
EUR to INR Converter
Convert Euro to Indian Rupee at the live market rate — plus a quick conversion table and travel-money tips.
Euro to Indian Rupee — EUR to INR
One currency covers most of a European holiday: the euro is legal tender across around twenty countries, so a single wallet works from Paris to Rome. Check the live EUR to INR rate below — the euro is among the strongest currencies against the rupee, so amounts add up quickly — then use the table to budget before you fly. Any figure is indicative; your bank or forex card sets the rate you actually get.
1 EUR = ₹109.89 INR
EUR to INR conversion table
| Euro (EUR) | Indian Rupee (INR) |
|---|---|
| 1 EUR | ₹109.89 |
| 5 EUR | ₹549.44 |
| 10 EUR | ₹1,098.89 |
| 25 EUR | ₹2,747.23 |
| 50 EUR | ₹5,494.45 |
| 100 EUR | ₹10,988.9 |
| 250 EUR | ₹27,472.25 |
| 500 EUR | ₹54,944.5 |
| 1,000 EUR | ₹1,09,889 |
| 5,000 EUR | ₹5,49,445 |
Travel money for your Europe trip
Planning a Europe holiday? The euro (EUR) is legal tender across much of the continent — France, Italy, Germany, Spain, the Netherlands and more — so a single currency covers a multi-country trip. A few non-euro stops (Switzerland, the UK, Czechia) keep their own money, so check each country before you pack your wallet.
Plan the tripExplore Europe tour packages with TraverseCurated packages, visas & forex handled for youEUR to INR — FAQs
What is the EUR to INR exchange rate today?
The current rate appears in the converter above, fetched when the page loads. Euro–rupee rates move through the day, so treat it as a guide and confirm the exact figure with your bank or forex provider before converting.
How much is 1 Euro in INR?
One euro is approximately the live rate shown above. The euro is among the strongest currencies against the rupee, so even small euro amounts add up — budget carefully for a Europe trip.
Which European countries use the euro?
Around twenty European Union countries use the euro, including France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Portugal, the Netherlands, Greece and Austria. Notable exceptions that keep their own currency include Switzerland, the United Kingdom, Czechia, Hungary and Poland.
Should I carry euros in cash or use a forex card in Europe?
A combination works best — a multi-currency forex card for most spending and a small amount of euro cash for taxis, tips and small cafes. Compare card and bank rates before you travel, as airport exchange counters usually offer the weakest rates.
