Brazilian Real (R$) to Peruvian Sol (S/) Conversion
Brazilian Real
The Brazilian Real (BRL) was introduced on 1 July 1994 as part of the Plano Real — an economic stabilisation programme that successfully ended Brazil's hyperinflation, which had peaked at over 2,000% annually in the early 1990s. The Real replaced the Cruzeiro Real at 1:2,750 and was initially pegged to the US Dollar before transitioning to a managed float in 1999. Managed by the Banco Central do Brasil, the BRL is the most traded Latin American currency and critical for your Portuguese-speaking audience.
Peruvian Sol
The Peruvian Sol (PEN) is the official currency of Peru. Introduced in 1991 to replace the Inti (which had suffered hyperinflation), the sol takes its name from the Latin word for sun, also depicted on Peru's national coat of arms. Peru is one of the world's top producers of copper, gold, zinc, and silver, making the sol a commodity-sensitive currency. The Banco Central de Reserva del Perú manages monetary policy, and Peru is one of Latin America's more economically stable countries.
| Brazilian Real (R$) | Peruvian Sol (S/) |
|---|---|
| R$ 0.1 | S/ 0.1 |
| R$ 1 | S/ 1 |
| R$ 2 | S/ 2 |
| R$ 3 | S/ 3 |
| R$ 5 | S/ 5 |
| R$ 10 | S/ 10 |
| R$ 20 | S/ 20 |
| R$ 30 | S/ 30 |
| R$ 50 | S/ 50 |
| R$ 100 | S/ 100 |
| R$ 1000 | S/ 1000 |