Colombian peso to HRK Historical Exchange Rates
Welcome to the COP to HRK exchange rate history page. This page contains detailed daily historical exchange rates between COP and HRK from 2025-3-8 to 2026-04-05, making it easy to look up and reference.
1 COP = 0.00178308 HRK
08:31 Exchange Rate
1 Colombian peso to HRK Historical Exchange Rate Trends
1 COP = -- HRK
08:31 Exchange Rate
1 Colombian peso to HRK Data Statistics
This section organizes the historical exchange rate data of 1 COP to HRK, 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 COP to HRK for the past 7 days, helping you track the trend during this period. We also provide exchange rate changes of HRK to COP, helping you understand fluctuations from different perspectives and better plan your currency exchange, transfers, or fund management.
COP to HRK - Last 7 Days
HRK to COP - Last 7 Days
COP - Colombian Peso
The Colombian peso has been gradually established as legal tender since the 1810s and has undergone many reforms since then. The currency has gradually stabilized as the country's economic structure has shifted from coffee exports to diversification. The Colombian peso is widely circulated on a daily basis and is also an important target of monetary policy regulation.
- Supporting unit:No auxiliary currency units
- Denomination of banknotes:2000, 5000, 10000, 20000, 50000, 100000 COP
- Reserve currency:No, it is primarily used for domestic circulation.
- Banknote material:The mixture of polymer and pulp provides anti-counterfeiting features.
- Metal composition:Copper-nickel alloy, stainless steel
- Currency symbol:$ or COL$
- Paper currency size:Available in various sizes, with a maximum length of approximately 165mm.
- language:en
- Main unit:1 peso
- ISO code:COP
- Currency name:Colombian Peso
- Exchange Rate System:The floating exchange rate system is regulated by the Central Bank of Colombia.
- Central Bank:Banco de la República
- Safe-haven currency:No, it is subject to significant fluctuations and is influenced by economic volatility.
- Coin denomination:50, 100, 200, 500, 1000 pesos
- Countries of Use:Official currency of Colombia.
- Cross-border payment:The SWIFT system supports international transactions but primarily relies on the US dollar as an intermediary for cross-border settlements, resulting in limited global usage.
HRK - Croatian Kuna
The Kuna was created in 1994 when Croatia gained independence, replacing the Yugoslav dinar. The Kuna witnessed the country's recovery from war and economic transformation, and was widely used in tourism and export-oriented economy until the Euro officially replaced the Kuna in 2023.
- Supporting unit:1 Kuna = 100 Lipa
- Denomination of banknotes:5, 10, 20, 50, 100, 200, 500, 1,000 kuna
- Reserve currency:Kuna is not a reserve currency; currently, the euro is in use.
- Banknote material:Primarily made of cotton paper, incorporating features such as anti-counterfeiting watermarks and intaglio printing.
- Metal composition:Copper-nickel alloy, aluminum bronze, nickel-plated steel core, etc.
- Currency symbol:kn
- Paper currency size:100 Kuna is approximately 138mm × 69mm.
- language:en
- Main unit:Kuna
- ISO code:HRK (no longer in use, currently using EUR)
- Currency name:Croatian kuna (replaced by the euro in 2023)
- Exchange Rate System:Originally managing a floating exchange rate system, it officially transitioned to an Eurozone country in 2023.
- Central Bank:Croatian National Bank
- Safe-haven currency:No, the original KUNA does not have a hedging function.
- Coin denomination:1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50 Lipa; 1, 2, 5 Kuna
- Countries of Use:Historically, it served as the official currency of Croatia, which has now fully adopted the euro.
- Cross-border payment:HRK era cross-border payments mainly rely on the SWIFT network, but are limited by the currency's usage range; after 2023, it will fully integrate into the euro system, supporting SEPA and eurozone real-time payment standards.




