EUR Cheque Amount in Words
Convert Euro amounts into words for cheque writing. Correct Euros and Cents format. Bank-ready output.
Accepted across Europe and internationally · Free · No signup
How to use
Enter your amount
Type the figure as you would write it on a cheque — e.g. 1250.75. Commas are accepted.
See it instantly
The converter shows the words as you type.
Copy or download
Use the copy buttons next to each output, or download the filled cheque as a PNG.
Write it down
Copy the words exactly onto your physical cheque. Always end with the word "Only".
How to write a Euro cheque
Euro cheques are used across 20 EU member states and accepted internationally wherever EUR payments are processed. While SEPA digital transfers have replaced cheques for most everyday European transactions, paper Euro cheques remain valid instruments for cross-border and international payments.
Write the currency name after the amount. Euro convention places the currency after the number in words. Write "One Thousand Euros Only", not "Euros One Thousand Only". The figures box should show the amount as a number with "EUR" or "€" before it.
No "and" between hundreds and units. Euro cheques follow the international convention. Write "Two Hundred Fifty Euros", not "Two Hundred and Fifty Euros". The word "and" is used only to connect Euros to Cents — for example, "Two Hundred Euros and Cents Fifty Only".
Write the payee's full legal name. Use the name exactly as it appears on the recipient's official documents or bank account registration. Abbreviated or informal names are a common cause of cheque rejection, particularly for cross-border Euro payments where the receiving bank may apply stricter matching rules.
Match figures and words exactly. The amount in the figures box and the amount written in words must agree in full. A mismatch will typically result in the cheque being returned unpaid. If words and figures differ, most European banks treat the written words as authoritative — but in practice they will reject rather than process a mismatched cheque.
End with "Only". Always close the amount-in-words line with "Only" to prevent anyone from appending additional amounts after you have signed. This is standard practice for Euro cheques presented internationally.
Use DD/MM/YYYY date format. Most European countries use day-first date format. Write the full four-digit year — for example, 15/04/2026. Some countries use dots instead of slashes (15.04.2026 in Germany and Austria). Follow whatever format is printed on your cheque.
Consider SEPA transfers as an alternative. For payments within the SEPA zone (EU plus several neighbouring countries), a SEPA credit transfer is faster, cheaper, and trackable compared to a paper cheque. Many European businesses and landlords now only accept SEPA transfers and will not accept cheques. Confirm with your payee before issuing a Euro cheque.
Cross your cheques for security. Draw two parallel diagonal lines across the top-left corner and write "A/C Payee Only" between them. This restricts the cheque to bank-account deposit and prevents cash-counter encashment. Crossed cheques are the standard for any Euro payment of significant value.
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