Travel tips
Currency & money in Timor-Leste
US dollars for notes, local centavos for coins — plus every bank, ATM and money changer on one map.
- USD official
- Centavos for small change
- ATMs in Dili & district capitals
- Crisp post-2006 notes only
A dollar economy with its own coins
- $ USD Official currency since 2000
- 1, 5, 10, 25, 50, 100 ¢ Local centavo coins
- ~$500 Typical ATM daily limit
- 0 % VAT on goods & services
Timor-Leste has used the US dollar as its official currency since 25 January 2000, shortly after the restoration of independence. Notes from $5 up to $100 circulate just as they do in the United States — but at the smallest end, the country mints its own coinage in "centavos" (1/100 of a US dollar). One centavo equals one US cent in value, and US coins also circulate at parity, so you will often see a Timorese 25-centavo coin and a US quarter rattling around in the same pocket. There is no $1 note in everyday circulation: the missing dollar bill is replaced by the 100-centavo coin.
Cards accepted at
A small but growing pocket of card-friendly venues, almost all in Dili.
- Mid-range and top-end Dili hotels
- Some Dili restaurants & cafés
- Established dive shops on Atauro & Dili
- Timor Plaza shops & supermarkets
Cash only at
Assume USD cash everywhere else — withdraw before you leave Dili.
- Microlets, taxis & mototaxis
- Market stalls and roadside food
- Most guesthouses outside Dili
- Mountain restaurants & pousadas
USD banknotes accepted
Only later-series US notes are reliably accepted, and only if they are clean and untorn. Vendors and banks routinely refuse damaged USD because they cannot bank them. Carry a mix of small and large bills — change for a $100 is genuinely hard to find outside the capital.
| Denomination | Accepted | Minimum series year | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| $100 | ✓ Yes | 2006 | Most travelers' default for large payments; bring crisp notes. |
| $50 | ✓ Yes | 2006 | Widely accepted; check no tears, no marks. |
| $20 | ✓ Yes | 2006 | Best workhorse note — change is easy. |
| $10 | ✓ Yes | 2006 | Useful for taxis, guesthouses. |
| $5 | ✓ Yes | 2006 | Smallest paper denomination — keep a stack. |
| $1 | ✗ No | — | Not accepted as a banknote; use centavos coins instead. |
| $2 | ✗ No | — | Rare in TL; vendors may refuse. |
Centavos coins (and US coins at parity)
Below the $5 note, everything is coinage. The Banco Central de Timor-Leste mints seven centavos denominations, and the 100-centavo coin in particular does the daily work that a $1 note would do elsewhere. Standard US coins also circulate, accepted one-for-one against the centavos equivalent — a US quarter and a 25-centavo coin are interchangeable.
| Coin | Equivalent USD | Common use |
|---|---|---|
| 200 centavos | $2.00 | Snacks, microlets in Dili. |
| 100 centavos | $1.00 | Most common coin; replaces the missing $1 note. |
| 50 centavos | $0.50 | Small produce, water bottles. |
| 25 centavos | $0.25 | Mototaxi, street snacks. |
| 10 centavos | $0.10 | Change. |
| 5 centavos | $0.05 | Change. |
| 1 centavo | $0.01 | Rare in circulation. |
Banks in Timor-Leste
Five banks have an everyday consumer presence. Branch banking is available in Dili and the larger municipal capitals; outside those, you are limited to ATMs (or no banking at all).
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BNCTL
Banco Nacional de Comércio de Timor-Leste — the national bank. The widest physical footprint in the country, with branches in all 13 municipalities. The default choice if you need to reach a teller outside Dili.
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BNU
Banco Nacional Ultramarino — Portuguese-owned, the most international of the five. Main branch on Avenida dos Direitos Humanos, Dili; ATMs at Timor Plaza, the airport, and several Dili hotels. Best Visa/Mastercard coverage.
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Mandiri
Bank Mandiri — Indonesian, useful if you are crossing in from West Timor or need to convert IDR. Branch on Avenida Presidente Nicolau Lobato. Accepts JCB at its ATMs.
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BRI
Bank Rakyat Indonesia — branches in Dili (Colmera and Comoro) and Maliana near the West Timor border. Useful in the western municipalities.
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ANZ
ANZ closed its retail branches in Timor-Leste but its ATMs remain live in Dili — including Hotel Timor and Timor Plaza. Reliable for Australian-issued cards.
Money changers in Dili
Most travellers never need a money changer — the US dollar is the currency — but if you are arriving with AUD, IDR, EUR or SGD, these are the established Dili counters. Compare rates between two of them before committing a large stack; spreads vary by the day.
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Timor Plaza Money Changer
Ground floor, Timor Plaza, Comoro Road, Dili. The most-used counter for travellers — accepts USD, AUD, IDR, EUR and SGD with competitive rates.
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Halaibu Money Changer
Colmera district, central Dili. Reliable rates for AUD and IDR; closed on Sundays.
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Hadomi Money Changer
Lecidere, eastern Dili. Convenient for travellers staying along the beachfront and Cristo Rei side of the city.
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Airport Currency Exchange
Presidente Nicolau Lobato International Airport, arrivals hall. Convenient on landing, but rates are noticeably worse than town — use for an emergency only.
ATMs around Dili
ATMs are concentrated in the capital. Once you leave Dili the network thins quickly — Baucau and Maliana have working ATMs, but Atauro, Maubisse, Suai and most other towns are cash-only. Plan to withdraw your full trip budget before you head outside the city.
Major ATM locations & what cards they accept
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BNU ATM — Timor Plaza
Inside the Timor Plaza shopping centre, Comoro Road. The most international-friendly ATM in the country: accepts Visa, Mastercard, Maestro, Cirrus and UnionPay.
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BNCTL ATM — Avenida dos Direitos Humanos
Outside the BNCTL head office in central Dili. Visa and Mastercard only. Reliable but the lowest withdrawal cap of the major ATMs.
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ANZ ATM — Hotel Timor lobby
Inside Hotel Timor on the Dili waterfront. The default ANZ-cardholder option in town; accepts Visa and Mastercard.
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BNU ATM — Dili Airport (arrivals)
Just past customs in the arrivals hall at Presidente Nicolau Lobato. Visa and Mastercard. Confirmed working around the clock — useful for late-night landings.
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Mandiri ATM — Comoro
Outside the Mandiri Comoro branch on Avenida Presidente Nicolau Lobato. One of the few ATMs in Dili to accept JCB alongside Visa and Mastercard.
Practical tips before you travel
- Bring crisp post-2006 notes. Many vendors and even banks visually check series year and condition; older or damaged notes get refused.
- Withdraw your full trip budget in Dili. Once you leave the capital, ATMs are rare — Atauro, the highlands, and the south coast are effectively cash-only.
- Card-only payment is uncommon outside the top hotels and Timor Plaza. Assume cash for restaurants, guesthouses, dive operators, taxis and microlets.
- Expect ATM fees of $1–4 per withdrawal on top of whatever your home bank charges for a foreign-currency withdrawal — and pick the highest per-transaction limit you can to minimise the per-fee hit.
- WhatsApp Pay and SOTcoin are emerging digital options used by a small but growing set of merchants — see the /pay/ page for current acceptance.
"I learned the hard way — a single torn corner on a $20 bill, and three vendors in a row waved me off. Pull crisp post-2006 notes from your home bank before you fly, and carry them flat." — Repeat visitor, Dili waterfront