1 USD = 7,800 Kip to 9,800 Kip (depending on who you’re asking and trading with)
1 Bhatt = 265 Kip to 280 Kip
And here’s the additional catch for Malaysians. We can’t trade for Lao Kip in our Malaysian Ringgit (or in
1 RM = 9.8 Bhatt (est) = 2,597 to 2,744 Kip
1 USD = 3.23 RM (
Negotiating for goods became that much more interesting. It was a game of “Who gets more confused first”. You, or the trader.
At one point I was bargaining for scarves.
After negotiating the price down from 5 USD (5 x 8,700 = 43,500 Kip per piece) to 40,000 Kip a piece, the lady was adamantly unable to reduce the price from 120,000 Kip to 105,000 Kip for 3 pieces (35,000 Kip per piece for ‘bulk purchase’). I didn’t have enough Kip, so she suggested USD. Strangely, she was amicably agreeable when I suggested 4 USD a piece (4 x 8,700 = 34,800 Kip a piece). That’s 5,200 Kip less then her insistent price of 40,000 Kip.
At first I thought, maybe Lao traders preferred USD, but anther trader selling bags preferred I pay 55,000 Kip instead of 6 USD (6 x 8,700 = 52,200 Kip).
Even hotels contradicted on their currency exchange rate. The first hotel I stayed in charged me 19 USD a night based on an exchange rate of 1 USD = 7,800 Kip. The second one cost 17 USD with a rate of 1 USD = 9,800 Kip. My friends and I saw yet another pretty decent guest house which valued 1 USD as 10,000 Kip.
If you have an uncanny love for numbers, eateries with receipts come in 3 to 4 currency denomination options for a delightful dinner-after game of digits.



































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