Kuwaiti Dinar (KWD)
The Kuwaiti dinar (KWD) is the national currency of the State of Kuwait. It is divided into 1,000 fils and is notable for being one of the highest-valued currencies relative to the U.S. dollar.
Key facts
- Currency code: KWD
- Subunit: 1 dinar = 1,000 fils
- Common nickname: dinar (from the Roman denarius)
- Typical exchange-range behavior: relatively low volatility compared with many other currencies
- Primary economic driver: petroleum exports and related government revenue
Brief history
- Introduced in 1961 to replace the Gulf rupee (which had been pegged to the Indian rupee and, by extension, the British pound).
- The Central Bank of Kuwait (originating from the Kuwaiti Currency Board) established the dinar and phased out the rupee after the rupee’s devaluation.
- From 1975–2003 the dinar was pegged to a weighted currency basket. In 2003 it was briefly pegged to the U.S. dollar and re-pegged in 2007 to an undisclosed basket of currencies.
Banknotes and security
- Six official banknote series have been issued since 1961, plus two commemorative sets.
- The third series (1980) was invalidated after the 1990 Iraqi invasion, necessitating a replacement series after liberation.
- Later series, including the 1994 and 2014 issues, added enhanced security and tactile features to assist visually impaired users.
Exchange rate and peg
- The KWD is pegged to a basket of currencies; the exact composition is not publicly disclosed but is believed to be heavily weighted toward the U.S. dollar.
- The dinar typically moves within a narrow range. For example, over a recent 10-year span it fluctuated roughly between USD 3.17 and USD 3.54 per KWD.
- Because of low volatility and limited global liquidity, the KWD is not commonly used for speculative forex trading.
Why the KWD is strong
- Kuwait’s economy is heavily oil-dependent and is a major oil exporter; oil revenues create sustained demand for the currency.
- Efficient use of oil income, a sovereign wealth fund, and relatively stable fiscal finances support confidence in the dinar.
- Low domestic taxes and low unemployment contribute to overall economic stability.
KWD versus the U.S. dollar
- In nominal terms the dinar is worth more than one U.S. dollar. However, the U.S. dollar remains the global reserve currency and is more widely used for international transactions. The higher nominal value of the KWD reflects supply-demand dynamics tied to Kuwait’s oil-based economy and monetary policy rather than broad global acceptance.
Summary
The Kuwaiti dinar is a high-value, relatively stable currency supported by Kuwait’s petroleum-driven economy and conservative exchange-rate management. Its peg to an undisclosed basket and limited volatility make it a currency more associated with national stability than with speculative forex trading.