
USD
GBP
An in-depth comparison of USD (US Dollar) and GBP (British Pound): physical banknotes, cash in circulation, trading volume, purchasing power, central bank policy, and fun size comparisons — all with authoritative citations.
Dimensions at real scale — as issued by each central bank
USD — Federal Reserve System
GBP — Bank of England
US Dollar (USD) banknotes are 7% larger in area than British Pound (GBP) banknotes. All US dollar bills are the same size regardless of denomination. Euro banknotes increase in size with higher denominations for accessibility.
All available banknote denominations
6 denominations
3 denominations
Physical banknotes in circulation, per central bank data [Source: Federal Reserve, 2024]
2.32 trillion USD
US Dollar in circulation
Federal Reserve System
92.58 billion GBP
British Pound in circulation
Bank of England
What everyday items cost in US Dollar and British Pound regions [Source: The Economist, 2025]
$5.69
Big Mac price
US Dollar region, 2025
£4.49
Big Mac price
British Pound region, 2025
☕ Cup of Coffee
🍽️ Restaurant Meal
🏠 Monthly Rent
⛽ Liter of Gas
Global OTC FX market data [Source: BIS, 2025]
$967B
USD/GBP daily volume
Average daily turnover, USD equivalent
10.1%
Share of global FX
Of all currency trades worldwide
#3
Global ranking
By average daily turnover
The institutions that issue and manage USD and GBP
Issues US Dollar
Issues British Pound
IMF SDR (Special Drawing Rights) basket weights reflect a currency's importance in global trade and finance. [Source: IMF, 2022]
Physical dimensions and time-based comparisons at the same value
2 hours 47 minutes
Count USD at 1 bill/second
10,000 bills
5 hours 33 minutes
Count GBP at 1 bill/second
20,000 bills
16.9 years of median income
Median USD region worker
~$59,228/yr median wage
21.0 years of median income
Median GBP region worker
~$47,608/yr median wage
USD — Physical properties
GBP — Physical properties
USD weight comparisons
USD height comparisons
USD volume comparisons
Text and numbers can only go so far. Use Money Visualiser to see how US Dollar and British Pound bill stacks actually compare in physical space.
US Dollar (USD) banknotes are 7% larger in area: 156.1mm × 66.3mm vs 139mm × 69mm. In 3D, this means a stack of USD bills takes up noticeably more physical space than an equivalent value in GBP bills.
At current dimensions and using the highest denomination ($100), you need approximately 10,000 US Dollar bills. This stack weighs about 10 kg (22 lbs) and stands 109 m (358 ft) high.
Using the highest denomination (£50), you need approximately 20,000 British Pound bills. This stack weighs 18 kg (40 lbs) and stands 220 m (722 ft) high.
US Dollar (USD) is issued by the Federal Reserve System. British Pound (GBP) is issued by the Bank of England. Both central banks manage monetary policy, inflation targets, and currency stability for their respective economies.
The USD/GBP currency pair trades an average of $967 billion USD per day, accounting for 10.1% of global OTC FX turnover. It ranks #3 among all currency pairs. Source: BIS 2025 Triennial Central Bank Survey.
Counting at 1 bill per second, it would take 2 hours 47 minutes to count $1,000,000 in US Dollar (10,000 bills). In comparison, the same value in British Pound would take 5 hours 33 minutes (20,000 bills).
US Dollar comes in 6 denominations: $100, $50, $20, $10, $5, $1. British Pound comes in 3 denominations: £50, £20, £10.
Money Visualiser at https://moneyvisualiser.com/convert/USD/GBP lets you enter any amount and see the equivalent bill stacks for both currencies side-by-side in interactive 3D. You can rotate, zoom, and compare the physical scale in real time with live exchange rates.
Statistics and data are sourced from central banks and international financial organisations. Exchange rates and market volumes change daily — figures shown reflect the most recently published research data.