Signed proof documents for official exchange rates

Keep source attribution, selected date, document id, payload hash, and public verification together.

Official source proof

Federal Reserve H.10 exchange-rate proof documents

When a file relies on Federal Reserve H.10 data, FXProof can turn the supported dataset and selected date into a signed proof PDF that carries the source context, document id, payload hash, and verification details.

FXProof is not affiliated with or endorsed by Federal Reserve System.

Federal Reserve System current proof sample preview

Signed FXProof Proof PDF

Sample date: 2026-06-26

Static public example. Availability for your proof depends on the concrete dataset and date.

Download sample PDF

Available proof datasets

FRB G.5 Monthly Rates

Monthly

fed|g5_monthly|monthly

FRB G.5A Annual Rates

Early (Yearly)

fed|g5a_early|early

FRB H.10 Daily Rates

Daily

fed|h10_daily|daily

How can I keep evidence of the Federal Reserve H.10 rate used on a particular date?

Select the supported H.10 dataset and the date used by the calculation or record. A signed proof PDF can be opened when the corresponding proof bundle is ready.

Use the Federal Reserve H.10 page when rate evidence needs to move clearly between finance, controls, and technical teams.

Is the FXProof PDF a Federal Reserve publication?

No. The Federal Reserve publishes the underlying H.10 data. FXProof produces its own signed proof PDF around supported data and is not affiliated with or endorsed by the Federal Reserve.

  • Federal Reserve System source attribution.
  • Source date or reference date used for the rate.
  • Rate context for the selected dataset and date.
  • FXProof document id, payload hash, digital signature, and verification information.

How is signed proof different from a saved H.10 page?

A saved H.10 page provides useful source context. The FXProof PDF records the selected dataset, date, and rate context and adds a digital signature, document id, payload hash, and public verification route.

Store the signed PDF with the finance, control, or technical record that used the rate. Acceptance remains a decision for the recipient and applicable procedure.

Open a Federal Reserve H.10 sample

Review how H.10 source context and the signed FXProof verification fields are laid out for later checking.

View a proof sample

Evidence for an earlier H.10 date

See how date readiness works when the calculation depends on historical Federal Reserve H.10 data.

Read historical proof guide

Verification across teams

See how the proof answers which H.10 dataset and date supported the rate and whether the proof payload hash still matches.

Read verification guide

Federal Reserve H.10 proof in an audit file

Follow the audit handoff from the H.10-based proof PDF to the workpaper and the reviewer's checks.

Open audit use case

Questions

Can I create proof for an earlier H.10 date?

Check the supported H.10 dataset and date first. Historical proof is available only for a proof bundle that is ready.

Who publishes the rate and who signs the proof PDF?

The Federal Reserve publishes the underlying H.10 data. FXProof issues and signs the proof PDF that records the supported source and rate context.

Is a downloaded H.10 page the same as verifiable proof?

No. A downloaded page can preserve source context, while the FXProof PDF adds its own digital signature, document id, payload hash, and public verification path.

What can a finance or control reviewer check?

The reviewer can inspect the H.10 source context, validate the PDF signature, and check the document id and payload hash without access to the preparer's account.

Keep the proof with the file that used the rate

Inspect a static sample first, then use an account when you need a proof bundle for a concrete dataset and date.