Explore world currencies and where they’re used, from major reserve currencies to local tender and symbols. These quizzes help you connect countries and regions with their official money and common abbreviations.
Spot the right currency sign fast with this mixed-difficulty quiz on $, €, and ¥. You’ll match symbols to currencies, countries, and common real-world uses, building confidence for travel, shopping, and finance basics. Choose how many questions to play and the difficulty level that fits your pace.

Match ISO currency codes to the right currencies and sharpen your global money knowledge. This mixed-difficulty quiz blends everyday codes with less common ones, so you’ll build confidence fast. Choose your preferred question count and difficulty, then answer at your own pace with no timer.

Travel through monetary history by matching obsolete currencies to what replaced them. From redenominations to currency unions, this quiz tests whether you can connect old notes and coins with their modern successors. Choose your question count and difficulty, then play at your own pace with no timer.
There are 3 quizzes with 327 questions total.
No. Each question is untimed so you can answer at your own pace.
Each question is multiple-choice with 4 options, typically asking you to match a country or region to its currency.
Yes. Some questions include ISO currency codes and abbreviations, alongside currency names and symbols.
No. The 3 quizzes vary, combining easy recognition questions with harder ones like shared names, shared currencies, and less common units.
These Currencies quizzes focus on identifying official currencies by country and region, along with common names, symbols, and ISO codes (like USD, JPY, or ZAR).
You’ll also practice spotting look-alike names (dollar, peso, dinar) and distinguishing where each one is actually used.
Each question gives you 4 answer options, and there’s no timer—so you can think through tricky country–currency pairs without rushing.
Quizzes vary in length and difficulty, mixing straightforward matches with more challenging cases such as shared currencies, recent currency changes, and similarly named units.
Many countries share currency names because of historical trade, colonization, or monetary unions; for example, “franc” and “dinar” appear across multiple regions, while the euro is used by many countries under a single monetary policy.