Logo Title
obverse
reverse
US Mint
Context
Years: 1990–2008
Issuer: Denmark Issuer flag
Currency:
(since 1873)
Demonetization: 10 January 2008
Total mintage: 541,205,154
Material
Diameter: 17.5 mm
Weight: 2.8 g
Thickness: 1.55 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Bronze (97% Copper, 2.5% Zinc, 0.5% Tin)
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard868
Numista: #1057
Value
Exchange value: 0.25 DKK = $0.04
Inflation-adjusted value: 0.50 DKK

Obverse

Description:
Crown of Christian V at center, splitting the date with its cross. Country name along rim below.
Inscription:
19 90

DANMARK
Translation:
NINETEEN 90

DENMARK
Script: Latin
Languages: English, Danish
Engraver: Johan Alkjaer

Reverse

Description:
Royal Mint face value, early issues with LG ♥ JP initials.
Inscription:


25

ØRE

LG ♥ JP
Translation:
TWENTY-FIVE ØRE

LG ♥ JP
Script: Latin
Languages: Danish, Norwegian

Edge

Plain

Mints

NameMark
Royal Danish Mint

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1990109,084,000
1991102,162,000
19926,293,000
199314,756,000
199435,750,000
199540,000,000
199646,760,000
199730,306,000
199817,200,000
199918,748,000
200014,500,000
200110,530,000
200212,000,000
200317,590,000
20043,000Proof
20047,040,304
200519,039,000
20052,650Proof
20061,800Proof
200616,796,000
200720,592,000
20071,400Proof
20082,049,000
20081,000Proof

Historical background

In 1990, Denmark's currency situation was defined by its pivotal role within the European Monetary System (EMS) and its ongoing political debate regarding deeper European integration. The Danish krone (DKK) was a central and stable member of the EMS Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM), pegged to the European Currency Unit (ECU) within narrow fluctuation bands. This arrangement, in place since 1979, had successfully provided low inflation and exchange rate stability, anchoring Denmark's small, open economy to its major trading partners, particularly Germany. The Bundesbank's monetary policy effectively became the benchmark for Denmark, requiring the Danmarks Nationalbank to closely shadow German interest rates to maintain the krone's peg.

This period was one of quiet stability for the krone itself, but it occurred against a tense political backdrop. Across Europe, the Maastricht Treaty negotiations were advancing, proposing a path to Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) and a single currency. Domestically, this sparked a profound debate about national sovereignty and economic policy. Many Danes, including key political and economic actors, were skeptical of ceding monetary control to a European central bank. The memory of the 1982 devaluation and the subsequent austerity that restored stability made authorities wary of any system that might compromise their hard-won credibility.

Thus, while the technical currency regime in 1990 was functioning smoothly within the ERM, the fundamental question was Denmark's future within it. The stage was being set for the pivotal 1992 referendum on the Maastricht Treaty, which would initially result in a Danish 'no' vote, triggering the EMS crises of 1992-93. Consequently, 1990 represents a calm before the storm—a year of operational stability for the krone, but one of growing political uncertainty about Denmark's commitment to the next, more binding stage of European monetary integration.

Series: 1990 Denmark circulation coins

25 Øre obverse
25 Øre reverse
25 Øre
1990-2008
5 Kroner obverse
5 Kroner reverse
5 Kroner
1990-2023
20 Kroner obverse
20 Kroner reverse
20 Kroner
1990-1993
🌱 Very Common