LogoSymbolDb
$
Dollar/Peso
¢
Cent
£
Pound Sterling
¥
Yuan/Yen
Euro
¤
Currency Sign
Bitcoin
฿
Baht
֏
Armenian Dram
Georgian Lari
Turkish Lira
Azerbaijani Manat
French Franc
Italian Lira
Spanish Peseta
Greek Drachma
German Pfennig
French Livre
ECU
Colón
Philippine Peso
Guarani
Argentine Austral
Spanish Maravedí
Brazilian Cruzeiro
𐆐
Roman As
𐆑
Roman Denarius
𐆒
Roman Sestertius
𐆓
Roman Dupondius
𐆔
Roman Quinarius
𐆕
Roman Victoriatus
𐆖
Greek Drachma
𐆗
Greek Obol
𐆘
Roman Silver Coin
𐆙
Roman Gold Coin
𐆚
Roman Bronze Coin
𐆛
Roman Currency Symbol
Ukrainian Hryvnia
Mill
Nigerian Naira
Rupee
Won
Shekel
Dong
Kip
Tughrik
$
US Dollar
CA$
Canadian Dollar
MX$
Mexican Peso
BZ$
Belize Dollar
C$
Cordoba
B$
Barbados Dollar
Costa Rican Colón
Paraguayan Guarani
S/
Peruvian Sol
Ghanaian Cedi
¢
US Cent
G$
Guyanese Dollar
J$
Jamaican Dollar
TT$
Trinidad Dollar
BBD
Barbados Dollar
BSD
Bahamian Dollar
KYD
Cayman Dollar
XCD
Caribbean Dollar
PAB
Panamanian Balboa
¥
Yuan / Yen
Fullwidth Yuan
Korean Won
Fullwidth Won
Israeli Shekel
Vietnamese Dong
Lao Kip
Mongolian Tughrik
Kazakhstani Tenge
Indian Rupee
Pakistani Rupee
Bangladeshi Taka
Cambodian Riel
Iranian Rial
؋
Afghani
ރ
Maldivian Rufiyaa
Tamil Rupee
Gujarati Rupee
Bengal Rupee Mark
Bengal Currency Mark
𑿿
Tamil Currency
𞲰
Indic Siyaq
RM
Malaysian Ringgit
S$
Singapore Dollar
Rp
Indonesian Rupiah
Chinese Yuan
Japanese Yen
Traditional Yuan
Nigerian Naira
Ghanaian Cedi
£
Egyptian Pound
د.ج
Algerian Dinar
د.م
Moroccan Dirham
د.ت
Tunisian Dinar
CFA Franc
Egypt Pound
Lebanese Pound
South Sudan Pound
GH₵
Ghana Cedi
NG₦
Nigeria Naira
R
South African Rand
ZAR
Rand Code
MAD
Dirham Code
ECU
Cruzeiro
Austral
Maravedí
Livre
Pfennig
Peseta
Drachma
Lira
𐆐
Roman As
𐆑
Roman Denarius
𐆒
Roman Sestertius
𐆓
Roman Dupondius
𐆔
Roman Quinarius
𐆕
Roman Victoriatus
𐆖
Greek Drachma
𐆗
Greek Obol
𐆘
Roman Silver
𐆙
Roman Gold
𐆚
Roman Bronze
Yuan Unit
Traditional Yuan
Classic Yuan
Japanese Yen
Tael
Mon Cash
Qian
Kwan Kan
Diao
Thai Baht
Fen Cent
Jiao
Hao
Li
Fullwidth Dollar
Fullwidth Cent
Fullwidth Pound
Fullwidth Yuan
Fullwidth Won
Fullwidth Mark
Fullwidth Left
Fullwidth Right
Fullwidth At
Fullwidth Hash
Georgian Lari
֏
Armenian Dram
ብር
Ethiopian Birr
གྲུམ
Tibetan Currency
Mauritius Rupee
Bangla Taka
Tamil Rupee
Gujarati Rupee
Arabic Rial
؋
Afghani
ރ
Maldivian Rufiyaa
Khmer Riel
Korean Won
¥
Chinese Yuan
CJK Yuan

💱 About Currency Symbols

Complete collection of 167 currency and financial symbols, including international symbols, global currencies, historical currencies, and CJK units

This page contains 167 currency symbols covering major circulating currencies, historical currencies, rare symbols, and Chinese/Japanese/Korean currency units worldwide. Currency symbols are essential in finance, economics, international trade, and software localization, each representing unique cultural and economic heritage.

🌍 International Common Symbols

$ is called the "Dollar Symbol" or "Peso Symbol". It is the most widely used currency symbol globally, representing currencies such as the US Dollar, Canadian Dollar, and Mexican Peso. The corresponding currency code is USD. Its Unicode is U+0024, the LaTeX command is \$, and the HTML entity is $.

¢ is called the "Cent Symbol". It represents the subunit of many currencies, equivalent to one hundredth of a dollar or other base units. The corresponding currency code is USD (subunit). Its Unicode is U+00A2, the LaTeX command is \cent, and the HTML entity is ¢.

£ is called the "Pound Sterling Symbol". It represents the British Pound, one of the world's oldest currencies still in use. The corresponding currency code is GBP. Its Unicode is U+00A3, the LaTeX command is \pounds, and the HTML entity is £.

¥ is called the "Yen Symbol" or "Yuan Symbol". It represents the Japanese Yen in Japan and the Chinese Renminbi (Yuan) in China, with context determining which currency is meant. The corresponding currency codes are CNY/JPY. Its Unicode is U+00A5, the LaTeX command is \textyen, and the HTML entity is ¥.

is called the "Euro Symbol". It represents the Euro, the official currency of the European Union and used by 20 of its member states. The corresponding currency code is EUR. Its Unicode is U+20AC, the LaTeX command is \euro, and the HTML entity is €.

¤ is called the "Currency Symbol". It is a generic placeholder used when the specific currency symbol is unknown or unavailable. The corresponding currency code is Generic. Its Unicode is U+00A4, the LaTeX command is \textcurrency, and the HTML entity is ¤.

is called the "Bitcoin Symbol". It represents Bitcoin, the first and most widely recognized decentralized cryptocurrency. The corresponding currency code is BTC. Its Unicode is U+20BF, the LaTeX command is \bitcoin, and the HTML entity is ₿.

฿ is called the "Thai Baht Symbol". It represents the Baht, the official currency of Thailand. The corresponding currency code is THB. Its Unicode is U+0E3F, the LaTeX command is \textbaht, and the HTML entity is ฿.

֏ is called the "Armenian Dram Symbol". It represents the Dram, the official currency of Armenia. The corresponding currency code is AMD. Its Unicode is U+058F, and the HTML entity is ֏.

is called the "Georgian Lari Symbol". It represents the Lari, the official currency of Georgia. The corresponding currency code is GEL. Its Unicode is U+20BE, and the HTML entity is ₾.

is called the "Turkish Lira Symbol". It represents the Turkish Lira, the official currency of Turkey and Northern Cyprus. The corresponding currency code is TRY. Its Unicode is U+20BA, the LaTeX command is \textlira, and the HTML entity is ₺.

is called the "Azerbaijani Manat Symbol". It represents the Manat, the official currency of Azerbaijan. The corresponding currency code is AZN. Its Unicode is U+20BC, and the HTML entity is ₼.

🇪🇺 European Currencies

is called the "French Franc Symbol". It represents the former currency of France before it was replaced by the Euro in 2002. The corresponding currency code is FRF (historical). Its Unicode is U+20A3, the LaTeX command is \textfranc, and the HTML entity is ₣.

is called the "Italian Lira Symbol". It represents the former currency of Italy before it was replaced by the Euro. The corresponding currency code is ITL (historical). Its Unicode is U+20A4, the LaTeX command is \textlira, and the HTML entity is ₤.

is called the "Spanish Peseta Symbol". It represents the former currency of Spain before it was replaced by the Euro. The corresponding currency code is ESP (historical). Its Unicode is U+20A7, the LaTeX command is \textpeseta, and the HTML entity is ₧.

is called the "Greek Drachma Symbol". It represents the former currency of Greece before it was replaced by the Euro. The corresponding currency code is GRD (historical). Its Unicode is U+20AF, the LaTeX command is \textdrachma, and the HTML entity is ₯.

is called the "German Pfennig Symbol". It represented the subunit of the former German Deutsche Mark, with 100 Pfennig equaling one Mark. The corresponding currency code is DEM (subunit). Its Unicode is U+20B0, the LaTeX command is \textpfennig, and the HTML entity is ₰.

is called the "French Livre Symbol". It represents the Livre, a historical currency used in France before the French Revolution and later replaced by the Franc. The corresponding currency code is FRF (historical). Its Unicode is U+20B6, and the HTML entity is ₶.

is called the "European Currency Unit Symbol". It represents the ECU (European Currency Unit), the predecessor to the Euro used by the European Community from 1979 to 1999. The corresponding currency code is XEU (historical). Its Unicode is U+20A0, and the HTML entity is ₠.

is called the "Colón Symbol". It represents the Colón, the official currency of Costa Rica and formerly of El Salvador. The corresponding currency code is CRC. Its Unicode is U+20A1, and the HTML entity is ₡.

is called the "Philippine Peso Symbol". It represents the Philippine Peso, the official currency of the Philippines. The corresponding currency code is PHP. Its Unicode is U+20B1, and the HTML entity is ₱.

is called the "Guarani Symbol". It represents the Paraguayan Guarani, the official currency of Paraguay. The corresponding currency code is PYG. Its Unicode is U+20B2, and the HTML entity is ₲.

is called the "Argentine Austral Symbol". It represents the Austral, the former currency of Argentina used between 1985 and 1991. The corresponding currency code is ARA (historical). Its Unicode is U+20B3, and the HTML entity is ₳.

is called the "Spanish Maravedí Symbol". It represents the Maravedí, a historical coin used in Spain from the 11th to the 19th century. The corresponding currency code is Historical. Its Unicode is U+20B7, and the HTML entity is ₷.

is called the "Brazilian Cruzeiro Symbol". It represents the Cruzeiro, the former currency of Brazil used in several periods before the Real. The corresponding currency code is BRB (historical). Its Unicode is U+20A2, and the HTML entity is ₢.

is called the "Ukrainian Hryvnia Symbol". It represents the Hryvnia, the official currency of Ukraine. The corresponding currency code is UAH. Its Unicode is U+20B4, and the HTML entity is ₴.

𐆐 is called the "Roman As Symbol". It represents the As, a bronze coin that was the basic unit of currency in ancient Rome. The corresponding currency code is Ancient. Its Unicode is U+10190, and the HTML entity is 𐆐.

𐆑 is called the "Roman Denarius Symbol". It represents the Denarius, a silver coin that was the standard Roman currency for over 400 years. The corresponding currency code is Ancient. Its Unicode is U+10191, and the HTML entity is 𐆑.

𐆒 is called the "Roman Sestertius Symbol". It represents the Sestertius, a large bronze coin used in ancient Rome, valued at one-quarter of a Denarius. The corresponding currency code is Ancient. Its Unicode is U+10192, and the HTML entity is 𐆒.

𐆓 is called the "Roman Dupondius Symbol". It represents the Dupondius, a brass coin worth two Asses in ancient Rome. The corresponding currency code is Ancient. Its Unicode is U+10193, and the HTML entity is 𐆓.

𐆔 is called the "Roman Quinarius Symbol". It represents the Quinarius, a small silver coin worth half a Denarius. The corresponding currency code is Ancient. Its Unicode is U+10194, and the HTML entity is 𐆔.

𐆕 is called the "Roman Victoriatus Symbol". It represents the Victoriatus, a silver coin minted in ancient Rome featuring the goddess Victory. The corresponding currency code is Ancient. Its Unicode is U+10195, and the HTML entity is 𐆕.

𐆖 is called the "Greek Drachma Symbol". It represents the ancient Greek Drachma, a silver coin that was the standard currency of ancient Greece. The corresponding currency code is Ancient. Its Unicode is U+10196, and the HTML entity is 𐆖.

𐆗 is called the "Greek Obol Symbol". It represents the Obol, a small silver coin in ancient Greece, with six Obols equaling one Drachma. The corresponding currency code is Ancient. Its Unicode is U+10197, and the HTML entity is 𐆗.

𐆘 is called the "Roman Silver Coin Symbol". It represents a generic Roman silver coin symbol used in numismatic contexts. The corresponding currency code is Ancient. Its Unicode is U+10198, and the HTML entity is 𐆘.

𐆙 is called the "Roman Gold Coin Symbol". It represents a generic Roman gold coin symbol, often referring to the Aureus. The corresponding currency code is Ancient. Its Unicode is U+10199, and the HTML entity is 𐆙.

𐆚 is called the "Roman Bronze Coin Symbol". It represents a generic Roman bronze coin symbol used in numismatic notation. The corresponding currency code is Ancient. Its Unicode is U+1019A, and the HTML entity is 𐆚.

🌎 Americas Currencies

$ is called the "US Dollar Symbol". It represents the United States Dollar, the world's primary reserve currency. It can also be prefixed with country codes like CA$ (Canadian Dollar), MX$ (Mexican Peso), or BZ$ (Belize Dollar) for specificity. The corresponding currency code is USD. Its Unicode is U+0024, the LaTeX command is \$, and the HTML entity is $.

CA$ is called the "Canadian Dollar Symbol". It represents the Canadian Dollar, the official currency of Canada, often written with the prefix "CA" to distinguish it from other dollar currencies. The corresponding currency code is CAD. Its Unicode sequence is U+0043 U+0041 U+0024.

MX$ is called the "Mexican Peso Symbol". It represents the Mexican Peso, the official currency of Mexico. The corresponding currency code is MXN. Its Unicode sequence is U+004D U+0058 U+0024.

is called the "Costa Rican Colón Symbol". It represents the Colón, the official currency of Costa Rica. The corresponding currency code is CRC. Its Unicode is U+20A1, and the HTML entity is ₡.

is called the "Paraguayan Guarani Symbol". It represents the Guarani, the official currency of Paraguay. The corresponding currency code is PYG. Its Unicode is U+20B2, and the HTML entity is ₲.

S/ is called the "Peruvian Sol Symbol". It represents the Peruvian Sol, the official currency of Peru. The corresponding currency code is PEN. The symbol combines the letter "S" with a forward slash.

is called the "Ghanaian Cedi Symbol". It represents the Cedi, the official currency of Ghana. The corresponding currency code is GHS. Its Unicode is U+20B5, the LaTeX command is \textcedi, and the HTML entity is ₵.

¢ is called the "Cent Symbol". It represents the cent subunit of the US Dollar and other currencies. The corresponding currency code is USD (subunit). Its Unicode is U+00A2, the LaTeX command is \cent, and the HTML entity is ¢.

BBD is the ISO currency code for the Barbados Dollar, the official currency of Barbados. The corresponding currency code is BBD.

BSD is the ISO currency code for the Bahamian Dollar, the official currency of the Bahamas. The corresponding currency code is BSD.

XCD is the ISO currency code for the East Caribbean Dollar, used by eight Caribbean nations. The corresponding currency code is XCD.

🌏 Asian Currencies

¥ is called the "Yuan Symbol" or "Yen Symbol". In China, it represents the Renminbi (Yuan), and in Japan, it represents the Japanese Yen. The corresponding currency codes are CNY/JPY. Its Unicode is U+00A5, the LaTeX command is \textyen, and the HTML entity is ¥.

is called the "Fullwidth Yuan Symbol". It is a fullwidth variant of the Yen/Yuan symbol used in East Asian typography for fixed-width layouts. The corresponding currency codes are CNY/JPY. Its Unicode is U+FFE5, and the HTML entity is ¥.

is called the "Won Symbol". It represents the South Korean Won and the North Korean Won. The corresponding currency code is KRW. Its Unicode is U+20A9, the LaTeX command is \textwon, and the HTML entity is ₩.

is called the "Fullwidth Won Symbol". It is the fullwidth version of the Won symbol used in Korean typography. The corresponding currency code is KRW. Its Unicode is U+FFE6, and the HTML entity is ₩.

is called the "Israeli Shekel Symbol". It represents the New Israeli Shekel, the official currency of Israel. The corresponding currency code is ILS. Its Unicode is U+20AA, the LaTeX command is \textshekel, and the HTML entity is ₪.

is called the "Vietnamese Dong Symbol". It represents the Dong, the official currency of Vietnam. The corresponding currency code is VND. Its Unicode is U+20AB, the LaTeX command is \textdong, and the HTML entity is ₫.

is called the "Lao Kip Symbol". It represents the Kip, the official currency of Laos. The corresponding currency code is LAK. Its Unicode is U+20AD, and the HTML entity is ₭.

is called the "Mongolian Tugrik Symbol". It represents the Tugrik, the official currency of Mongolia. The corresponding currency code is MNT. Its Unicode is U+20AE, and the HTML entity is ₮.

is called the "Kazakhstani Tenge Symbol". It represents the Tenge, the official currency of Kazakhstan. The corresponding currency code is KZT. Its Unicode is U+20B8, and the HTML entity is ₸.

is called the "Indian Rupee Symbol". It represents the Indian Rupee, the official currency of India. The corresponding currency code is INR. Its Unicode is U+20B9, the LaTeX command is \textrupee, and the HTML entity is ₹.

is called the "Rupee Symbol". It is used for currencies such as the Pakistani Rupee, Sri Lankan Rupee, and others. The corresponding currency code is PKR. Its Unicode is U+20A8, the LaTeX command is \textrupee, and the HTML entity is ₨.

is called the "Bangladeshi Taka Symbol". It represents the Taka, the official currency of Bangladesh. The corresponding currency code is BDT. Its Unicode is U+09F3, and the HTML entity is ৳.

is called the "Cambodian Riel Symbol". It represents the Riel, the official currency of Cambodia. The corresponding currency code is KHR. Its Unicode is U+17DB, and the HTML entity is ៛.

is called the "Iranian Rial Symbol". It represents the Iranian Rial, the official currency of Iran. The corresponding currency code is IRR. Its Unicode is U+FDFC, and the HTML entity is ﷼.

؋ is called the "Afghani Symbol". It represents the Afghan Afghani, the official currency of Afghanistan. The corresponding currency code is AFN. Its Unicode is U+060B, and the HTML entity is ؋.

ރ is called the "Maldivian Rufiyaa Symbol". It represents the Rufiyaa, the official currency of the Maldives. The corresponding currency code is MVR. Its Unicode is U+0783, and the HTML entity is ރ.

RM is called the "Malaysian Ringgit Symbol". It represents the Ringgit, the official currency of Malaysia. The corresponding currency code is MYR. The symbol combines the letters R and M.

S$ is called the "Singapore Dollar Symbol". It represents the Singapore Dollar, with the prefix "S" distinguishing it from other dollar currencies. The corresponding currency code is SGD.

Rp is called the "Indonesian Rupiah Symbol". It represents the Rupiah, the official currency of Indonesia. The corresponding currency code is IDR.

is called the "Yuan Character". It is the Chinese character for Yuan, used as the primary unit of China's Renminbi currency. The corresponding currency code is CNY. Its Unicode is U+5143, and the HTML entity is 元.

is called the "Yen Character". It is the Japanese kanji for Yen, used in Japan to denote the Yen currency. The corresponding currency code is JPY. Its Unicode is U+5186, and the HTML entity is 円.

🌍 African Currencies

is called the "Nigerian Naira Symbol". It represents the Naira, the official currency of Nigeria. The corresponding currency code is NGN. Its Unicode is U+20A6, the LaTeX command is \textnaira, and the HTML entity is ₦.

is called the "Ghanaian Cedi Symbol". It represents the Cedi, the official currency of Ghana. The corresponding currency code is GHS. Its Unicode is U+20B5, the LaTeX command is \textcedi, and the HTML entity is ₵.

£ is called the "Egyptian Pound Symbol". It represents the Egyptian Pound, the official currency of Egypt. The corresponding currency code is EGP. Its Unicode is U+00A3, and the HTML entity is £.

د.ج is called the "Algerian Dinar Symbol". It represents the Algerian Dinar, the official currency of Algeria, written in Arabic script. The corresponding currency code is DZD.

د.م is called the "Moroccan Dirham Symbol". It represents the Moroccan Dirham, the official currency of Morocco. The corresponding currency code is MAD.

د.ت is called the "Tunisian Dinar Symbol". It represents the Tunisian Dinar, the official currency of Tunisia. The corresponding currency code is TND.

R is called the "South African Rand Symbol". It represents the South African Rand, the official currency of South Africa. The corresponding currency code is ZAR. Its Unicode is U+0052.

🏛️ Historical Currencies

is called the "European Currency Unit Symbol". It represents the ECU, the predecessor to the Euro used by the European Community. The corresponding currency code is XEU (historical). Its Unicode is U+20A0, and the HTML entity is ₠.

is called the "Brazilian Cruzeiro Symbol". It represents the Cruzeiro, the former currency of Brazil. The corresponding currency code is BRB (historical). Its Unicode is U+20A2, and the HTML entity is ₢.

is called the "Argentine Austral Symbol". It represents the Austral, the former currency of Argentina. The corresponding currency code is ARA (historical). Its Unicode is U+20B3, and the HTML entity is ₳.

is called the "Spanish Maravedí Symbol". It represents the Maravedí, a historical Spanish coin. The corresponding currency code is Historical. Its Unicode is U+20B7, and the HTML entity is ₷.

is called the "French Livre Symbol". It represents the Livre, the historical currency of France. The corresponding currency code is Historical. Its Unicode is U+20B6, and the HTML entity is ₶.

is called the "German Pfennig Symbol". It represents the Pfennig, the subunit of the former German Mark. The corresponding currency code is DEM (subunit). Its Unicode is U+20B0, and the HTML entity is ₰.

is called the "Spanish Peseta Symbol". It represents the Peseta, the former currency of Spain. The corresponding currency code is ESP (historical). Its Unicode is U+20A7, and the HTML entity is ₧.

is called the "Greek Drachma Symbol". It represents the Drachma, the former currency of Greece. The corresponding currency code is GRD (historical). Its Unicode is U+20AF, and the HTML entity is ₯.

🈷️ CJK Currency Units

is called the "Yuan Character". It is the standard Chinese character for the Yuan, the base unit of China's Renminbi. The corresponding currency code is CNY. Its Unicode is U+5143, and the HTML entity is 元.

is called the "Traditional Yuan Character". It is the traditional Chinese character for Yuan, often used in formal contexts and on banknotes. The corresponding currency code is CNY. Its Unicode is U+5706, and the HTML entity is 園.

is called the "Classic Yuan Character". It is an alternative traditional form of the Yuan character. The corresponding currency code is CNY. Its Unicode is U+5713, and the HTML entity is 圓.

is called the "Yen Character". It is the Japanese kanji for Yen, used in Japan. The corresponding currency code is JPY. Its Unicode is U+5186, and the HTML entity is 円.

is called the "Tael Character". It represents the tael, a historical Chinese weight unit and currency. The corresponding currency code is CNY (traditional). Its Unicode is U+4E24, and the HTML entity is 两.

is called the "Mon Character". It represents the mon, a historical Japanese and Chinese coin unit. The corresponding currency code is Historical. Its Unicode is U+6587, and the HTML entity is 文.

is called the "Qian Character". It represents the qian, a historical Chinese currency unit. The corresponding currency code is CNY (traditional). Its Unicode is U+94B1, and the HTML entity is 钱.

is called the "Kwan Character". It represents the kwan (or guàn), a historical East Asian currency unit representing a string of coins. The corresponding currency code is Historical. Its Unicode is U+8D2F, and the HTML entity is 贯.

is called the "Fen Character". It represents the fen, the cent subunit of the Chinese Yuan. The corresponding currency code is CNY (subunit). Its Unicode is U+5206, and the HTML entity is 分.

is called the "Jiao Character". It represents the jiao, a dime subunit of the Chinese Yuan, with 10 jiao equaling one Yuan. The corresponding currency code is CNY (subunit). Its Unicode is U+89D2, and the HTML entity is 角.

🔠 Fullwidth Variants

is called the "Fullwidth Dollar Symbol". It is the fullwidth version of the dollar symbol, used in East Asian typography for monospaced layouts. The corresponding currency code is USD (typographic). Its Unicode is U+FF04, and the HTML entity is $.

is called the "Fullwidth Cent Symbol". It is the fullwidth version of the cent symbol. The corresponding currency code is USD (subunit). Its Unicode is U+FFE0, and the HTML entity is ¢.

is called the "Fullwidth Pound Symbol". It is the fullwidth version of the pound sterling symbol. The corresponding currency code is GBP. Its Unicode is U+FFE1, and the HTML entity is £.

is called the "Fullwidth Yuan Symbol". It is the fullwidth version of the Yen/Yuan symbol. The corresponding currency codes are CNY/JPY. Its Unicode is U+FFE5, and the HTML entity is ¥.

is called the "Fullwidth Won Symbol". It is the fullwidth version of the Korean Won symbol. The corresponding currency code is KRW. Its Unicode is U+FFE6, and the HTML entity is ₩.

✒️ Other Scripts & Minor Regional Symbols

is called the "Georgian Lari Symbol". It represents the Lari, the official currency of Georgia. The corresponding currency code is GEL. Its Unicode is U+20BE, and the HTML entity is ₾.

֏ is called the "Armenian Dram Symbol". It represents the Dram, the official currency of Armenia. The corresponding currency code is AMD. Its Unicode is U+058F, and the HTML entity is ֏.

ብር is called the "Ethiopian Birr Symbol". It represents the Birr, the official currency of Ethiopia, written in the Ge'ez script. The corresponding currency code is ETB.

གྲུམ is called the "Tibetan Currency Symbol". It represents a traditional Tibetan currency unit written in the Tibetan script. The corresponding currency code is Historical.

is called the "Tamil Rupee Symbol". It is a traditional rupee symbol used in the Tamil script of South India and Sri Lanka. The corresponding currency code is INR. Its Unicode is U+0BF9, and the HTML entity is ௹.

is called the "Gujarati Rupee Symbol". It is a traditional rupee symbol used in the Gujarati script. The corresponding currency code is INR. Its Unicode is U+0AF1, and the HTML entity is ૱.

is called the "Arabic Rial Symbol". It represents the Iranian Rial and is written in Arabic script. The corresponding currency code is IRR. Its Unicode is U+FDFC, and the HTML entity is ﷼.

؋ is called the "Afghani Symbol". It represents the Afghan Afghani in Arabic script. The corresponding currency code is AFN. Its Unicode is U+060B, and the HTML entity is ؋.

ރ is called the "Maldivian Rufiyaa Symbol". It represents the Rufiyaa in the Thaana script of the Maldives. The corresponding currency code is MVR. Its Unicode is U+0783, and the HTML entity is ރ.

📌 Usage Notes

1. The $ symbol is ambiguous across multiple countries – it's recommended to use currency codes (USD, CAD, MXN) for clarity in international contexts. 2. ¥ serves both Chinese Yuan and Japanese Yen, with context determining which currency is intended. 3. Many LaTeX symbols require additional packages such as textcomp or fontspec for proper rendering. 4. Some historical and rare script symbols require modern fonts with extensive Unicode coverage to display correctly.

💡 Tips

Click any symbol card to view its detailed information. You can copy Unicode values, LaTeX commands, HTML entities, and currency codes with a single click. Export SVG vector code for scalable graphics, or download 512×512 transparent PNG images for use in documents, design materials, presentations, and web development projects.