New Design series
The New Design Series ''', also known as the BSP Series, was the name used to refer to the banknotes of the Philippine peso. They were conceptualized from 1983 to 1985, issued from 1985 to 2013, and circulated from 1985 to 2019. The coins of the series were minted and issued from 1995 to 2017, and remain legal tender as of 2025. It was succeeded by the New Generation Currency Series. The series used the Friz Quadrata, Arial, Optima, and Helvetica typefaces.
History
When President Ferdinand Marcos' Martial Law was lifted in 1981, the central bank of the country, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, started to print and mint a new series of Philippine peso banknotes and coins, adopting anti-counterfeiting features. On June 12, 1985, the BSP issued the New Design Series, beginning with the 5-peso banknote which had the face of Emilio Aguinaldo on the obverse side. The following month, the 10-peso banknote, with the face of Apolinario Mabini on the obverse side, was issued. On January 1986, a new 20-peso banknote was introduced.Before the final 500-peso banknote with Ninoy Aquino, the original scheduled version was planned to feature Marcos which were already printed with 2 million banknotes as initial batch. However, the People Power Revolution caused it to be replaced by the former and also delayed the denomination's release to August 21, 1987.
Following the Philippines' new Constitution coming into effect in 1987, the 50, 100, and 500-peso banknotes, featuring Sergio Osmeña, Manuel Roxas, and Ninoy Aquino, were introduced. On December 16, 1991, the BSP issued a 1000-peso banknote, for the first time. It contained composite portraits of Jose Abad Santos, Josefa Llanes Escoda, and Vicente Lim, considered to be World War II heroes.
The 5- and 10-peso banknotes stopped production in June 1995 and July 2001, respectively, due to wear and tear caused by widespread usage. They were replaced by coin versions, though the banknotes remained the liability of the BSP until January 3, 2018. On May 2, 1997, the portrait of Andrés Bonifacio was added beside Apolinario Mabini on the 10-peso banknote. Elements of Katipunan were also included on the right side of the bill. The reverse design was likewise revised. The scene depicting the Katipuneros' blood compact, previously featured on the 5-peso banknote in the Pilipino and Ang Bagong Lipunan series, was added to the right side of the Barasoain Church. However, the watermark area continued to feature only Mabini, and the embedded security thread remained on the right side of the BSP governor's signature until 1998. As a result, banknotes with Bonifacio's image issued between 1997 and 1998 used the same paper originally intended for the 1985 version, which featured only Mabini.
Year of printing was implemented in the series starting with the second version of 10-peso banknote in May 1997, followed by the rest of the series' denominations 20, 50, 100, 500, and 1,000 in 1998. The 5-peso is the only one to not use it as the banknote already stopped production at the said month of 1995 two years before it was implemented.
In 1998, the 100,000-peso Centennial banknote, measuring 8.5" x 14" and recognized by the Guinness World Records as the world's largest legal tender note, was issued in a limited quantity of 1,000 pieces to commemorate the Centennial of Philippine Independence. Alongside this, the 2,000-peso Centennial note, measuring 216 mm x 133 mm and bearing the signature of President Joseph Estrada, was launched on December 1, 1998. In 1999, the names of the signatories on banknotes were first included, beginning with those bearing the signature of Estrada. During the Estrada administration, the long-standing practice since the Commonwealth era, of reproducing the signature of the President of the Philippines above the legend "President of the Philippines," was discontinued. Instead, the president's full name was explicitly printed. Additionally, the names of the signatories were rendered in all capital letters, while their positions were printed in lowercase.
Meanwhile, in the late 1990s, color reproduction machines became commercially available and posed a significant threat to the integrity of the currency. As a result, in 2001, the BSP decided to enhance the security features of the 1,000-, 500-, and 100-peso banknotes, as well as the 200-peso note, which was issued on June 12, 2002. These enhancements included the incorporation of an iridescent band and a windowed security thread to combat counterfeiting using color copiers. On that same year, the name of the Old Legislative Building on the reverse side of the fifty-peso note was changed to the "National Museum" and the name was moved at the top of the building, to reflect the turnover made by the Congress of the Philippines to the National Museum. The name of the building's facade was changed from "Executive House" to "National Museum". Also, the serial number was moved at the top of the denomination that was located on the lower left side of the banknote.
The second major political upheaval, known as the Second EDSA Revolution in 2001, was depicted on the reverse side of the 200-peso banknote, showing Gloria Macapagal Arroyo being sworn into office at the EDSA Shrine. The obverse side of the banknote featured a portrait of her father, Diosdado Macapagal. The 200-peso note of the NDS was issued in 2002, making it the last denomination to be added to the series. It was also a commemorative banknote, released on June 12, 2002, to mark the 104th anniversary of Philippine independence. Its release also coincided with the 17th anniversary of the launch of the NDS and the five-peso note on June 12, 1985, which featured the Aguinaldo Shrine, was colored green, and remained in common circulation even after production ended in 1995, seven years before the 200-peso note was issued.
The 200-peso banknote drew criticism from the opposition, who argued that legal tender should feature only deceased national heroes, not a sitting president. However, this was not the first time a legal tender featured an incumbent president. Coins were minted to commemorate the inauguration of Manuel L. Quezon as President of the Philippines in 1935. During World War II, various provincial emergency currency boards issued notes bearing the image of then-President Quezon. In 1975, the BSP released a 5-peso coin featuring then-President Marcos. Former Presidents Fidel V. Ramos and Estrada also appeared on a limited commemorative 2,000-peso banknote issued to mark the 100th anniversary of Philippine independence. A limited commemorative 1,000-peso banknote featuring former President Estrada was also released for the same occasion. Additionally, every banknote series since 1935 has included the facsimile signature of the incumbent President of the Philippines.
The 100-peso banknote became the subject of controversy in 2005 after notes printed by Oberthur Technologies of France, intended for circulation during the Christmas season and featuring the signature of BSP Governor Amando Tetangco Jr., were released with a misspelling of the President's name, a first in Philippine history. The banknotes incorrectly spelled the name as "Gloria Macapagal-Arrovo" instead of the correct "Gloria Macapagal Arroyo." The incident quickly became the subject of public humor once it made national headlines. The BSP investigated the error and corrected it afterward.
The NDS banknotes were printed until 2013. They remained legal tender until December 31, 2015, and could be exchanged for newer notes until the larger comemorative banknotes were demonetized on August 2, 2019. The NDS coexisted with the New Generation Currency Series banknotes throughout the 2010s.
The main NDS notes ceased to be legal tender on January 1, 2016, and were demonetized two years later on January 3, 2018. The entire series, including the 2,000- and 100,000-peso commemorative banknotes, was officially demonetized on August 2, 2019, making the NDS series the longest-running banknote series with a liability under the BSP lasting 34 years.