Today, nothing. Italy adopted the euro in 2002 and all lira currency was taken out of circulation that year.
If you have old lira coins or bills you might be able to find a bank in a major city where you could exchange them but it would hardly be worth the effort. At the exchange rate in effect at the time, 1000 lira were only worth about 75¢
It's kind of like asking "How much is $100 in the USA?"
100 lira in Italy is worth 100 lira.
100 lira is worth $0.07 (7 cents) in the USA.
100 lira is worth 0.07 (7/100) of a euro.
50 cents :/
Italy hasn't used lira since 2002 when they switched to the euro. At that time 100 lira was worth about 7 US cents.
Before Italy adopted the Euro the currency was the Lira. good
Zero. Lira are not produced anymore. Italy uses the Euro.
The lira was the previous unit of Italian money. But Italy discarded their longtime monetary unit, in favor of the 'euro', with the Italian Republic's membership in the European Union. Switching to the 'euro' isn't mandatory. But Italy decided to do so.
Italy hasn't used lira since 2002 when they switched to the euro. At that time 100 lira was worth about 7 US cents.
Yes, bin is thousand. 100 Bin lira = 100 Lira.
It used to be the Lire, but now it's the Euro.
Italy does not have "Italian dollars". Italy switched over from the Lira to the Euro.
Italy
Italy has used the Euro since 1999. Prior to that, the Lira was used.
The lira has not been in use in Italy since 2002 when the euro was adopted. At that time the exchange rate was roughly £1 = 3,140 lira, so 5,000 lira was about £1.59
The lira has not been in use since 2002. Italy is now entirely on the Euro system.