GBP — Pound Sterling
Rates for Pound Sterling (GBP) as published by every national bank tracked by exrate.
Country
Cross-bank index
Latest rates
| Bank | Rate | Last update |
|---|---|---|
| BOC — Bank of Canada | 1.8743 | 2026-06-12 |
| BOI — Bank of Israel | 3.9328 | 2026-06-12 |
| CBA — Central Bank of Armenia | 493.7300 | 2026-06-13 |
| CBR — Bank of Russia | 96.3707 | 2026-06-13 |
| CNB — Czech National Bank | 28.0000 | 2026-06-12 |
| DN — Danmarks Nationalbank | 8.6578 | 2026-06-11 |
| ECB — European Central Bank | 1.1587 | 2026-06-12 |
| NBG — National Bank of Georgia | 3.5658 | 2026-06-13 |
| NBK — National Bank of Kazakhstan | 656.1400 | 2026-06-13 |
| NBP — National Bank of Poland | 4.9223 | 2026-06-12 |
| NBRB — National Bank of the Republic of Belarus | 3.7044 | 2026-06-13 |
| NBU — National Bank of Ukraine | 60.0431 | 2026-06-13 |
| NB — Norges Bank | 12.7750 | 2026-06-12 |
| TCMB — Central Bank of the Republic of Türkiye | 61.6939 | 2026-06-13 |
How to read this chart
Each line is a normalized index, anchored at 100 at the first available date inside the chosen range. A line above 100 means the bank's national currency has weakened against GBP since the anchor; below 100 means it has strengthened.
Frequently asked questions
Why do banks publish different GBP rates?
Each central bank publishes its own daily fixing against its national currency. Differences reflect local market microstructure, methodology and timing.
What does 'normalized index' mean?
Each bank's series is divided by its first observation in the range, then multiplied by 100. All lines start at 100 from their own first date — useful for comparing shape across banks regardless of absolute level.
Why is one bank missing from the chart?
Either the bank does not quote GBP, or the bank has no observations inside the chosen date range. Try a wider range.