Vivid Regional Currency, Recreated for the Screen
Malaysian Ringgit notes are known for their bold colors and detailed cultural imagery, from the deep blue RM50 to the vibrant RM100. That level of visual detail sets a high bar for prop currency — a flat photocopy won't hold up in a close-up. Our prop Malaysian Ringgit banknotes are designed to match that same color depth and layout, so they read as authentic whether they're glimpsed in the background or examined up close on camera.
Skip the Sourcing Headaches
Pulling large sums of genuine MYR for a shoot means bank withdrawals, currency exchange for crews working outside Malaysia, and someone assigned to track every note between takes. Prop money removes that entire logistics chain. Cast members can count it, stack it, or scatter it across a table as many times as a scene requires, with no risk to real funds and nothing to reconcile at wrap.
Denomination Guide
| Note |
Common On-Screen Use |
| RM1 |
Small change, vending machines, background props |
| RM5 |
Register drawers, minor purchases |
| RM10 |
Wallet shots, market and taxi scenes |
| RM20 |
Everyday transaction scenes |
| RM50 |
Mid-size handoffs, retail scenes |
| RM100 |
Larger payouts, briefcase and envelope reveals |
Printed to Handle Like the Real Thing
Thin, flat paper stands out as obviously fake once it's under studio lighting or being handled on camera. Our prop Ringgit notes are produced on stock chosen to hold color accurately and move naturally — fanning, stacking, and catching light the way genuine banknotes do, which matters most in scenes where a bill gets counted or passed between characters.
Clearly Novelty, Fully Compliant
Every note includes intentional design differences and disclaimer text that keep it distinct from official Malaysian currency at all times. This keeps productions compliant when ordering, shipping, storing, or filming with these notes — no currency permits or import restrictions to navigate before your shoot.
Who Buys This Prop Currency
- Film and TV productions set in Malaysia or Southeast Asia
- Advertising agencies shooting finance or lifestyle campaigns
- Content creators making money-themed YouTube or short-form videos
- Magicians and performers doing currency-based routines
- Casino night and fundraiser event organizers
- Educators teaching about Southeast Asian currencies and trade
- Escape room and immersive experience designers
Ready to Ship for Tight Deadlines
RM50 and RM100 notes are our most-ordered denominations and stay well-stocked to cover last-minute production needs. Order a small pack for a quick scene or a bulk quantity for a longer shoot — discounts apply automatically as your order size grows.
Browse the full lineup below and get realistic, camera-ready Malaysian Ringgit currency shipped to your set, studio, or event.