USD/TRY Exchange Rate
Rate updates live from market data · indicative, not an official dealing rate · not trading advice.
USD/TRY — interactive chart
Momentum & oscillators
About USD/TRY
USD/TRY measures how many Turkish Lira it takes to buy one US Dollar. Like any exchange rate it is driven by the interest-rate gap between the two central banks, by the relative pace of growth and inflation in each economy, by trade and capital flows, and by the overall appetite for risk in global markets. A stronger US Dollar — or a weaker Turkish Lira — pushes the rate up.
Technical snapshot
USD/TRY is trading around 46.978, up +0.05% over the last session. The rate is sitting above its 50-day average, framing the medium-term picture as a uptrend. RSI-14 reads 100 — stretched to the upside, where pullbacks are more common. These are mechanical indicator readings, not a forecast or a recommendation.
USD/TRY — frequently asked
What is the USD/TRY exchange rate today?
One US Dollar (USD) is worth about 46.978 TRY, up +0.05% on the day. The rate at the top of this page refreshes live from market data.
What moves the USD/TRY pair?
Mostly the interest-rate gap between the USD and TRY central banks, the relative pace of growth and inflation in each economy, trade and capital flows, and the global appetite for risk. Data surprises and central-bank commentary can move it quickly.
Is USD/TRY a good pair to trade?
That depends entirely on your strategy, risk tolerance and experience — there is no universal answer. Use the live chart and the technical readings above as inputs, never as a signal to act. FX is leveraged and risky, and this page is information, not advice.
How many TRY is 1 USD?
At the current rate, 1 USD ≈ 46.978 TRY, and 1 TRY ≈ 0.0213 USD. Use the converter on this page for other amounts.
Disclaimer: TrendiView provides market data and educational information only. Nothing here is investment, financial or trading advice, and rates are indicative and may be delayed. Foreign exchange is leveraged and carries a high risk of loss. Do your own research and consider a licensed adviser. Past performance does not guarantee future results.