Every time a film shows a briefcase stuffed with cash or a robbery scene with notes flying everywhere, there’s a good chance none of that money is real. Behind those scenes sits a small, specialised industry built entirely around making convincing but legally distinct euro prop money — and the rules governing it are stricter than most viewers would guess.
Why Productions Avoid Real Currency
Using genuine banknotes on a film set introduces problems that have nothing to do with acting or cinematography. Real cash needs security, insurance, and careful handling, and if a script calls for money to be destroyed, thrown into water, or scattered across a street, that expense becomes permanent. Productions of every size have learned it’s simpler and safer to commission replicas built specifically for the camera.
This isn’t a shortcut around the law — it’s a system that works alongside it. The Forgery and Counterfeiting Act 1981draws a firm line between currency intended to deceive and currency that is clearly, deliberately not real. Prop houses operate on the correct side of that line by design, not by accident.
The Rules That Keep Prop Money Legal
The Bank of England has published guidance that prop manufacturers follow closely. A legal replica note typically differs from genuine currency in several ways at once:
- It’s usually printed on one side only, since real notes carry detail on both faces.
- Its dimensions are altered — generally at least a quarter larger or smaller than an actual note.
- If the size does match genuine currency, the word “SPECIMEN” must appear diagonally across the design.
- The material itself is different. UK banknotes are printed on a polymer substrate that prop paper never replicates.
None of these features are hidden or subtle. They’re intentional signals that the note is a prop currency replica, not something meant to fool a bank teller or a shopkeeper.
How Prop Departments Make It Convincing On Screen
Camera lenses are unforgiving, so prop teams rely on a layering trick. A handful of highly detailed notes — often called “hero” notes — sit on the outside of a stack where they’ll actually be seen. Everything beneath them is blank filler paper cut to the same size. This keeps production costs down and has a useful side effect: if a stack goes missing from a set, it’s mostly worthless paper rather than a genuine loss.
Specialist prop-printing houses produce these hero notes to a professional standard, printing them with wording such as “Motion Picture Use Only” so there’s never any doubt about their purpose, even under close inspection.
What Happens If Prop Money Leaves the Set
It occasionally does — a crew member keeps one as a souvenir, or a note ends up somewhere it shouldn’t. Because possessing currency that fails to meet the legal prop standards is treated as a strict liability offence in the UK, intent doesn’t need to be proven for someone to face consequences. Depending on the circumstances, that can mean confiscation, a police investigation, or, in more serious cases involving deliberate distribution, prosecution.
This is one reason reputable prop suppliers keep meticulous records and mark every batch clearly. It protects the production as much as it protects them.
Sourcing Prop Cash the Right Way
Productions rarely make their own prop money from scratch. Instead, they work with licensed prop suppliers who understand both the creative brief and the legal requirements. A good supplier will ask what the camera needs to see — close-up shots of texture, wide shots of stacks, notes being counted by hand — and build the replica accordingly, always staying within Bank of England guidelines.
For smaller productions, student films, or content creators, this same principle applies at a smaller scale. It’s tempting to think a personal project doesn’t need to follow the same rules, but the legal definition of counterfeit currency doesn’t change based on budget or audience size.
Common Questions Productions Ask
Can real money be filmed at all? Yes, as long as it isn’t damaged, destroyed, or lost. Any scene involving burning, tearing, or scattering cash calls for legal replicas instead.
Is this different from children’s play money? Considerably. Play money is usually brightly coloured and obviously fake at a glance. Prop currency for film is built to survive studio lighting and high-definition cameras while still meeting the same legal standards that keep it out of everyday circulation.
Does every production need a professional supplier? Not strictly, but working with an established prop house removes the guesswork around sizing, printing, and material — the details most likely to cause legal trouble if they’re wrong.
The Bottom Line
The fake money audiences see on screen represents a genuine balancing act: it has to look real enough to serve the story, while staying unmistakably fake enough to stay legal. That balance is maintained through consistent design choices — one-sided printing, altered dimensions, distinct materials — enforced by clear legislation and upheld by an industry that takes the distinction seriously.







