It’s pre 1989 hungarian money. Btw worths more now for collectors than 100 HUF but cant be used as official money.
Its not current and unfortunately it has no numismatic value.
It was very common, i dont see any misprint and it is folded.
Keep it for interesting “showing piece” to friends
As many stated before me, it has been invalidated since 31st December, 1998. However the old currencies are still sold as they have numismatical values. Of course the value is based upon condition, date of the note (equals rarity). An interesting fact that only the 100 Ft banknote has the four variations which marked the rulership of Hungary (the coat of arm in the middle was Kossuth’s CoA from 1946-1949 representing the post-war Hungary, then Rákosi’s CoA from 1949-1956, then Kádár’s CoA from 1956-1989, then the still active “new republic coat of arm” from 1989-1998 when the government changed the banknote to a coin, which was first appeared as a regular coin made out of one type of metal, later changed to a bi-metal coin.
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Nope. I have never seen one and I am 30+.
https://preview.redd.it/b1kke86gsweb1.jpeg?width=318&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=8646a4696366b0665a49b4eab86608d0b34a6a3f
that’s how it looks like now
No, there is coin instead of it.
nope. 100 forints is a coin since 1992. now it’s worth about one single bread roll.
No. We have coins for 100Ft now.
This is very old. You can find it [here.](https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banknotes_of_the_Hungarian_forint)
It’s pre 1989 hungarian money. Btw worths more now for collectors than 100 HUF but cant be used as official money.
Its not current and unfortunately it has no numismatic value.
It was very common, i dont see any misprint and it is folded.
Keep it for interesting “showing piece” to friends
As many stated before me, it has been invalidated since 31st December, 1998. However the old currencies are still sold as they have numismatical values. Of course the value is based upon condition, date of the note (equals rarity). An interesting fact that only the 100 Ft banknote has the four variations which marked the rulership of Hungary (the coat of arm in the middle was Kossuth’s CoA from 1946-1949 representing the post-war Hungary, then Rákosi’s CoA from 1949-1956, then Kádár’s CoA from 1956-1989, then the still active “new republic coat of arm” from 1989-1998 when the government changed the banknote to a coin, which was first appeared as a regular coin made out of one type of metal, later changed to a bi-metal coin.