France, Germany, Luxembourg, Finland, Spain, Portugal, Italy, Austria, Belgium, Netherlands, Greece, Ireland, Cyprus and Malta are the 'members'. There are also other states which don't have their own separate currencies and use the Euro, they are;- Monaco, Vatican City, Andorra, San Marino, Kosovo and Montenegro
The countries listed all have their own currencies, except those in the Euro zone, who share the Euro.
Three countries in Africa own and operate submarines.AlgeriaEgyptSouth Africa
No, it is not used in countries in Africa. African countries have their own currencies.
Yes, all of them has their own currencies.
South Africa
No African countries use the euro.
As of the 1st of January 2014, 18 of the European Union's 28 countries use the euro.
17 countries use the euro, as of 1/1/11They areAustriaBelgiumCyprusEstoniaFinlandFranceGermanyGreeceIrelandItalyLuxembourgMaltaNetherlandsPortugalSlovakiaSloveniaSpain16 countries now use the Euro. This will grow in the coming years.
The European Union is an organisation that consists of 27 countries, 17 of which use the Euro. There are many other countries in Europe that are not members of the European Union and none of these use the Euro. So most European countries do not use it. See the related questions below.
The currency is called the Euro, not the Euro Dollar. Not all countries in the European Union use the Euro. There are 28 countries that are members of the European Union. 18 use the Euro. 10 use their own currencies.
United Kindom (Pound)Republic of Ireland (Euro)France (Euro)Spain (Euro)Portugal (Euro)Germany (Euro)Greece (Euro)Switzerland (Swiss Franc)South Africa (Rand)Italy (Euro)
You are referring to the Euro. It is used in many countries in Europe, but most countries in Europe use their own currencies, not the Euro.
16 countries have adopted the Euro, 5 other countries use the Euro with formal agreements (these are places such as the Vatican). 6 other districts or countries use the euro without formal agreement; these include Andorra - which doesn't have an official currency, and Akrotiri and Dhakalia - a British sovereign base area in Cyprus. Countries outside of Europe have adopted the euro for international transactions (an example is Cuba).
The Euro is the same for all countries that use it, though one side of the coin is different in each country. All the notes are the same for all countries. You can still use those different coins in any of the countries that use the Euro. Not all countries in Europe use the Euro. There are over 50 countries in Europe. 28 of them are members of an organisation called the European Union. 18 of those 28 countries use the Euro as their currency.
16 countries have adopted the Euro, 5 other countries use the Euro with formal agreements (these are places such as the Vatican). 6 other districts or countries use the euro without formal agreement; these include Andorra - which doesn't have an official currency, and Akrotiri and Dhakalia - a British sovereign base area in Cyprus. Countries outside of Europe have adopted the euro for international transactions (an example is Cuba).
16 countries have adopted the Euro, 5 other countries use the Euro with formal agreements (these are places such as the Vatican). 6 other districts or countries use the euro without formal agreement; these include Andorra - which doesn't have an official currency, and Akrotiri and Dhakalia - a British sovereign base area in Cyprus. Countries outside of Europe have adopted the euro for international transactions (an example is Cuba).
If you mean how many countries in the EU use the EU currency, the Euro, the answer is 17.