New £20 note enters circulation today - can you still use your old ones?

THE new £20 banknote featuring artist JMW Turner has officially entered into circulation.
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The new polymer note will replace the paper current paper ones and has been hailed by the Bank of England as its most secure banknote yet.

JMW Turner replaces economist Adam Smith as the face on the note.

They will start appearing in ATMs and tills from today.

The new £20 note has entered circulation. Picture: Kirsty O'Connor/PA WireThe new £20 note has entered circulation. Picture: Kirsty O'Connor/PA Wire
The new £20 note has entered circulation. Picture: Kirsty O'Connor/PA Wire
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It includes two see-through windows and a two colour foil to help thwart counterfeiters.

The Bank expects half of all ATMs across the UK to be dispensing polymer £20 banknotes in just two weeks' time.

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Here's what the new £20 note looks like - and when it enters circulation

The son of a barber and a wig maker, Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775-1851) became renowned as one of the great masters of painting.

He first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1790 aged just 15.

Features on the new Turner note include:

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- A large see-through window with a blue and gold foil on the front depicting Margate lighthouse and Turner Contemporary. The foil is silver on the back. The shape of the large window is based on the shape of the fountains in Trafalgar Square.

- Turner's self-portrait, painted around 1799 and currently on display in Tate Britain.

- One of Turner's most celebrated paintings The Fighting Temeraire - a tribute to the ship HMS Temeraire which played a distinguished role in Nelson's victory at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805. It was voted the nation's favourite painting in a BBC Radio 4 poll.

- A metallic hologram which changes between the word ‘twenty' and ‘pounds’ when the note is tilted.

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- A purple foil patch containing the letter ‘T’ and based on the staircase at Tate Britain.

- A quote ‘Light is therefore colour’ from an 1818 lecture by Turner referring to the use of light, shade, colour and tone in his pictures.

- Turner's signature from his will, in which he bequeathed many of his paintings to the nation.

The paper £20 notes can still be used as normal and the Bank will give six months' notice ahead of their legal tender status being withdrawn.

There are over two billion £20 notes in circulation.

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The note will join the Sir Winston Churchill £5 and the Jane Austen £10 in the Bank of England's first series of polymer notes.

A new polymer £50 featuring Bletchley Park codebreaker Alan Turing will be issued next year.

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