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Sales of the first euro coin starter kits in Bulgaria begin today, with the sets available at the Bulgarian National Bank, post offices and all banking branches nationwide. Both private individuals and companies can purchase them.
Each starter pack is priced at 20 leva, roughly 10.23 euros, and includes 42 coins covering every denomination. The composition features, among others, nine 1-cent coins, five 20-cent pieces and two 1-euro coins. The sets are designed to help people familiarize themselves with the new currency ahead of its introduction.
Although the coins are now on sale, they cannot be used for payments until January 1 of next year, when the euro officially enters circulation.
Scope Ratings has completed its latest review of Bulgaria and confirmed the country’s long-term credit rating at A- with a stable outlook, alongside short-term ratings of S-1/Stable
At the turn of the year, Bulgaria is preparing to enter 2026 without an approved state budget
In Bulgaria, the common perception that investing is reserved for the wealthy remains widespread, but recent analysis by Freedom24 shows that households can begin investing with modest amounts of 50–100 BGN (approximately €25–50) per month
The euro has been in use since 1999 as a non-cash accounting unit and since 2002 as physical currency.
Pension insurance contributions will not increase in 2026, while pensions themselves will be updated from 1 July under the Swiss indexation formula, resulting in an expected rise of 7–8%.
The digital euro is a crucial tool for strengthening Europe’s financial and strategic independence and will complement physical cash amid the rapid digitalisation of payments.
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