Bulgaria joins eurozone
Kartavya Desk Staff
Source: IE
Subject: Mapping
Context: Bulgaria officially adopted the euro on January 1, 2026, becoming the 21st member of the eurozone and retiring its national currency, the lev.
About Bulgaria joins eurozone:
What it is?
• Bulgaria is a Balkan nation in southeastern Europe and a member of the European Union (since 2007) and NATO (since 2004). It replaced the Bulgarian lev (in use since 1881) with the euro after fulfilling EU convergence criteria.
Location: Located in the eastern Balkan Peninsula, Bulgaria sits at the crossroads of Europe, the Black Sea region, and West Asia, giving it strategic geopolitical importance.
Bordering nations: Romania, Greece, Turkey, Serbia, North Macedonia and Black Sea.
Geographical features:
• Danubian Plain in the north (fertile agricultural belt).
• Balkan Mountains running east–west.
• Rila–Rhodope Massif in the south (Mount Musala – highest peak in the Balkans).
• Black Sea coastline supporting ports, tourism, and trade.
About Eurozone:
What it is?
• The eurozone (euro area) is the group of EU countries that have adopted the euro (€) as their official legal tender and follow a common monetary policy.
Established in:
• 1992 – Maastricht Treaty: Formally created the Economic and Monetary Union (EMU), setting convergence criteria and a legal roadmap for a single currency to ensure fiscal discipline and macroeconomic stability among EU states.
• 1999 – Euro as “book money”: The euro was launched for electronic transactions, accounting, and financial markets, while national currencies continued in circulation at fixed exchange rates.
• 2002 – Physical euro launch: Euro banknotes and coins were introduced, completing the currency transition and replacing national currencies as the sole legal tender in participating states.
Members
• 21 EU countries (as of 2026), including Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Greece, Croatia (2023), and Bulgaria (2026).
Key features:
• Single currency (euro) as legal tender.
• European Central Bank (ECB) conducts unified monetary policy.
• No currency exchange costs within the bloc.
• Free movement of goods, services, capital, and labour.
• Members get representation on the ECB Governing Council.