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Bulgaria and the euro
Process of Bulgaria adopting the Euro From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Bulgaria has been approved to adopt the euro effective 1 January 2026, which would make it the 21st member state of the eurozone.[1][2]

- European Union member states (special territories not shown)
-
5 not in ERM II, but committed to join the eurozone on meeting the convergence criteria (Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Romania, and Sweden)
- Non–EU member states
When Bulgaria joined the EU in 2007 it committed to join the eurozone and replace its currency with the euro. In February 2025, the country officially requested off-cycle assessments of their convergence by the European Commission and ECB to determine the country's readiness.[3][4] The 2025 convergence reports published on 4 June 2025 concluded that Bulgaria met the convergence criteria.[5] On 8 July 2025, the European Parliament endorsed Bulgaria's entry in the eurozone[6] and the Council of the European Union adopted the final 3 legislative acts required for the admission.[7]
The Bulgarian lev has been under a currency board since 1997, with a fixed exchange rate initially against the Deutsche Mark and subsequently its replacement, the euro. The convergence exchange rate is fixed at 1 EUR = 1.95583 BGN.
When Bulgaria adopts the euro, it would become only the second official currency in the country's history, replacing the lev, which was established in 1880 and first introduced in 1881.
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Convergence criteria
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Perspective
When it joined the European Union in 2007, Bulgaria committed to switching its currency, the lev, to the euro, as stated in the 2005 EU accession treaty. The transition would occur once the country meets all the euro convergence criteria. As the lev was fixed to the Deutsche Mark at par, the lev's peg effectively switched to the euro on 1 January 1999, at the rate of 1.95583 leva = 1 euro, which was the Deutsche Mark's fixed exchange rate to the euro.[8]
Before the Bulgarian euro coins had been designed, the Madara Rider had already been selected as the motif on the obverse ("national" side) of the coins. Two Bulgarian saints, Ivan Rilski and Paisius of Hilendar, will also be depicted on the Bulgarian euro coins. In this way, Bulgaria will become the first Orthodox country to have a Christian character on its Euro coins.[9] Bulgaria officially joined the European Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM II) on 10 July 2020.[10][11] Bulgarian government and central bank officials adopted a draft national plan for euro adoption on 30 June 2021,[12] after stating that same day Bulgaria's intention to adopt the euro on 1 January 2024.[13] In May 2022, the government adopted a more definitive version of its euro introduction plan, reaffirming the country's commitment to adopt the euro on the target date.[14] On 21 February 2023, Bulgaria scrapped the idea of adopting the single currency on 1 January 2024 due to an internal political crisis.[15]
The Maastricht Treaty, which Bulgaria acceded to by way of its EU accession treaty, requires that all European Union member states, except Denmark, join the euro once certain economic criteria are met.
In November 2007, Bulgarian Finance Minister Plamen Oresharski stated that his goal was to comply with all five convergence criteria by 2009 and adopt the euro in 2012.[16] But Bulgaria did not comply with the requirement to be an ERM II member for at least two years, nor did it satisfy the price stability criterion in 2008. Bulgaria's inflation in the 12 months from April 2007 to March 2008 reached 9.4%, well above the reference value limit of 3.2%.
However, Bulgaria fulfilled the state budget criterion of only having a maximum deficit of 3% of the country's gross domestic product (GDP). The country had posted surpluses since 2003, which in 2007 represented 3.4% of its GDP (at the time, the EC forecast that it would remain at 3.2% of GDP in both 2008 and 2009). Bulgaria also complied with the public debt criteria. During the prior decade, the Bulgarian debt had declined from 50% of GDP to 18% in 2007, and was expected to reach 11% in 2009.[17] Finally, the average for the long-term interest rate during the prior year was 4.7% in March 2008, well within the reference limit of 6.5%.[18]
A 2008 analysis said that Bulgaria would not be able to join the eurozone earlier than 2015 due to high inflation and the repercussions of the 2008 financial crisis.[19] Some members of Bulgarian government, notably economy minister Petar Dimitrov, speculated about unilaterally introducing the euro, which was not well received by the European Commission.[20]
Bulgaria met all five criteria in the last off-cycle convergence report published by the European Central Bank in June 2025.
Joining ERM II
The Bulgarian lev has been pegged to the euro since the latter was launched in 1999, at a fixed rate of €1 = BGN 1.95583, through a strictly managed currency board. Prior to that, the lev was pegged at par to the German Mark. While the currency board which pegs Bulgaria to the euro has been seen as beneficial to the country fulfilling criteria so quickly,[21] the ECB has pressured Bulgaria to drop it as it did not know how to let a country using a currency board join the euro. The Bulgarian Prime Minister has stated the desire to keep the currency board until the euro was adopted. However, factors such as a high inflation, an unrealistic exchange rate with the euro and the country's low productivity are negatively affected by the system.[22]
Simeon Dyankov, Bulgaria's finance minister, said in September 2009 that Bulgaria planned to enter ERM II in November,[23][24][25] but this was delayed. It was then delayed further due to an increased budget deficit, outside the Maastricht criteria.[26][27] From 2011 to 2020, Bulgaria's non-membership of the ERM II was the primary factor that prevented euro membership, as Bulgaria met the other criteria for euro adoption. In July 2011, Dyankov stated that the government would not adopt the euro as long as the European sovereign-debt crisis was ongoing.[28][29][30] In 2011, Bulgaria's Minister of Finance Simeon Dyankov stated that adoption of the euro would be postponed until the end of the eurozone crisis.[28]
In January 2015, Finance Minister Vladislav Goranov (under Prime Minister Boyko Borisov) changed approach and said that it was possible for Bulgaria to join ERM II before the end of 2018. Goranov said he would immediately begin talks with the Eurogroup to establish a plan for joining ERM II.[31] In July 2015, the Bulgarian government established a coordination council to prepare the country for eurozone membership.[32] The coordination council was to draft a plan for the introduction of the euro, propose a target date, and organise the preparation and coordination of the expert working groups.[33]
This approach was supported by former Bulgarian National Bank governor Kolyo Paramov, who had been in office when the state currency board was established. Paramov argued that adoption would "trigger a number of positive economic effects":
- Sufficient money supply (leading to increased lending, which is needed to improve economic growth)[34]
- Getting rid of the currency board that prevents the national bank from functioning as a lender of last resort to rescue banks in financial trouble[34]
- Private and public lending benefiting from lower interest rates (at least half as high)[34]
Former Bulgarian National Bank deputy governor Emil Harsev agreed with Paramov, stating that it was possible to adopt the euro in 2018 and that "Bulgaria's membership in the eurozone will bring only positive effect on the economy" because "since [the establishment of] the currency board in 1997, we have been accepting all the negative effects of accession into the eurozone without getting the positive ones (access to the European financial market)".[35]
From 2017
When Borisov's government was re-elected in 2017, he declared his intention to apply to join ERM II,[36] but Goranov elaborated that the government would only seek to join once the eurozone states were ready to approve the application, and that he expected to have clarity on the matter by the end of 2017.[37] On taking the presidency of the EU Council in January 2018, Borisov indicated that no clarification had been given, but announced that he was going to pursue applications for both ERM II and Schengen by July 2018 regardless.[38][39][40][41] Bulgaria sent a letter to the Eurogroup in July 2018 expressing its desire to join ERM II and committing to enter into a "close cooperation" agreement with the European banking union.[42][43]
In January 2019, Goranov said he hoped that Bulgaria could join the ERM II mechanism in July and introduce the euro on 1 January 2022.[44] However, the first deadline was deferred to July 2019 due to extra conditions requested by eurozone governments, namely that Bulgaria:[45]
- Join the European banking union at the same time as ERM II (meaning Bulgaria's banks must first pass stress tests)
- Reinforce supervision of the non-bank financial sector and fully implement EU anti money-laundering rules
- Thoroughly implement the reforms of the Mechanism for Cooperation and Verification (CVM)
While the CVM reforms were mentioned, and progress in judicial reform and organised crime was expected, leaving the CVM was not a precondition.[45]
As of October 2019, Goranov's target was to enter the ERM II by April 2020.[46] In January 2020, IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva said that it was possible for Bulgaria to join ERM II later in 2020 and adopt the euro in 2023.[47] Borisov stated in February 2020 that Bulgaria's application would be reviewed in July.[48] In March, the Bulgarian central bank said that this target was no longer realistic due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.[49] However, in April Borisov stated that he would push forward the application by the end of April.[50] The reason he gave for this U-turn was the 500 billion euros rescue package to deal with the economic fallout of the coronavirus pandemic, which the finance ministers of the Eurogroup had agreed upon on 10 April.[51] On 24 April, Fitch Ratings announced that they would probably upgrade Bulgaria's foreign currency issuer default ratings (IDR) between Bulgaria's accession to ERM II and euro adoption:
"… Given that the COVID-19 pandemic response is taking up significant resources with regard to political engagement at the EU-wide level, facilitating the Bulgarian lev's ERM2 accession may decline as a relative priority for European institutions. If concerns about risks ease and the process resumes, this would be supportive of the rating, as underlined by our view that all things being equal, we would upgrade Bulgaria's Long-Term Foreign-Currency IDR by two notches between admission to the ERM II and joining the euro."[52]
On 30 April 2020, Bulgaria officially submitted documents to the European Central Bank to apply to join ERM II, the first step to introducing the euro.[53] On 12 May, European Commission Executive Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis stated that Bulgaria could join ERM II together with Croatia in July,[54] which both countries did on 10 July.[10][55]
By the ECB decision adopted on 24 June 2020, Bulgaria and its national bank became a member of the European banking union under a close cooperation agreement which entered into force on 1 October 2020.[56][57]
Joining the eurozone

Bulgaria is set to adopt the euro as its official currency on 1 January 2026, following several delays. In February 2023, Finance Minister Rositsa Velkova announced that Bulgaria's target date for entry into the eurozone would be delayed from 1 January 2024 to 1 January 2025, primarily due to the projected inflation not meeting the inflation criterion in time.[58][59] In April 2023, enough signatures had been collected to put the entry to a referendum.[60] However, in June 2023 the referendum was rejected by Bulgaria's parliament with 98 votes against, 46 abstentions and 68 votes in favour.[61][62] On 26 July 2023, the newly formed Bulgarian government adopted a programme which stated that the switch to the euro in January 2025 is one of the main government priorities.[63] In November 2023, the Bulgarian euro coin design was revealed and approved by the Bulgarian National Bank.[64]
In order to ensure full compliance with the legal criteria for euro adoption, the Bulgarian Parliament approved the necessary legislation on the Bulgarian National Bank (BNB) on 1 February 2024.[65][66] However, according to the assessment of the President of BNB, Dimitar Radev, the recently adopted constitutional revision (making it possible for the President or Vice President of BNB to be appointed as a temporary caretaker Prime Minister in case of failed attempts to form regular governments), and the recently adopted revision to the law on the BNB (making it possible for such a caretaker Prime Minister to resume his work and role at BNB after having completed his tenure as temporary caretaker Prime Minister), were both unlikely to meet ECB's convergence criteria for legal compliance. The ECB was not consulted on this specific change to the Bulgarian law, but were expected to reveal its assessment on this potential issue in its upcoming convergence report scheduled for publication in June 2024.[67]
On 20 January 2024, Bulgarian Prime Minister Nikolai Denkov said in an interview that Bulgaria might be forced to delay its adoption of the euro to 1 July 2025 if the inflation criterion is not met in time, although the current target date of 1 January 2025 remained unchanged.[68][69] Finance Minister Asen Vasilev believed Bulgaria was on track for euro adoption at some point in time in 2025, as the last inflation criteria was projected to be met between June and September 2024,[70] and the revised Bulgarian euro adoption law was expected to be approved by the ECB shortly.[71]
The euro adoption law was launched as a draft law for public consultation from 25 March to 24 April,[72] and subsequently will be subject to approval by the Bulgarian Parliament; the European Commission — although not yet ECB — had already approved the published version as of 26 March.[73] The ECB proposed several amendments to the proposed euro adoption law on 2 May 2024.[74] The Bulgarian Ministry of Finance later clarified that the proposed euro adoption law will never be assessed by ECB as part of their euro adoption compliance test of the national legislation in their convergence reports (due to this law only being a national matter), but stressed that it was important from a national perspective that the National Assembly vote and approve the law by the end of summer 2024.[75] An information website (www.evroto.bg) was launched on 25 March, dedicated to communicate the progress towards introduction of the euro in Bulgaria and practicalities of the euro changeover,[76] and the European Commission signed a Partnership Agreement for co-financing information campaigns towards Bulgarian citizens and businesses on all euro changeover aspects on 12 April.[77]
After a planned government rotation and negotiations for a renewed government mandate for the next nine months failed,[78][79][80] and subsequent attempts to form a new government among the elected parties were likewise unsuccessful, Bulgarian President Rumen Radev announced he would appoint a new caretaker Prime Minister and caretaker government tasked with organizing an early election in June 2024.[81] Analysts had warned that snap elections could risk delaying efforts for Bulgaria to adopt the euro in 2025.[82][83] However, outgoing Finance Minister Asen Vasilev stated that preparations were so far advanced that at the current stage a caretaker government could ensure eurozone entry in 2025.[84] Incoming caretaker Prime Minister Dimitar Glavchev stated that the incoming caretaker government would continue to focus on achieving membership of the eurozone and "Schengen on land" among its priorities.[85]
On 26 June 2024, the ECB released their report confirming that the country had failed to comply with the inflation criteria and was therefore unable to join the eurozone on the 1 January 2025 target date.[86] According to BNB's press website evroto.bg, it was projected that the inflation criteria would be met by the end of 2024, and that if it was, the country would request an off-cycle compliance re-assessment to get approval to adopt the euro as soon as possible.[87] In June 2024, Bulgaria's acting finance minister said Bulgaria would need to reduce inflation in order to meet ECB requirements to adopt the euro in January 2026.[88][89]
As of July 2024, the process was in an advanced phase. Once the required level of convergence had been achieved, an off-cycle evaluation would be requested.[90] On 26 July 2024, the members of the Bulgarian National Assembly adopted a decision obliging the Bulgarian government to speed up the process of introducing the common European currency. On August 7, the law on the introduction of the euro was adopted, which represented the most important legislative act necessary for the smooth running of the currency changeover process. 167 MPs voted in support of the law, in particular MPs from the pro-European majority in the form of PP-DB, GERB and DPS, while 48 MPs from Revival (Vazrazhdane), independents and two Socialists voted against. Only the group of There is Such a People and one independent abstained. This law determines the terms and ways in which the currency will be changed. It was the final important legal act on the way to Bulgaria's euro adoption before fulfilling the last Maastricht criteria — that of price stability and, accordingly, the subsequent decision of the Council of the EU to introduce the euro in Bulgaria. After the council made another decision on the issue, some regulations and other subnormative acts were to be adopted to regulate in greater detail what was written in the package of laws that Bulgaria adopted on the path to the eurozone.[91][92] On 20 August 2024, President Rumen Radev signed a decree[93] promulgating in the Bulgarian State Gazette the law on the euro, with which it officially entered into force.[94]
Developments in 2025
According to data from Eurostat in mid-January 2025, Bulgaria's inflation was 2.6% — only 0.1% from meeting the inflation criteria.[95] On 17 January 2025, it was reported that the government was expected to submit a request for an off-cycle convergence report to the European Commission and the ECB within two weeks.[96] However, in a 23 January 2025 speech, Finance Minister Temenuzhka Petkova announced the country would not submit such a request until the inflation rate criteria had been met, with 0.1% still missing.[97]
On 22 February 2025, thousands of Bulgarian far-right Revival party supporters tried to break into the headquarters of the European Union mission in Sofia during a protest against the country's plans to adopt the euro in 2026.[98]
On 24 February 2025, after the government deemed that the country had now met the inflation criteria, the Council of Ministers adopted a decision to formally request an off-cycle convergence report from the European Commission and European Central Bank.[99][3][4] The Bulgarian National Bank and Ministry of Finance sent the letter formally requesting the report the following day.[3]
On 9 May 2025, in a surprising move seen by some as a populist rhetoric, the Bulgarian President Rumen Radev announced that he would submit a proposal to parliament to hold a referendum on the euro,[100] which was subsequently turned down by the speaker of parliament. The Bulgarian supreme court had previously deemed such a referendum unconstitutional as it contradicts both national and EU law.[101]
On 4 June 2025, the European Commission and European Central Bank published their off-cycle convergence reports, according to which Bulgaria fulfilled the 5 convergence criteria.[102] The European Commission proposed a Council Decision and Regulation to enact Bulgaria accession to the eurozone effective 1 January 2026.[103]
On 19 June 2025, the finance ministers of the Eurogroup member states unanimously recommended that Bulgaria be approved to adopt the euro.[104]
On 20 June 2025, the Economic and Financial Affairs Council unanimously supported Bulgaria’s accession to the eurozone.[105]
On 24 June 2025, the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs and Subcommittee on Tax Matters in the European Parliament’s approved a draft report recommending approval of Bulgaria joining the eurozone effective 1 January 2026. The vote was 46 in favor, with 3 against and 5 abstentions.[106]
On 26 June 2025, during a meeting of the European Council EU leaders welcomed the fulfillment of all the convergence criteria set out in the Treaty. They endorsed the Commission’s proposal that Bulgaria adopt the euro on 1 January 2026 and invited the Council to swiftly adopt the relevant Commission proposals.
On 8 July 2025 the European Parliament endorsed Bulgaria’s bid to adopt the euro and join the eurozone effective 1 January 2026. Members of the European Parliament, by 531 votes in favor, 69 against and 79 abstentions, adopted a report confirming Bulgaria fulfilled the criteria for adopting the euro.[107] Later that day, the Council granted final approval by unanimously adopting the final three legal acts. One of the three legal acts sets the conversion rate between the euro and the Bulgarian lev at 1.95583 lev per 1 euro. This completes the process for Bulgaria to become the 21st member of the euro area.[108] The documents were signed by Stephanie Lose on behalf of the Danish Presidency of the Council of the EU in the presence of Temenuzhka Petkova, Valdis Dombrovskis, Paschal Donohoe, and Luis de Guindos.
On 8 August 2025 all sales prices were listed in both lev and euro using the same font and color. Exemptions were made for books, school textbooks and supplies, who will be listed under both currencies from 1 January 2026. Due to technical restrictions taxi displays and gas stations would only list prices in lev. However, gas stations prices in both currencies should be visible in a prominent location inside the gas station. In addition, purchase receipts list the paid amount in both lev and euro.[109][110]
Status
Criterion fulfilled
Criterion potentially fulfilled: If the budget deficit exceeds the 3% limit, but is "close" to this value (the European Commission has deemed 3.5% to be close by in the past),[143] then the criteria can still potentially be fulfilled if either the deficits in the previous two years are significantly declining towards the 3% limit, or if the excessive deficit is the result of exceptional circumstances which are temporary in nature (i.e. one-off expenditures triggered by a significant economic downturn, or by the implementation of economic reforms that are expected to deliver a significant positive impact on the government's future fiscal budgets). However, even if such "special circumstances" are found to exist, additional criteria must also be met to comply with the fiscal budget criterion.[144][145] Additionally, if the debt-to-GDP ratio exceeds 60% but is "sufficiently diminishing and approaching the reference value at a satisfactory pace" it can be deemed to be in compliance.[145]
Criterion not fulfilled
- Notes
- The rate of increase of the 12-month average HICP over the prior 12-month average must be no more than 1.5% larger than the unweighted arithmetic average of the similar HICP inflation rates in the 3 EU member states with the lowest HICP inflation. If any of these 3 states have a HICP rate significantly below the similarly averaged HICP rate for the eurozone (which according to ECB practice means more than 2% below), and if this low HICP rate has been primarily caused by exceptional circumstances (i.e. severe wage cuts or a strong recession), then such a state is not included in the calculation of the reference value and is replaced by the EU state with the fourth lowest HICP rate.
- The arithmetic average of the annual yield of 10-year government bonds as of the end of the past 12 months must be no more than 2.0% larger than the unweighted arithmetic average of the bond yields in the 3 EU member states with the lowest HICP inflation. If any of these states have bond yields which are significantly larger than the similarly averaged yield for the eurozone (which according to previous ECB reports means more than 2% above) and at the same time does not have complete funding access to financial markets (which is the case for as long as a government receives bailout funds), then such a state is not to be included in the calculation of the reference value.
- The change in the annual average exchange rate against the euro.
- The maximum allowed change in rate is ± 2.25% for Denmark.
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Advantages of euro adoption
Since the lev has been pegged to the euro at a fixed rate, it has been argued that Bulgaria is already a de facto member of the eurozone as it cannot pursue an independent monetary policy and is bound by the interest rate policy of the European Central Bank, without having a say in monetary strategy. Therefore, Bulgaria does not lose any financial tools by adopting the euro. Adopting the euro and thereby becoming a de jure member of the eurozone would enhance Bulgaria's position by giving it a seat at the European Central Bank’s decision-making table.[51]
Other advantages of adopting the euro include the improved supervision of Bulgaria's systemically important banks and the decreased cost of borrowing. Adopting the euro could aid Bulgaria in fostering greater economic stability and integration with the eurozone, reducing exchange rate transaction costs for businesses and consumers. Finally, joining the euro area can enhance price transparency, making it easier for consumers to compare prices and for businesses to compete more effectively within the single market.
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Linguistic issues
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Bulgarian Cyrillic script and its non-straightforward transliteration of the word euro initially caused issues when the European Central Bank and European Commission insisted that Bulgaria adopt the name ЕУРО (i.e., euro), rather than the original ЕВРО (i.e., evro) Bulgarian pronunciation: [ˈɛvro] (from Bulgarian Европа [ɛvˈrɔpɐ], meaning Europe), arguing that the currency's name should be standardised across the EU as much as possible. Bulgaria maintained that its language's alphabet and phonetic orthography warranted the exception.[146] At the 2007 EU Summit in Lisbon, the issue was decided in Bulgaria's favour, making евро the official Cyrillic spelling from 13 December 2007.[147][148]
This ruling affected the design of euro banknotes. The second series of notes (beginning with the €5 note issued from 2013) includes the term "ЕВРО" and the abbreviation "ЕЦБ" (short for Европейска централна банка, the Bulgarian name of the European Central Bank).[149] The first series only had the standard Latin alphabet "EURO" and Greek "ΕΥΡΩ".
The plural of евро in Bulgarian varies in spoken language – евро, евра [ɛvˈra], еврота [ˈɛvrotɐ] – but the most widespread form is евро – without inflection in plural form. The word for euro, though, has a normal form with the postpositive definite article – еврото ([ˈɛvroto], the euro).
The word for eurocent is евроцент [ˈɛvrot͡sɛnt] and actually this or just цент [ˈt͡sɛnt] will be used in the future when the European currency is adopted in Bulgaria. This is also the official word mentioned and accordingly used in the Bulgarian national law and the Bulgarian legislation prepared on the path of Bulgaria in the eurozone and its participation in the Eurosystem. In contrast to euro (in Bulgarian. ЕВРО), the word for "cent (in Bulgarian. ЦЕНТ - Стотинка/Стотинки)" has a full inflection both in the definite and the plural form: евроцент (basic form), евроцентът (full definite article – postpositive), евроцентове (plural), 2 евроцента (numerative form – after numerals). However, the word stotinki (стотинки), singular stotinka (стотинка), the name of the subunit of the Bulgarian monetary unit, will continue to be used informally as it has become synonymous with the word coins in the colloquial Bulgarian language; same as "cent (in Bulgarian. Цент - стотинка/стотинки)" (from Latin centum), its etymology is from a word meaning hundred - "sto" (сто). Stotinki (Стотинки) or more precisely стотинка and стотинки is used widely in the Bulgarian diaspora in Europe to refer to subunits of currencies other than the Bulgarian lev. Although Bulgaria will officially use the word евроцент or цент in its national laws, the words стотинка and стотинки will continue to be present on Bulgarian coins, or more precisely, they will be minted on the national side of Bulgarian euro coins. More precisely, the 1 euro cent coin will read "стотинка" and the other 2, 5, 10, 20 and 50 euro cent coins will read "стотинки".
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Design selection
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Perspective

Bulgarian euro coins will replace the lev. On the occasion of the signing of the EU accession treaty on 25 April 2005, the Bulgarian National Bank issued a commemorative coin with a face value of 1.95583 leva, giving it a nominal value of exactly 1 euro.[150][151]
The Madara Rider was one of the favourites to become the symbol of Bulgaria to be used on the "national" (obverse) side of the country's euro coins. Other eminent contenders to be the 'symbol of Bulgaria' were ancient traditional nestinars (Bulgarian fire dancers), Cyrillic script,[152] the Rila Monastery[153] and the Tsarevets medieval fortress near Veliko Turnovo.[153]
On 17 June 2008, debates on the design of future Bulgarian euro coins were held all over the country, continuing until 29 June when a vote was held on the symbol to be used on all coins. Bulgarians voted in post offices, fuel stations and schools.[154][155] That same day, the winner was announced: a plurality of voters, 25.44%, had chosen the Madara Rider to be depicted on future euro coins.[156][157][158][159]
On 24 July 2023, the governor of the BNB, Dimitar Radev, announced that the BNB Governing Council had decided that the Bulgarian national side of euro coins would be identical to that of the Bulgarian lev coins in circulation.[160]
Eurocoins with a Bulgarian national side will contain the name of the fractional unit of the former Bulgarian currency leva (СТОТИНКА/СТОТИНКИ). The Bulgarian alphabet is already present on the euro banknotes, and with the introduction of the euro in Bulgaria and the putting into circulation of the Bulgarian euro coins, the Cyrillic alphabet will now also be presented on the euro coins. Together with the Greek coins, the Bulgarian euro coins will be the only euro coins that will not use only the Latin alphabet in their design.[161]
The design of the euro coins was officially chosen by the Bulgarian National Bank in November 2023,[162] and approved by the Council of the EU in February 2024.[65] On 9 April 2025, the BNB Governing Council approved the revised graphic designs for the Bulgarian national side of the euro coins, with the only change being the year of issue from "2025" to "2026".[163] Minting of the coins in necessary quantities began shortly after the Council of the EU approved Bulgaria to adopt the euro, so that they can be circulated starting from the date of euro introduction in Bulgaria.
The official website for the introduction of the euro in Bulgaria (www.evroto.bg) gives the following description of the Bulgarian euro coins:[164][161]
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Public opinion
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- Public support for the euro in Bulgaria
Since 2007, public support for adopting the euro in Bulgaria has fluctuated notably, reflecting varying economic sentiments and political climates. Support has remained divided in recent years, with recent surveys showing near-even splits between the “Yes” and “No” camps. Overall, since joining the EU, support for the adoption of euro in Bulgaria has averaged around 48%, while approximately 44% have been against.
The following are the annual Eurobarometer polls on the question of whether Bulgarians are more in favour or against the idea of introducing the euro in their country.
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See also
References
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