Coins: ten cents, twenty cents, fifty cents, one dollar, two dollars, five dollars and ten dollars.
Paper money: ten yuan, twenty yuan, fifty yuan, one hundred yuan, five hundred yuan, one thousand yuan.
Extended data:
Hong Kong dollar or Hong Kong dollar is the legal tender of Hong Kong. According to the Basic Law of Hong Kong and the Sino-British Joint Declaration, Hong Kong's autonomy includes the right to issue its own currency. Its official ISO 42 17 abbreviation is HKD (Hong Kong dollars); The sign is Hong Kong dollars.
The Hong Kong Monetary Authority, Standard Chartered Bank (Hong Kong) Limited, The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited and the Bank of China (Hong Kong) Limited announced on July 20th that they would launch a new series of 20 10 banknotes. Hong Kong has established a linked exchange rate system linking the issuance of Hong Kong dollars to the US dollar. The US dollars held by the Exchange Fund provide support for the stability of Hong Kong dollar banknotes.
The earliest banknotes in Hong Kong were issued by Credit Suisse Orient at 1845. Before 1935 the government passed the monetary regulations, many banks issued paper money, but these paper money were mainly used for commercial transactions. The government only accepts banknotes from some chartered banks as legal tender.
After 1935, the government authorized HSBC, beneficiary banks (later acquired by HSBC) and Credit Suisse Bank China (later renamed Standard Chartered Bank) to issue HK$ 5 yuan and above. Hong Kong dollar banknotes with a face value of one yuan or less are issued by the Hong Kong Government. 1975 After the Hong Kong government issued five-dollar coins, five-dollar notes ceased to be issued.
/kloc-in the 1990s, the government issued ten-dollar coins, and later banks stopped issuing ten-dollar bills. Later, the Bank of China became one of the note-issuing banks in Hong Kong. In 2002, the government again issued 10 yuan banknotes by the Monetary Authority.
References:
Baidu Encyclopedia-HKD