The New Syrian Currency: Observations on the Ground

An Improvement in Living Standards?

A combination of old bank notes (top left: the old 5000 note mentioned earlier) and new bank notes (primarily 200 new Syrian pound notes, each one equivalent to 20,000 in the old currency). These notes were received at a jewelry store as an exchange for U.S. dollars.

A combination of old bank notes (top left: the old 5000 note mentioned earlier) and new bank notes (primarily 200 new Syrian pound notes, each one equivalent to 20,000 in the old currency). These notes were received at a jewelry store as an exchange for U.S. dollars.

Image: Author

𐌹t has now been six months or so since the Syrian government introduced a new version of the Syrian pound: essentially a re-domination of the currency under the Assad regime that removes two zeros. For example, 5000 old Syrian pounds (the highest monetary note under the old regime, featuring on one side a Syrian soldier saluting next to the old Syrian flag) would equal 50 Syrian pounds under the new currency. Meanwhile, the highest monetary note under the new government is 500 Syrian pounds, equivalent to 50000 Syrian pounds under the old regime.

But what do transactions look like on the ground? Moreover, has the re-denomination led to any improvement in people’s daily lives?

Firstly, although a number of months have passed since the introduction of the new currency, in most instances I have observed in markets and stores, in areas that were controlled by the Assad regime, the habit of stating prices in the old currency persists, while in areas that were controlled by the rebels such as the town of Azaz on the border with Turkey, stating prices in the Turkish lira (the primary currency that was used in those areas before the regime fell) remains common. Receipts and listing of prices in the new currency do exist, but they have not yet become the norm. For example, prices for mobile phone data and call packages are now listed in the new Syrian pound. Similarly, the bill below for a meal at a restaurant at the Aleppo Sheraton Hotel in Aleppo city gives the price in new Syrian pounds (with equivalent in US dollars), but restaurants I have visited in the city still give prices in the old currency.

A bill from 2 May 2026 from a restaurant at the Aleppo Sheraton Hotel (lunch for two people). The receipt gives prices in new Syrian pounds (equivalent to 263,000 Syrian pounds in the old currency).

A bill from 2 May 2026 from a restaurant at the Aleppo Sheraton Hotel (lunch for two people). The receipt gives prices in new Syrian pounds (equivalent to 263,000 Syrian pounds in the old currency).

Image: Author

Meanwhile, purchases, sales and exchanges of currency, are readily being conducted with a combination of the new and old monetary units. For example, let us say that a fruit and vegetable seller sells me various items at a price of 60,000 Syrian pounds in the old denomination, it would be generally accepted for me to give him a 500 new Syrian pound note and then two 5000 old notes. Similarly, when I have gone and exchanged U.S. dollars for Syrian pounds, I might be given the equivalent only in new Syrian pounds, the equivalent only in old Syrian pounds, or a combination of the two. Part of the reason for this combined use of old and new notes is a matter of availability. Some of the newer notes (e.g. the new 25 Syrian pound note) still seem rare in comparison with older equivalents that remain common and are more convenient to use (e.g. the old 2000 Syrian pound note, which features Bashar al-Assad’s portrait, and the old 500 Syrian pound note).

A group of bank notes given as part of a currency exchange at a store. Included among the old 5000 Syrian pound notes are some 50 new Syrian pound notes, with the new 50 pound note equivalent to the old 5000 note.

A group of bank notes given as part of a currency exchange at a store. Included among the old 5000 Syrian pound notes are some 50 new Syrian pound notes, with the new 50 pound note equivalent to the old 5000 note.

Image: Author

A combination of old and new bank notes at a store, featuring the old 5000 note, the old 2000 note, the new 100 note, and the old 500 note.

A combination of old and new bank notes at a store, featuring the old 5000 note, the old 2000 note, the new 100 note, and the old 500 note.

Image: Author

And what about the impact of the new currency on people’s lives? Certainly, the re-denomination generally makes larger transactions more convenient: no need to learn a specific technique of holding and counting a wad of notes when purchasing goods at a price of e.g. 250,000 old Syrian pounds (50 old 5000 Syrian notes, but just 5 new 500 Syrian pound notes by comparison).

However, the introduction of the new currency has not somehow led to an improvement in the broader cost of living crisis in Syria. The simple fact is that both before and after the fall of the Assad regime, people’s incomes here have generally been insufficient to meet living expenses. Moreover, over the past year or so, there has been a noticeable and continuous decline in the value of the Syrian pound against the U.S. dollar. Around this time last year, following President Trump’s intent to announce the lifting of sanctions on Syria, the Syrian pound experienced a notable surge on the black market, coming to under 10,000 old Syrian pounds against the dollar. Today, the black market rate is hovering at around 14,000-14,500 old Syrian pounds against the dollar, not too far from what the rate was under the Assad regime. To illustrate the extent of the decline by way of practical example: I purchased a house for 100,000,000 old Syrian pounds around this time last year with the owner asking for the money to be paid in old Syrian pounds. This was equivalent to just over $10,000. Today, that same sum I gave him in Syrian pounds would only be worth around $6500-7000. This undoubtedly reflects a substantial loss for him.

The official exchange rate (which is used on the restaurant bill given above, for example), remains well below the black market rate, hovering at around 11,000 old Syrian pounds. The gap in the official exchange rate is undoubtedly one factor behind the observed decline in the value of the Syrian pound on the black market. Other cited factors include an increase in imports into the country versus weak export levels.

Besides the decline in the value of the currency, some services and commodities have also become more expensive. A clear case is the price of gasoline per litre, which gasoline stations generally prefer to set and sell in dollars. Previously, this price was set at $0.85 per litre. It is now $1.10 per litre (see below).

Gasoline for sale at a station in the Aleppo area in early June, giving the price in dollars ($1.10), Turkish lira (51) and old Syrian pounds (15,180). The exchange rate is 13,800 old Syrian pounds to the dollar: a black market rate rather than the official exchange rate.

Gasoline for sale at a station in the Aleppo area in early June, giving the price in dollars ($1.10), Turkish lira (51) and old Syrian pounds (15,180). The exchange rate is 13,800 old Syrian pounds to the dollar: a black market rate rather than the official exchange rate.

Image: Author

In the long run, satisfaction with the new government among the wider populace will depend on whether the government can bring about a tangible improvement in living standards for large sections of it. So far, the hoped-for improvements have generally not materialised.

Published originally on June 11, 2026.

Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi is the Director of the Middle East Forum’s Syria office. He is an independent Arabic translator, editor, and analyst. A graduate of Brasenose College, Oxford University, he earned his Ph.D. from Swansea University, where he studied the role of historical narratives in Islamic State propaganda. His research focuses primarily on Iraq, Syria, and jihadist groups, especially the Islamic State, on which he maintains an archive of the group’s internal documents. He has also published an Arabic translation and study of the Latin work Historia Arabum, the earliest surviving Western book focused on Arab and Islamic history. For his insights, he has been quoted in a wide variety of media outlets, including the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and AFP.
See more from this Author
An Interview with a Contact Who Resides in the Iranian City of Qom
The Islamic State Is Hostile to the Event Given That It Features the Football Teams of Nation-States (A Concept Opposed by the Islamic State) Playing Against Each Other
Interview with a Leading Figure in the ā€˜National Guard’
See more on this Topic
America Didn’t Achieve a Single One of Its Aims in Iran
An Interview with a Contact Who Resides in the Iranian City of Qom
Israel’s Alumot Unit Turns Battlefield AI From Research Into Real-Time Combat Capability