300 UAE dirham to Indian rupee Historical Exchange Rates
Welcome to the AED to INR exchange rate history page. This page contains detailed daily historical exchange rates between AED and INR from 2025-3-8 to 2026-04-01, making it easy to look up and reference.
1 AED = 25.518 INR
13:30 Exchange Rate
1 UAE dirham to Indian rupee Historical Exchange Rate Trends
1 AED = -- INR
13:30 Exchange Rate
1 UAE dirham to Indian rupee Data Statistics
This section organizes the historical exchange rate data of 1 AED to INR, including daily data over the past 1 day, 15 days, 30 days, and 90 days. It also marks the highest, lowest, and average rates during each period, helping you easily understand how the exchange rate has changed over time, which is useful for currency exchange, transfers, or investment decisions.
Past 7 days historical exchange rates
Below are the daily average exchange rates of AED to INR for the past 7 days, helping you track the trend during this period. We also provide exchange rate changes of INR to AED, helping you understand fluctuations from different perspectives and better plan your currency exchange, transfers, or fund management.
AED to INR - Last 7 Days
INR to AED - Last 7 Days
AED - United Arab Emirates Dirham
The UAE Dirham has been the official currency of the UAE since 1973 and is pegged to the US dollar. The AED supports the country's position as a global trade and financial hub, especially in oil exports and tourism, attracting a large amount of foreign investment and international business activities.
- Major Unit:1 Dirham
- ISO Code:AED
- Used In:United Arab Emirates
- Reserve Currency:No, the US dollar is the main reserve currency
- Cross-border Payment:AED cross-border payments rely heavily on the SWIFT network. Due to the UAE's status as a financial hub, its payment systems are mature and international trade is often settled in USD.
- Currency Name:United Arab Emirates Dirham
- Exchange Rate Regime:Fixed exchange rate (pegged to the US dollar)
- language:en
- Safe Haven Currency:No, it is a regional currency
- Banknote Denominations:5, 10, 20, 50, 100, 200, 500, 1000 Dirhams
- Banknote Material:Paper, with security features
- Metal Composition:Copper-nickel alloy
- Coin Denominations:1, 5, 10, 25, 50 Fils, 1 Dirham
- Currency Symbol:د.إ
- Banknote Size:Approx. 150mm × 70mm
- Central Bank:Central Bank of the UAE
- Minor Unit:1 Fils (1 Dirham = 100 Fils)
INR - Indian Rupee
The Indian rupee is centuries old, with the modern version in use since independence in 1947. The rupee is the foundation of India's large and diverse economy and is widely used in domestic trade, services and the growing digital payments market.
- Supporting unit:1 rupee = 100 paise, but small denomination coins have largely ceased to be in circulation.
- Denomination of banknotes:₹10, ₹20, ₹50, ₹100, ₹200, ₹500, ₹2000 (some higher denominations have been discontinued but are still in circulation)
- Reserve currency:No, but it plays a certain role as a regional reserve currency in South Asia.
- Banknote material:The main material is cotton paper, while some new versions use a polymer blend material, featuring anti-counterfeiting lines, watermarks, micro-printing, and other security features.
- Metal composition:Steel, stainless steel, nickel-clad steel, copper-nickel alloy, etc.
- Currency symbol:₹
- Paper currency size:For example, ₹500 measures 150mm × 66mm, and different denominations have different sizes.
- language:en
- Main unit:1 Rupee
- ISO code:INR
- Currency name:Indian Rupee
- Exchange Rate System:A managed floating exchange rate system, regulated by interventions from the Reserve Bank of India.
- Central Bank:Reserve Bank of India (RBI)
- Safe-haven currency:No, it is a currency in a highly volatile emerging market.
- Coin denomination:₹1, ₹2, ₹5, ₹10, ₹20 (New Polygon Type)
- Countries of Use:India is an official user of the currency, and countries like Nepal and Bhutan also accept the circulation of the rupee to a certain extent.
- Cross-border payment:Access to the SWIFT network is widely used for remittances in South Asia and the Middle East, yet transactions in international trade are still predominantly settled in US dollars. In recent years, the Reserve Bank of India has encouraged the establishment of local currency settlement mechanisms with certain countries.



