Hungarian one hundred quintillion pengő banknote
| Country | Hungary |
|---|---|
| Value | $100 quintillion |
| Width | 159 mm |
| Height | 79 mm |
| Weight | ≈ 1.0 g |
| Security features | optically variable ink |
| Material used | paper |
| Years of printing | June 3, 1946-July 31, 1946 |
| Obverse | |
| Design | Hungarian woman |
| Design date | 1946 |
| Reverse | |
| Design | Hungarian Parliament Building |
| Design date | 1946 |
The Hungarian one hundred quintillion pengő banknote is one of the highest denomination banknotes ever circulated,[1] issued in 1946 during Hungary's extreme post-WWII hyperinflation, a period of unprecedented economic chaos where the currency lost value incredibly fast.[2] This massive note, sometimes called the one hundred million b.-pengő, was part of a series symbolizing the peak of this inflation, though an even higher, unissued sextillion pengő note was also printed.[3]
References
- ^ "Highest denomination banknote". Guinness World Records.
- ^ "10 July 1946: Hungary suffers the world's worst hyperinflation". MoneyWeek.
- ^ "Egymilliárd B.-pengő". Pénzmúzeum (in Hungarian). 2026-01-03. Retrieved 2026-01-03.