The modern Bahamian dollar (BSD) emerged from a mid-20th-century shift away from the colonial pound system. Decimalized issues replaced pounds–shillings–pence with dollar–cent denominations, aligning local accounting with U.S. trade and tourism flows. The Bahamas Monetary Authority (late 1960s) and, soon after, the Central Bank of The Bahamas oversaw the transition, maintaining a long-standing par relationship to the U.S. dollar. Contemporary notes retain national emblems—coastlines, marine life, and historical portraits— while incorporating security methods standard among leading Commonwealth issuers.
From early paper to today’s series, Bahamian currency reflects continuous investment in anti-counterfeiting. The CRISP program (Counterfeit Resistant Integrated Security Product) introduced advanced threads, microtext, and color management; the later CRISP Evolution refresh refined artwork and security layering across denominations, including the ½ dollar. International security-printing partners—most notably European firms specializing in banknote production—worked alongside the central bank to balance vibrant design with robust public recognition. Specimens and proofs preserve the design intent behind each issue; they document plate states, watermark placements, and serial conventions that are often obscured in circulation. Use the filters to pivot by type or year; the items shown here highlight technical milestones rather than repeating card-level text, emphasizing how a small island economy built a modern, resilient banknote family for a global audience.