Nepalese Rupee to Turkish Lira — NPR to TRY

1 NPR = 0.3003 TRY
Updated: Thursday, June 4 2026 — Rates are updated once daily (cross-rate — inverse)

NPR to TRY Converter

NPR (🇳🇵 Nepalese Rupee)
=
?
TRY (🇹🇷 Turkish Lira)
Reverse: 1 TRY = 3.3305 NPR

NPR/TRY Rate — Last 30 Days

Rate Statistics

Period High Low Average
7 days 0.3022 0.2997 0.3007
30 days 0.3022 0.2944 0.2982
Convert NPR to TRY
NPR TRY
1 0.30
5 1.50
10 3.00
25 7.51
50 15.01
100 30.03
250 75.06
500 150.13
1,000 300.26
5,000 1,501.28
Convert TRY to NPR
TRY NPR
1 3.33
5 16.65
10 33.31
25 83.26
50 166.53
100 333.05
250 832.63
500 1,665.25
1,000 3,330.50
5,000 16,652.50

Get notified when rate changes

Set a target rate — we email you when NPR/TRY hits it. Checked every 15 minutes.

PRO FEATURE

What drives the NPR/TRY rate?

Whether you're converting NPR for travel, business, or investment, here's what drives the NPR to TRY exchange rate. The NPR/TRY exchange rate is determined by supply and demand in global currency markets, influenced by interest rate decisions from both central banks, economic data releases, inflation figures, and broader risk sentiment in financial markets. Trade flows between the two countries or regions also play an important role in long-term rate direction.

How to get the best NPR to TRY rate

The rate shown above is the interbank mid-market rate — the real exchange rate used between financial institutions. Individual customers cannot access this rate directly. Banks typically add a 2–3% spread on top, meaning you receive significantly less than the rate shown.

Online transfer services like Wise offer rates very close to the interbank rate with a small transparent fee of 0.5–1%. On a $1,000 NPR exchange this typically saves $15–25 compared to a bank. Airport exchange booths charge the highest fees — often 5–8% above the interbank rate — and should be avoided for large amounts.

30-Day High
0.3022
30-Day Low
0.2944
30-Day Avg
0.2982
The NPR/TRY rate is currently 0.7% above its 30-day average of 0.2982. NPR is relatively strong right now.

NPR to TRY — Frequently Asked Questions