By Guest Blogger. Any opinions expressed are those of the author(s), and do not necessarily reflect the views of Iraq Business News.
You Bought Iraqi Dinars. Now What?
You made the purchase some time ago — maybe a few years back, maybe longer. You heard the pitch: Iraq sits on some of the world’s largest proven oil reserves, the dinar is trading at a fraction of what it once was, and when the country finally gets its act together, holders of today’s cheap banknotes will be rewarded handsomely. So you bought. And now, with a regional war disrupting Iraqi oil exports and Baghdad struggling to pay its own civil servants, you are wondering what to do next.
This article is not going to tell you that Iraq is a basket case. It isn’t. But it is going to be honest with you about what the numbers say — and what your actual options are.
What You’re Really Holding
Let’s start with a basic fact that dinar dealers tend to gloss over. The Iraqi dinar is not a traded currency in any conventional sense. Major banks do not offer exchange in Iraqi dinars. The currency is only available for purchase or sale by selected brokers or money exchangers, and since no formal exchange exists for the Iraqi dinar, dealers can charge whatever they want to buy and sell it.
This matters enormously when you think about getting out, because dealers who sell IQD will only buy it back at drastically lower rates. As a concrete example, buying one million Iraqi dinars from one online platform costs $1,220 — but selling one million dinars back to the same platform returns only $625. That means the dinar’s value against the US dollar would need to increase by approximately 95% just for a buyer to break even.
Read that again. You need a near-doubling of the dinar’s value just to recover your original outlay. The “investment” was compromised the moment you handed over your money.
Brokers typically charge a fee of 30% or more over and above the authorized exchange rate when selling dinars, and bid 30% under the formal exchange rate when buying them back. Purchasing and selling IQD could therefore lead to a loss of 50% or more without any movement in the exchange rate whatsoever.
The “RV” That Isn’t Coming
The pitch for the dinar has always rested on the idea of an imminent “revaluation” — a sudden, dramatic official increase in the dinar’s exchange rate. Online forums buzz with excitement over every piece of Iraqi economic news, with each development analyzed for signs of the imminent RV that will supposedly occur overnight, catapulting dinar holders into wealth.
A survey conducted in early 2025 revealed that more than half of respondents expected the dinar to revalue by at least 1,000 times within the first 100 days of the new US presidential term. Such expectations are not grounded in reality.
The Central Bank of Iraq (CBI) has stated repeatedly that no such revaluation is planned, and anyone with a basic understanding of economics would know that it would be impossible, yet speculative revaluation claims continue to circulate.
There is also a persistent and deliberate confusion being exploited by promoters between two very different things. Many promoters confuse a revaluation — a rare, dramatic jump in a currency’s value — with a redenomination, which adjusts the currency by removing zeroes without increasing purchasing power. Iraq has publicly discussed redenomination, not revaluation, multiple times. If Iraq removes three zeroes from its currency, your one million dinars becomes one thousand new dinars — worth exactly the same amount. You have not made a penny.
The Kuwait Comparison Doesn’t Hold Up
The origin story of dinar speculation is worth understanding, because it explains the persistence of the myth. The speculation originated from a misunderstanding of why the value of the Kuwaiti dinar recovered after the First Gulf War, leading to an assumption that the Iraqi dinar would follow suit. However, there are substantial differences in economic and political conditions between Iraq now and Kuwait then.
The main reason the Kuwaiti currency recovered was that its money supply had not been compromised, and it had a clear path back to normal. Iraq, on the other hand, had printed vast quantities of dinars; the comparison was always flawed, and two decades of non-revaluation have confirmed it.
So What Are Your Options?
If you are holding dinars right now, there are three realistic paths forward. None of them involves getting rich.
Option 1: Sell now and cut your losses.
This is the option most financial advisors would recommend, and the math supports it. You will take a significant loss on the spread, but you will recover something — and you can redeploy that capital into an investment that has a realistic thesis behind it. The dinar’s buy and sell rates differ widely depending on where and how you sell, and transaction fees can be substantial, so it pays to shop around before committing to a sale. Look for a licensed, regulated dealer and compare multiple buyback rates before you transact.
Option 2: Hold, but set a hard exit date.
If you cannot bring yourself to sell at a loss, at least impose discipline on yourself. Pick a date — say, twelve months from now — and commit to selling regardless of what the forums are saying. The psychology of dinar speculation shares characteristics with other speculative bubbles: confirmation bias leads believers to interpret any news as supporting their thesis while dismissing contrary evidence, and the sunk cost fallacy makes it psychologically difficult to admit error after years of waiting. A hard deadline is the only reliable defence against both.
Option 3: Treat it as a collectible and write it off mentally.
Some people buy dinars in quantities small enough that the loss, while real, is not life-altering. If that describes you, you can simply regard the notes as a curiosity — they are, after all, legal tender in a real country with a real history — and stop thinking of them as an investment. This is not a financially productive approach, but it is an honest one.
What Iraq Actually Looks Like Right Now
To be fair to Iraq: the country has real economic assets and genuine momentum in some areas. Iraq’s foreign exchange reserves stood at approximately $94-97 billion in mid-2025, and the economy is forecast to grow by 4.4% in 2026. Iraq issued 1,867 licences for new industrial projects during 2025 alone, spanning the whole range of industry sectors. These are not the indicators of a collapsed state.
But a growing economy and a revalued currency are two entirely different things. The Iraqi dinar is expected to remain range-bound and largely flat, with no credible indicators of a sharp revaluation. The currency’s fixed exchange rate, limited accessibility, and dependence on oil exports constrain its potential for significant appreciation. Iraq’s economic recovery will benefit Iraqis, but it will not deliver a windfall to foreign holders of physical banknotes.
A Word About the People Selling You the Dream
Multiple US state agencies have issued formal warnings to investors that there is no place outside Iraq to exchange the dinar, that it is typically sold by dealers at inflated prices, and that there is little evidence to substantiate the claims of significant appreciation due to revaluation.
The forums, the “gurus,” the YouTube channels, the “intel calls” — these are not news services. They are, at best, communities of wishful thinkers reinforcing each other’s hopes. At worst, some of them are actively profiting from keeping you in the trade: every month you hold is another month a dealer is not asked to buy back your dinars at the price they sold them to you.
The Bottom Line
Iraq is a country worth watching, and its long-term economic trajectory could be very exciting. But the specific proposition that holders of physical Iraqi dinars outside Iraq will one day see a dramatic, overnight increase in their currency’s value has no credible economic foundation, has been explicitly denied by the Central Bank of Iraq, and has been waiting to come true for over twenty years.
The question is not whether the RV is coming. The question is what you are going to do while you wait for something that is not going to happen.
This article does not constitute financial or investment advice. If you are holding Iraqi dinars and considering your options, consult a licensed, regulated financial advisor — not an online forum.
For more information on the Iraqi dinar, check out IBN’s Dinar Page here: https://www.iraq-businessnews.com/the-dinar-page/?swcfpc=1
