£50 notes

On a slightly different note (see what I did there), why do people ask if you have anything smaller? Of course you haven't.

I'd like to buy a packet of crisps with a fifty.

Usually people do, but they like to be flash with the cash. Daft if you ask me. Why carry around 500 quid in 50's when you can just use your bank card in 99% of places.

Then again if waving around that much cash makes you happy then it's up to you.
 
Usually people do, but they like to be flash with the cash. Daft if you ask me. Why carry around 500 quid in 50's when you can just use your bank card in 99% of places.

Then again if waving around that much cash makes you happy then it's up to you.

Many places still don't accept card.
Butchers, greengrocers, deli, a lot of small shops, pubs, clubs. Restaurants. Loads of places.
I barely go to large shops unless shopping for clothes etc.

Use my card where possible but it's always better to have cash on you, I always carry a few hundred.
 
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I seem to remember the days you could withdrawal £5 from a cash machine. That was great for when I got pocket money (which was little) and wanted to take out the most I would need.
 
Many places still don't accept card.
Butchers, greengrocers, deli, a lot of small shops, pubs, clubs. Restaurants. Loads of places.
I barely go to large shops unless shopping for clothes etc.

Use my card where possible but it's always better to have cash on you, I always carry a few hundred.


A few hundred in case the deli or butchers dont take your card..... what the heck are you buying???
 
My weekly shopping.
Usually ends up being about £100 on fresh food alone at least usually more.

It's like spending money for me, I go down the pub every night near enough, go out on weekends, go to quite a few cafes and restaurants.

I don't spend all of it but I do spend a lot of money in small places with no card machines.
 
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Many places still don't accept card.
Butchers, greengrocers, deli, a lot of small shops, pubs, clubs. Restaurants. Loads of places.
I barely go to large shops unless shopping for clothes etc.

Use my card where possible but it's always better to have cash on you, I always carry a few hundred.

I know who to mug now :)
 
Yeah they're not officially legal tender, but generally in practice are accepted as such in a sort of "gentleman's agreement". Either way the only £100 note I ever had I changed in HSBC without an issue. :)

Scottish notes are not even legal tender in Scotland, however, they are legal currency in the whole of the UK.
 
Does anyone else love £50 notes?
I just love the size and look of them, and the graphics, they're so damn english, red on white, I like that. And the fact when you hand one to the cashier they instantly **** their pants and start trying to proove its fake.
Anyone else find this, i've just drawn out £500 in £50 notes, i love how they don't fit in my wallet.

I tried going in to Cafe Nero once to buy a coffee while waiting to for the estate agents to get back from lunch to put a deposit on a house. I had my money and 2 of my house mates money all in £50's in an envelope.. So must have been at least £4,000 in £50's, maybe more.

I forgot this, and it was the only money I had on me.. So when I tried to buy a coffee with one of them, they wern't having any of it, got really edgy, called their managers out who asked me to leave.
 
Because there scottish notes?

If so then thats rubbish, it is illegal for any shop not to accept them. Or so I have been told.

Scottish notes are not legal tender in England. iirc it works both ways and English money is treated the same way up here.
 
2 years i was at work, think i saw 3max all genuine thank god, i've never personally had a £50 note, but a £50 note is nothing compaired to the 50 million dollar note just printed in zimbabwe
 
First - legal tender is not the same as legal currency. If you go into a shop and buy something legal tender is irrelevant.

Second - If you offer any money to buy something, irrespective of whether its English, Scottish, NI notes then the shop can say no thanks.

Third - if you go to shop and offer to pay with fake money you are braking the law as it is not lawful currency. If a shop keeper doesn't like legal currency money you have not
broken the law.

Fourth - If you go to restaurant and have a meal then go to pay for it then legal tender come into the equation. In England if you hand over a mankie English £10 then the restaurant has to take it as payment. They do not have to take Scottish notes. In Scotland the restaurant can reject any notes English or Scottish.

If you offer to pay with a reasonably clean note of any type and it is rejected and then walk out, you would not be doing anything illegal (i.e. not theft etc) but you would still be liable to pay the bill.
 
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Fear the Scottish note. Making English shopkeepers uneasy since 1707.

+1 for you pal!

:D
 
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