Old £1 coin: Hours left to spend round pound as 'hundreds of millions' are still in circulation

The old round pound coins go out of circulation from midnight on Sunday, October 15.
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Francesca Gillett16 October 2017

Brits have just hours left to spend their old round £1 coins as hundreds of millions of the old pounds are estimated to still be in circulation.

As of midnight on Sunday, the old pound coin will no longer be legal tender, replaced by the new design which was launched in March.

Some stores, including Tesco, have pledged to let people continue spending their round pounds for a limited period of extra time, despite the Royal Mint’s deadline of tonight.

On Saturday, it was estimated around 400 to 450 million old round coins are still lying around unspent. People had been offloading their old coins at a rate of around 60 million a week in the lead up to tonight’s deadline.

Deadline looming: The old round £1 coins will no longer be legal tender from October 16.
PA Wire/PA Images

Major banks and building societies have said they will continue to accept deposits of the old round pound after the deadline on Sunday October 15.

People can also deposit them into any of their usual high street banks or through the Post Office after this date.

Martin Kearsley, banking services director at the Post Office, said: "Thanks to an agreement with all UK high street banks, everyone can deposit old pound coins into their usual high street bank account at their local Post Office branch."

The new silver and gold pound coins went into circulation in March this year.
Ben Birchall/PA

Some major stores have said they will give shoppers an extra window of opportunity to spend up their old pound coins after October 15.

Iceland and Poundland have said they will continue to accept the old round pound until October 31, while Tesco has said it will continue accepting the old-style coins for a week after the October 15 deadline.

One pound coins were first launched on April 21 1983 to replace £1 notes. The Royal Mint has produced more than two billion round pound coins since that time.

The new 12-sided pound coin, which resembles the old threepenny bit, entered circulation in March and boasts new high-tech security features to thwart counterfeiters.

The production of the new coins follows concerns about round pounds being vulnerable to sophisticated counterfeiters. Around one in every 30 old-style pound coins in people's change in recent years has been fake.

Trade bodies say the industry has been working hard to update machines in time for the deadline. But there may be some cases where people find they are caught short.

The British Parking Association has said it is confident that the majority of parking machines are ready or will be ready to accept the new £1 coin, while the Automatic Vending Association (AVA) said it believes all machines owned by its members are now accepting the new coin.

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