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The 10,000,000 Iranian rial banknote is one of the high-denomination notes issued by the Central Bank of the Islamic Republic of Iran. This issue corresponds to the year 2026, which, in the Iranian solar calendar (Persian calendar), falls within the era of the Islamic Republic. Iran has gradually introduced banknotes of increasingly higher face values in response to the significant inflation the country has experienced over the decades, making it necessary to issue denominations of several million rials.
This banknote has a face value of 10 million rials, which is equivalent to 10,000 tomans according to the popular denomination commonly used in Iran, the toman being equal to ten rials. This convention of parallel usage between rials and tomans is a distinctive feature of the Iranian monetary system, where both units coexist in everyday language even though only the rial constitutes the official monetary unit.
Contemporary Iranian banknotes traditionally incorporate security features such as security threads, watermarks, optically variable ink effects and raised printing designed to prevent counterfeiting, although the specific security features of this particular issue are not detailed here.
Iranian high-denomination banknotes generally display motifs related to Islamic architecture, symbols of the 1979 Iranian Revolution, or historical and religious figures important to the Islamic Republic of Iran, thus reflecting the country's cultural and political identity through its banknote production.