Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Dario Silva Collection CC BY-NC
Context
Years: 2009–2022
Issuer: Turkey Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1923)
Currency:
(since 2005)
Total mintage: 2,948,807,110
Material
Diameter: 26.15 mm
Weight: 8.2 g
Thickness: 2 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Bimetallic (Copper-nickel center, Brass ring)
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard1244
Numista: #6163
Value
Exchange value: 1 TRY = $0.02
Inflation-adjusted value: 16.71 TRY

Obverse

Description:
Atatürk's head in left profile.
Inscription:
TÜRKİYE CUMHURİYETİ
Translation:
REPUBLIC OF TURKEY
Script: Latin
Language: Turkish

Reverse

Description:
Crescent and star above, date below, surrounding a central Rumi-art ring with denomination, all on a Rumi motif background.
Inscription:
1

TÜRK LİRASI

2012
Translation:
TURKISH LIRA

2012
Script: Latin
Language: Turkish

Edge

Legend:
ı∣|∣ı T.C. ı∣|∣ı ⤙⥺ ı∣|∣ı T.C. ı∣|∣ı ⤙⥺ ı∣|∣ı T.C. ı∣|∣ı ⤙⥺
Translation:
T.C. T.C. T.C.
Language: Turkish

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
2009
2010215,545,000
2011100,735,000
201292,697,750
201388,251,000
2014125,000,462
2015213,134,000
2016183,815,000
2017167,216,900
2018265,375,000
2019296,285,000
2020353,646,000
2021413,549,998
2022433,556,000

Historical background

In 2009, Turkey's currency situation was defined by the severe aftershocks of the global financial crisis, which abruptly ended a period of strong growth and stability. The Turkish Lira (TRY), which had benefited from high foreign investment inflows and a reform-driven positive sentiment in the mid-2000s, came under intense pressure. As global risk appetite vanished, capital fled emerging markets, leading to a sharp depreciation of the Lira. Over the course of 2008-2009, the Lira lost approximately 25% of its value against the US dollar, severely straining corporations with foreign currency debt and raising concerns about financial stability.

The Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey (CBRT) responded with a series of aggressive interest rate cuts, slashing its benchmark rate from 16.75% in late 2008 to a historic low of 6.5% by November 2009. This bold, unorthodox strategy aimed to stimulate domestic demand and cushion the economic contraction, even as the currency weakened. The policy was partly viable because low global inflation and weak domestic demand limited immediate pass-through effects of the weaker Lira into consumer prices. The economy, heavily reliant on external financing, contracted by 4.8% in 2009, but the banking sector, restructured after the 2001 crisis, remained resilient and avoided collapse.

By the end of 2009, the currency situation had stabilized from its crisis lows, with the Lira recovering some ground as global conditions improved and risk appetite tentatively returned. However, the year established a precarious template: heavy reliance on short-term foreign capital inflows for growth and stability, and a central bank increasingly willing to prioritize growth over currency defense. This set the stage for the persistent "twin deficits" (current account and budget) and chronic currency volatility that would define the coming decade, as the deep rate cuts of 2009 marked the beginning of a long period of largely negative real interest rates.

Series: 2009 Turkey circulation coins

1 Kuruş obverse
1 Kuruş reverse
1 Kuruş
2009-2022
5 Kuruş obverse
5 Kuruş reverse
5 Kuruş
2009-2022
10 Kuruş obverse
10 Kuruş reverse
10 Kuruş
2009-2022
25 Kuruş obverse
25 Kuruş reverse
25 Kuruş
2009-2022
50 Kuruş obverse
50 Kuruş reverse
50 Kuruş
2009-2022
1 Lira obverse
1 Lira reverse
1 Lira
2009-2022
🌱 Very Common