Logo Title
obverse
reverse
https://www.hnb.hr/

50 Kuna – Croatia

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: Dalmatian Dog
Croatia
Context
Year: 2021
Issuer: Croatia Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1991)
Currency:
(1994—2022)
Demonetization: 15 January 2023
Total mintage: 5,000
Material
Diameter: 15 mm
Weight: 1.94 g
Gold weight: 1.94 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 99.99% Gold
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard128
Numista: #316912
Value
Exchange value: 50 HRK
Bullion value: $324.08

Obverse

Description:
Dalmatian bust facing right, central coat of arms, sea and coastline.
Inscription:
REPUBLIKA HRVATSKA

50

KUNA
Translation:
REPUBLIC OF CROATIA

50

KUNAS
Script: Latin
Language: Croatian
Designer: Nikola Vudrag

Reverse

Description:
Two Dalmatians on a stone wall, one standing and one lying, with the sea behind them.
Inscription:
2021. DALMATINSKI PAS

CANIS DALMATICUS
Translation:
Dalmatian Dog

Dalmatian Dog
Script: Latin
Languages: Latin, Croatian
Designer: Nikola Vudrag

Edge

Plain

Categories

Animal> Dog

Mints

NameMark
Croatian Mint

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
20215,000

Historical background

In 2021, Croatia was in the final phase of a long-standing monetary transition, operating with the kuna (HRK) as its national currency while being formally integrated into the European Exchange Rate Mechanism II (ERM II). This "waiting room" for Eurozone membership, which Croatia entered in July 2020, required the country to maintain a stable exchange rate against the euro within a narrow band of ±15%. Throughout 2021, the Croatian National Bank successfully maintained this stability, with the kuna trading firmly around 7.5 HRK per EUR, a level it had held for years. This stability was a key prerequisite for the upcoming adoption of the euro.

The year was characterized by active technical and legislative preparations for the historic currency switch. The government and financial institutions worked on a detailed changeover plan, including public communication campaigns, logistical preparations for the dual circulation period, and the recalibration of millions of prices and automated systems. A significant milestone was the official convergence report published by the European Commission in June 2021, which gave a positive assessment of Croatia's readiness, confirming it met all the Maastricht criteria for adoption, albeit with a high but falling public debt level.

Underlying these technical steps was a broad political and social consensus in favor of euro adoption. Key motivations included the elimination of exchange rate risk and transaction costs for the tourism-dependent economy, enhanced investment stability, and the symbolic completion of Croatia's deeper integration into the European Union's core economic and political structures. Therefore, 2021 was not a year of monetary crisis or fluctuation for the kuna, but rather one of deliberate and stable preparation, setting the stage for the planned replacement of the kuna with the euro on January 1, 2023.

Series: Autochthonous Croatia

10 Kuna obverse
10 Kuna reverse
10 Kuna
2021
20 Kuna obverse
20 Kuna reverse
20 Kuna
2021
50 Kuna obverse
50 Kuna reverse
50 Kuna
2021
250 Kuna obverse
250 Kuna reverse
250 Kuna
2021
1000 Kuna obverse
1000 Kuna reverse
1000 Kuna
2021
1000 Kuna obverse
1000 Kuna reverse
1000 Kuna
2021
4 Euro obverse
4 Euro reverse
4 Euro
2024
💎 Extremely Rare