Convert Sri Lankan Rupee to Tajikistani Somoni
Instantly convert Sri Lankan Rupee (₨) to Tajikistani Somoni (SM) with our free online calculator.
Reference Table
| Sri Lankan Rupee (₨) | Tajikistani Somoni (SM) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 1 |
| 5 | 5 |
| 10 | 10 |
| 50 | 50 |
| 100 | 100 |
| 1000 | 1000 |
How to Convert Sri Lankan Rupee to Tajikistani Somoni
Live Exchange Rate Conversion
Convert Sri Lankan Rupee (₨) to Tajikistani Somoni (SM) using live exchange rates updated hourly. The rate reflects the current mid-market price — the most accurate reference for currency comparison.
Step-by-Step
- Open the ₨ to SM converter above.
- Enter the amount you want to convert in the ₨ (Sri Lankan Rupee) input field.
- The converter fetches the latest exchange rate and instantly shows the equivalent value in SM (Tajikistani Somoni).
- Use the swap button to reverse the conversion direction if needed.
About Sri Lankan Rupee (₨)
The Sri Lankan Rupee (LKR, ISO 4217 code 144, symbol ₨ or SLR) is the official currency of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, issued by the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL, est. 1950). Subdivided into 100 cents (no longer in circulation). Banknotes: Rs.20, Rs.50, Rs.100, Rs.500, Rs.1,000, Rs.5,000 (the highest denomination; current series introduced 2010-2011 features Sri Lankan cultural and biodiversity themes — Sigiriya, Buddhist temples, Sri Lankan birds and butterflies); coins: Rs.1, Rs.2, Rs.5, Rs.10. Sri Lanka experienced its worst economic crisis since independence in 2022 — sovereign default on April 12, 2022 (the first in Sri Lanka's history), severe fuel/food/medicine shortages, mass protests forcing the resignation of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa July 9, 2022, IMF Extended Fund Facility $3 billion approved March 2023, and LKR depreciation from ~Rs.200/USD pre-crisis to ~Rs.360/USD peak. Tourism (especially from Russia, India, UK, China) and remittances are recovering. CBSL targets 4-6% CPI inflation per Flexible Inflation-Targeting framework. Sri Lanka's external debt restructuring with India + China + Paris Club creditors remained ongoing as of 2024.
About Tajikistani Somoni (SM)
The Tajikistani Somoni (TJS, ISO 4217 code 972, symbol SM or сом) is the official currency of the Republic of Tajikistan, issued by the National Bank of Tajikistan (NBT, est. 1991). Subdivided into 100 diram. Banknotes: 1 SM, 3 SM, 5 SM, 10 SM, 20 SM, 50 SM, 100 SM, 200 SM, 500 SM (the highest denomination; current series features Tajik historical figures — Ismail Samani — the founder of the Samanid Empire and namesake of the currency — Bobojon Gafurov, Mirzo Tursunzoda, Sadriddin Aini, Abuabdullo Rudaki); coins: 5 diram, 10 diram, 20 diram, 25 diram, 50 diram, 1 SM, 2 SM, 3 SM, 5 SM. The somoni was introduced October 30, 2000 (replacing the Tajik ruble at 1 somoni = 1,000 rubles). Tajikistan is the smallest Central Asian economy by GDP (~$12B) and the most mountainous country in the region — over 90% mountainous terrain including the Pamir Mountains and the world's 4th-highest peak Ismoil Somoni Peak (7,495m, formerly Stalin Peak, then Communism Peak). The economy is heavily dependent on remittances from migrant workers in Russia (~30% of GDP — among the world's highest remittance-to-GDP ratios). Tajikistan was the only post-Soviet Central Asian country to experience a civil war (1992-1997).
Quick Facts
- Sri Lankan Rupee (₨) is a currency unit
- Tajikistani Somoni (SM) is a currency unit
- Exchange rates are updated hourly from live market data
- Rates shown are mid-market (interbank) rates
- This conversion is commonly used in international travel, online shopping, and business transactions
- Use the swap button to convert SM back to ₨
Understanding Sri Lankan Rupee
The Sri Lankan Rupee (symbol: ₨) is a unit of currency. The Sri Lankan Rupee (LKR, ISO 4217 code 144, symbol ₨ or SLR) is the official currency of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, issued by the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL, est. 1950). Subdivided into 100 cents (no longer in circulation). Banknotes: Rs.20, Rs.50, Rs.100, Rs.500, Rs.1,000, Rs.5,000 (the highest denomination; current series introduced 2010-2011 features Sri Lankan cultural and biodiversity themes — Sigiriya, Buddhist temples, Sri Lankan birds and butterflies); coins: Rs.1, Rs.2, Rs.5, Rs.10. Sri Lanka experienced its worst economic crisis since independence in 2022 — sovereign default on April 12, 2022 (the first in Sri Lanka's history), severe fuel/food/medicine shortages, mass protests forcing the resignation of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa July 9, 2022, IMF Extended Fund Facility $3 billion approved March 2023, and LKR depreciation from ~Rs.200/USD pre-crisis to ~Rs.360/USD peak. Tourism (especially from Russia, India, UK, China) and remittances are recovering. CBSL targets 4-6% CPI inflation per Flexible Inflation-Targeting framework. Sri Lanka's external debt restructuring with India + China + Paris Club creditors remained ongoing as of 2024.
Sri Lankan Rupee are commonly used in international travel, online shopping, and business transactions.
Understanding Tajikistani Somoni
The Tajikistani Somoni (symbol: SM) is a unit of currency. The Tajikistani Somoni (TJS, ISO 4217 code 972, symbol SM or сом) is the official currency of the Republic of Tajikistan, issued by the National Bank of Tajikistan (NBT, est. 1991). Subdivided into 100 diram. Banknotes: 1 SM, 3 SM, 5 SM, 10 SM, 20 SM, 50 SM, 100 SM, 200 SM, 500 SM (the highest denomination; current series features Tajik historical figures — Ismail Samani — the founder of the Samanid Empire and namesake of the currency — Bobojon Gafurov, Mirzo Tursunzoda, Sadriddin Aini, Abuabdullo Rudaki); coins: 5 diram, 10 diram, 20 diram, 25 diram, 50 diram, 1 SM, 2 SM, 3 SM, 5 SM. The somoni was introduced October 30, 2000 (replacing the Tajik ruble at 1 somoni = 1,000 rubles). Tajikistan is the smallest Central Asian economy by GDP (~$12B) and the most mountainous country in the region — over 90% mountainous terrain including the Pamir Mountains and the world's 4th-highest peak Ismoil Somoni Peak (7,495m, formerly Stalin Peak, then Communism Peak). The economy is heavily dependent on remittances from migrant workers in Russia (~30% of GDP — among the world's highest remittance-to-GDP ratios). Tajikistan was the only post-Soviet Central Asian country to experience a civil war (1992-1997).
Tajikistani Somoni are commonly used in international travel, online shopping, and business transactions.
Why Convert Sri Lankan Rupee to Tajikistani Somoni?
When travelling abroad, shopping from international retailers, or managing cross-border business payments, converting between Sri Lankan Rupee and Tajikistani Somoni is an everyday necessity. Freelancers invoicing international clients, investors monitoring foreign markets, and students comparing cost-of-living data all benefit from instant, accurate currency conversion with live exchange rates.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I convert Sri Lankan Rupee to Tajikistani Somoni?
Enter any ₨ amount in the converter above. It automatically fetches the latest exchange rate and instantly calculates the equivalent SM value. No manual calculation is needed.
How often is the ₨/SM exchange rate updated?
MegaCalc updates currency exchange rates hourly from live market data. The rate displayed reflects the current mid-market rate at the time of conversion.
What is the mid-market ₨/SM exchange rate?
The mid-market rate is the midpoint between the buy and sell prices on the global foreign exchange market. It is the most accurate reference rate for comparing currencies. Banks and exchange services add a spread on top of this rate, so the rate you receive at a bank or airport will differ slightly.
Can I convert SM back to ₨?
Yes. Use the swap button on the converter to reverse the conversion direction and calculate SM to ₨ instantly at the current exchange rate.
Why do I need to convert Sri Lankan Rupee to Tajikistani Somoni?
₨ to SM conversions are needed for international travel, online shopping from foreign retailers, cross-border business payments, and comparing prices or costs across countries. Investors and freelancers working with multiple currencies also rely on accurate exchange rate data for financial planning.