
Monty Montezuma
|
A bank may exchange them, but when they have been out of circulation for a certain number of years, I believe they can only be exchanged at the Bank of England itself. Jersey currency is not accepted in the rest of the British Isles, but Scottish currency is. |
|

Duke75
 |
Scottish pound notes are legal tender in England.
Take your English pound notes to the bank and they will give you face value for them. |
|

Curious Steve
|
No they are still valid, take them to a bank |
|

ak222002
 |
you can exchance / use them just they are not as common thats all |
|

Marc S
 |
Scottish £1 notes are still legal tender across the UK, not sure about Jersey. The English ones you'll need to exchange at the bank, though check on ebay (especially ebay USA) how much they go for before you exchange them. If they're old and/or rare they might be worth more than £1 to a collector. I know I've sold a few Scottish £5 notes to Americans for £7-8 (plus postage on top!) on ebay. |
|

SELB
|
If you are interested.
I will buy the 2 x £1 notes for the face value.
Which do you prefer? Paypal or cheque. |
|

mavericam
|
All money is exchangeable even old old white fivers etc |
|

Mental Mickey
 |
The Bank of England in London will always change notes at their face value, whether withdrawn from service or not (I think you have to write them), but a £1 note may actually be worth more to a collector on eBay, so it is worth considering this option - I'd pay a pound for one certainly if in good condition, so you should get your money back at least. I've not seen a Scottish £1 note in years, but I think they are still legal tender over there and should also therefore also be legal in England, though finding a shop who would take them would be quite difficult - a branch of the nearest Royal Bank of Scotland is probably your best bet to see if they'll change it for an English pound coin. I'm not sure of the status of Jersey money at all. Again, you'd probably have more luck selling it on to a collector, though your bank might change it for you on parity with the English pound. You can only go in and ask. |
|

jackie m
 |
They are real we still use them up here in Scotland. |
|

Ema H
 |
I think the best thing to do is to check with the bank, they might be interested in buying those notes from you. |
|

PAUL G
 |
They are no longer legal tender. |
|

| |
|