Currency Act 1983

Type Public General Act
Publication 1983-03-28
State In force
Department Statute Law Database
Reform history JSON API

Coinage

Amendments of Coinage Act 1971 in connection with changes in the coinage

1

(1) (1) The following provisions of this section have effect with respect to coins made at the Mint. (2) Gold coins and coins of silver of the Queen’s Maundy money shall, if of a denomination mentioned in Schedule 1 to this Act, be of the weight and fineness specified there, but in the making of the coins a remedy (that is, a variation from the standard weight and fineness so specified) shall be allowed of an amount not exceeding that specified in that Schedule. (3) Gold coins and coins of silver of the Queen’s Maundy money shall, if any other denomination, be of such weight and fineness as may be specified in a proclamation under section 3 of this Act. (4) Coins other than gold coins and coins of silver of the Queen’s Maundy money shall be of such weight, composition and dimensions as may be specified in a proclamation under that section. (5) In the making of the coins to which subsections (3) and (4) above apply, such remedy shall be allowed as may be specified in the proclamation. (6) The variation from the standard weight of any coin (other than a gold coin of a denomination mentioned in Schedule 1 to this Act) specified for that coin in accordance with this section shall be measured as the average of a sample of not more than one kilogram of that coin. (7) In subsection (5) above “remedy” means— (a) in relation to gold coins and coins of silver of the Queen’s Maundy money, a variation from the standard weight and fineness specified in the proclamation of an amount not exceeding that so specified; (b) in relation to other coins, a variation from the standard weight, composition or dimensions so specified of an amount not exceeding that so specified.

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(1) Gold coins shall be legal tender for payment of any amount, but shall not be legal tender if their weight has become less than that specified in Schedule 1 to this Act, or in the proclamation under which they are made, as the least current weight. (1A) Subject to any provision made by proclamation under section 3 of this Act, coins of cupronickel, silver or bronze shall be legal tender as follows— (a) coins of cupronickel or silver of denominations of more than 10 pence, for payment of any amount not exceeding £10; (b) coins of cupronickel or silver of denominations of not more than 10 pence, for payment of any amount not exceeding £5; (c) coins of bronze, for payment of any amount not exceeding 20 pence (1B) Other coins, if made current by a proclamation under section 3 of this Act, shall be legal tender in accordance with the provision made by that proclamation or by any later proclamation made under that section.

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(3) In this section “coins” means coins made by the Mint in accordance with this Act and not called in by proclamation under section 3 of this Act.

(c) determine the weight and fineness of any gold coins or coins of silver of the Queen’s Maundy money, other than those of a denomination mentioned in Schedule 1 to this Act, the remedy to be allowed in making them and (for gold coins) their least current weight; (cc) determine the weight and composition of any coins, other than gold coins or coins of silver of the Queen’s Maundy money, and the remedy (if any) to be allowed in making them; (cd) provide for the variation from the standard weight specified in Schedule 1 to this Act for a gold coin of a denomination mentioned in that Schedule to be measured in the manner specified in the proclamation; ” ;

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(dd) determine the percentage of impurities which coins other than gold coins and coins of silver of the Queen’s Maundy money may contain;

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(ff) direct that any coin shall be legal tender for payment of any amount not exceeding such amount as may be specified in the proclamation or for payment of any amount (without limit);

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(2) So far as it relates to the matters mentioned in paragraph (ff) of subsection (1) above, a proclamation under this section may make different provision in relation to different parts of the United Kingdom.

Gold coins of a denomination mentioned in Schedule 1 to this Act ........ Eleven twelfths fine gold and one twelfth alloy.
Other gold coins ............ Gold of the standard fineness specified in the proclamation under which the coins are made.

Bank of England note issue

Limit on amount of Bank of England fiduciary note issue

2

Writing off unpresented bank notes which have ceased to be legal tender

3

Supplementary

Short title, interpretation, repeals and extent

4

SCHEDULE

Amendments of Coinage Act 1971 in connection with changes in the coinage.

Editorial notes

[^c756749]: 1971 c. 34.

[^c756750]: S. 2(3) restricted (temp. from 3.12.1999 until 2.6.2000) by S.I. 1999/3228, art. 2

[^c756752]: 1844 c. 32.

[^c756754]: 1928 c. 13.

[^key-a9bba376944accebb688fb30570df81c]: S. 2(8) repealed (22.7.2004) by Statute Law (Repeals) Act 2004 (c. 14), Sch. 1 Pt. 17 Group 2

[^key-f58277559379f3dad166b6b4bfc8ea2d]: S. 2(9) repealed (22.7.2004) by Statute Law (Repeals) Act 2004 (c. 14), Sch. 1 Pt. 17 Group 2

[^key-322a3a733aaa305daa139a218905ebf6]: S. 3(5) repealed (22.7.2004) by Statute Law (Repeals) Act 2004 (c. 14), Sch. 1 Pt. 17 Group 2

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