Tokelau has no indigenous currency infrastructure of its own — it uses the New Zealand dollar for daily transactions and has no mint, no central bank, and a total land area under 12 square kilometres spread across three atolls. Its numismatic issues are produced entirely for the collector market, struck under licensing arrangements and typically manufactured at overseas facilities. The yellow-eyed penguin, known in Māori as hoiho, is endemic to New Zealand and its offshore islands, and was listed as endangered by the time this coin was issued.
Tokelau has no indigenous currency infrastructure of its own — it uses the New Zealand dollar for daily transactions and has no mint, no central bank, and a total land area under 12 square kilometres spread across three atolls. Its numismatic issues are produced entirely for the collector market, struck under licensing arrangements and typically manufactured at overseas facilities. The yellow-eyed penguin, known in Māori as hoiho, is endemic to New Zealand and its offshore islands, and was listed as endangered by the time this coin was issued.