Egyptian Pound (EGP) to Sudanese Pound (SDG) — Parallel Market Cross-Rate
As of June 6, 2026, 1 EGP is worth about 68.163 SDG, and 1 SDG is worth about 0.0147 EGP, using Egypt's and Sudan's parallel (black market) exchange rates. We derive this cross-rate by bridging both currencies through the US dollar: in Egypt one dollar trades near 53 EGP on the street, and in Sudan one dollar trades near 3,601 SDG.
For everyday amounts that means roughly 1,000 EGP ≈ 68,163 SDG, and 10,000 EGP ≈ 681,634 SDG, at today's parallel rates.
Egypt hosts a huge Sudanese community, and after Sudan's conflict the flow of people and money has made the pound–pound cross critical.
How the EGP to SDG cross-rate is calculated
There is no large, direct market that quotes EGP against SDG, so the realistic rate is built in two steps through the US dollar — the currency both Egypt and Sudan actually trade against. First we convert EGP to dollars at Egypt's parallel rate, then dollars to SDG at Sudan's parallel rate.
Put numerically: 1 EGP ÷ 53 (EGP per USD) ≈ $0.018929, then × 3,601 (SDG per USD) ≈ 68.163 SDG. Using the street rate on both legs gives a far more realistic figure than multiplying two official rates that may be impossible to obtain.
Why the parallel EGP/SDG rate differs from the official cross
Both of these currencies carry a parallel-market premium of their own. In Egypt, the gap is driven by recurring dollar shortages, a series of pound devaluations, IMF-linked reforms; in Sudan, by conflict and disruption, runaway inflation, severe dollar scarcity. Because each official rate can overstate what its currency is really worth, an official EGP/SDG cross can be doubly misleading.
Today Egypt shows a very small premium of about 1.9%, while Sudan shows an extreme premium of about 728.5%. The parallel cross-rate already bakes both of these gaps in, which is why it reflects what traders actually pay.
Egypt and Sudan: who converts EGP to SDG?
Egypt hosts a huge Sudanese community, and after Sudan's conflict the flow of people and money has made the pound–pound cross critical.
Egypt has repeatedly devalued the pound to close the gap with the street, making its black-market rate a closely tracked economic signal. War and economic collapse have pushed Sudan's parallel market far ahead of any official rate, making the street price the one most people actually use.
Converting Egyptian Pound to Sudanese Pound safely
Use the converter on this page to turn any Egyptian Pound amount into Sudanese Pound at the live parallel cross-rate, and check it against the reverse (SDG → EGP) direction too. All figures are aggregated from P2P platforms, community reports and market monitoring on both sides, then refreshed hourly.
These rates are published for information and price-transparency only — they are not an offer to trade and are not financial or legal advice. Many countries require foreign-currency transactions to go through licensed channels, so confirm the rules in both Egypt and Sudan before converting any money.