- List of international vehicle registration codes
-
Example of the small white oval plate or sticker; this one represents the former East Germany
The country in which a motor vehicle's vehicle registration plate was issued is indicated by an international licence plate country code displayed in bold block uppercase on a small white oval plate or sticker near the number plate on the rear of a vehicle.
The allocation of codes is maintained by the United Nations as the Distinguishing Signs of Vehicles in International Traffic (sometimes abbreviated to DSIT), authorised by the UN's Geneva Convention on Road Traffic of 1949 and the Vienna Convention on Road Traffic of 1968. Many vehicle codes created since the adoption of ISO 3166 coincide with ISO two- or three-letter codes.
The 2004 South-East Asian Agreement ... for the Facilitation of Cross-Border Transport of Goods and People uses a mixture of ISO and DSIT codes: Myanmar uses MYA, China CHN, and Cambodia KH (ISO codes), Thailand uses T (DSIT code), Laos LAO, and Viet Nam VN (coincident ISO and DSIT codes).[1]
In the European Union, vehicles from one member state do not need to display the oval while within another state, provided the number plate is in the common EU standard format, which includes the international vehicle registration code on the plate.[2]
Contents
Current codes
Note: an asterisk (*) indicates that this code is unofficial (does not appear in the UN list of distinguishing codes).
Code Country From Before Notes A Austria
1910 AFG Afghanistan
1971 AG* Antigua and Barbuda
AL Albania
1934 AM Armenia
1992 SU Formerly part of the Soviet Union AND Andorra
1957 ANG* Angola
1975 PAN: 1932–1957, P: 1957–1975 Formerly a territory of Portugal ARK* Antarctica AUA*, ARU* Aruba
NA Formerly part of the Netherlands Antilles AUS Australia
1954 AX* Åland Islands
2002 SF Territory of Finland. FIN is the official code. AXA* Anguilla
AZ Azerbaijan
1993 SU Formerly part of the Soviet Union B Belgium
1910 BD Bangladesh
1978 PAK Formerly East Pakistan BDS Barbados
1956 BF Burkina Faso
1990 RHV / HV until August 2003, 1984; (République (de)) Haute Volta (Upper Volta) BG Bulgaria
1910 BH Belize
1938 former British Honduras. Uses BZ unofficially since 1980, although still officially registered as BH as of 2007. BHT* Bhutan
BIH Bosnia and Herzegovina
1993 YU Bosna i Hercegovina (Bosnian) BOL Bolivia
1967 BR Brazil
1930 BRN Bahrain
1954 BRU Brunei
1956 BS Bahamas
1950 BUR Myanmar
1956 BA Also known as Burma. BVI British Virgin Islands
BW Botswana
2003 BP unofficially for Botswana. Officially RB for Republic of Botswana. Formerly Bechuanaland Protectorate BY Belarus
1992 (2004) SU Byelorussia; formerly part of the Soviet Union. The UN was officially notified of the change from SU to BY only in 2004.[3] BZ* Belize
1980 former British Honduras. Still officially registered as BH (as of 2007). C Cuba
1930 CAM Cameroon
1952 F & WAN Formerly a territory of France CDN Canada
1956 CA Canadian Dominion CH Switzerland
1911 Confœderatio Helvetica (Latin) CI Côte d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast)
1961 F Formerly a territory of France CL Sri Lanka
1961 Formerly Ceylon CN* People's Republic of China
CO Colombia
1952 COM* Comoros
F Formerly a territory of France CR Costa Rica
1956 CV* Cape Verde
1975 P Formerly a territory of Portugal CY Cyprus
1932 CYM* Wales
Part of the United Kingdom, CYM from Cymru (Wales) CZ Czech Republic
1993 CS Formerly Československo (Czechoslovakia) D Germany
1910 Deutschland (German); also used until 1974 by East Germany, which then used DDR until German reunification in 1990
DJI* Djibouti
F Formerly a territory of France DK Denmark
1914 DOM Dominican Republic
1952 DY Benin
1910 Part of AOF (Afrique occidentale française) − 1960 Dahomey (name until 1975) DZ Algeria
1962 F − 1911 Dzayer (Algerian Arabic); Formerly part of France E Spain
1910 España (Spanish) EAK Kenya
1938 East Africa Kenya EAT Tanzania
1938 EAT & EAZ East Africa Tanzania; formerly East Africa Tanganyika and East Africa Zanzibar EAU Uganda
1938 East Africa Uganda EAZ Zanzibar
East Africa Zanzibar EC Ecuador
1962 ENG* England
Part of the United Kingdom ER Eritrea
1993 AOI − 1941, ETH 1964–1993 Africa Orientale Italiana (Italian), Ethiopia ES El Salvador
1978 EST Estonia
1993 EW 1919–1940 & 1991–1993; SU 1940–1991 Eesti Vabariik (Estonian); Formerly part of the Soviet Union ET Egypt
1927 ETH Ethiopia
1964 AOI − 1941 Africa Orientale Italiana (Italian) F France
1910 FIN Finland
1993 SF Suomi Finland (Finnish/Swedish) FJI Fiji
1971 FL Liechtenstein
1923 Fürstentum Liechtenstein (German) FO Faroe Islands
1996 Sometimes FØ or Fø FRL* Friesland
unofficial; usually with the Frisian flag printed in the oval shape, behind the letters FSM* Federated States of Micronesia
G Gabon
1974 ALEF − 1960 Afrique Équatoriale Française GB United Kingdom (of Great Britain and Northern Ireland)
1910 Before 1922 it was used for the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland GBA Alderney
1924 Great Britain – Alderney GBG Guernsey
1924 Great Britain – Guernsey GBJ Jersey
1924 Great Britain – Jersey GBM Isle of Man
1932 Great Britain – Isle of Man GBZ Gibraltar
1924 Great Britain – Gibraltar [Z was assigned because G was already used for Guernsey] GCA Guatemala
1956 Guatemala, Central America GE Georgia
1992 SU Formerly part of the Soviet Union GH Ghana
1959 WAC − 1957 West Africa Gold Coast − 1957 GQ* Equatorial Guinea
E Formerly a territory of Spain – Spanish Guinea − 1968 GR Greece
1913 GUY Guyana
1972 BRG Formerly British Guiana − 1966 GW*, RGB* Guinea-Bissau
1974 P Portuguese Guinea – 1974. República da Guiné-Bissau H Hungary
1910 HK* Hong Kong
1932 HKJ Jordan
JOR Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan HN* Honduras
HR Croatia
1992 SHS 1919–29, Y 1929–53, YU 1953–92 Hrvatska (Croatian). Formerly part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (Kraljevina Srba, Hrvata i Slovenaca – Croatian), then part of Yugoslavia. In the period immediately following Croatia's declaration of independence from Yugoslavia in 1991, it was common to see unofficial oval stickers with the letters "CRO" sold across Croatia. Despite the initial anticipation that Croatia's international vehicle registration code would be "CRO", Croatia officially opted for the 2-letter "HR" (Hrvatska) code instead.
I Italy
1919 IL Israel
1952 IND India
1947 IR Iran
1936 IRL Ireland
1962 GB − 1910, SE − 1924, EIR − 1938 Formerly Great Britain, Saorstát Éireann, Éire. Currently there is a campaign underway by Irish Language activists to have the name of the country in the native language represented by changing the code back to EIR or ÉIR. This is unnecessary, as Statutory Instrument No. 269 of 1961 provides: " ... the letters EIR are used to indicate the name of the State but the letters IRL may be substituted therefor." IRQ Iraq
1930 IS Iceland
1936 Ísland (Icelandic) J Japan
1964 JA Jamaica
1932 K Cambodia
1956 F − 1949 Known as Kampuchea 1976–89. Formerly a territory of France. KAN* Saint Kitts and Nevis
KIR* Kiribati
KN* Greenland
GRO Kalaallit Nunaat KP* Democratic People's Republic of Korea
KS Kyrgyzstan
1992 SU − 1991 Formerly part of the Soviet Union KWT Kuwait
1954 KZ Kazakhstan
1992 SU − 1991 Formerly part of the Soviet Union L Luxembourg
1911 LAO Laos
1959 F – 1949 Formerly a territory of France (French Indochina) LAR Libya
1972 I − 1949, LT Libyan Arab Republic; Formerly a territory of Italy LB Liberia
1967 LS Lesotho
1967 BL Basutoland − 1966 LT Lithuania
1992 SU 1940–1991 Formerly part of the Soviet Union LV Latvia
1992 LR 1927–1940, SU 1940–1991 Latvijas Republika (Latvian); Formerly part of the Soviet Union M Malta
1966 GBY 1924–66 MA Morocco
1924 Maroc (French) MAL Malaysia
1967 PRK – 1957, FM 1954-7, PTM 1957–67 formerly Perak, then Federated Malay States, then Perseketuan Tanah Malayu (Malay) MC Monaco
1910 MD Moldova
1992 SU − 1991 Formerly part of the Soviet Union MEX Mexico
1952 MGL Mongolia
MH* Marshall Islands
MK Macedonia
1992 YU − 1992 Formerly part of Yugoslavia MNE Montenegro
2006 MN – 1913–1919, SHS 1919–29, Y 1929–53, YU 1953–2003, SCG 2003–2006 Formerly part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (Srba, Hrvata i Slovenaca – Serbo-Croatian), then part of Yugoslavia and then Serbia and Montenegro (Srbija i Crna Gora – Serbian) MO* Macau
1930s? former Portuguese overseas province MOC Mozambique
1975 MOC: 1932–56, P: 1957–75 Formerly part of Portugal. Moçambique (Portuguese) MS Mauritius
1938 MV* Maldives
MW Malawi
1965 EA 1932–38, NP – 1938–70, RNY option 1960–65 Formerly the Nyasaland Protectorate N Norway
1922 NA Netherlands Antilles
1957 NAM Namibia
1990 SWA Formerly South West Africa NAU Nauru
1968 NC* New Caledonia
NEP Nepal
1970 NI* Northern Ireland Part of the United Kingdom NIC Nicaragua
1952 NL Netherlands
1910 NZ New Zealand
1958 OM* Oman
P Portugal
1910 PA Panama
1952 PAL* Palau
PE Peru
1937 PK Pakistan
1947? PL Poland
1921 PMR* Transnistria
1990 SU − 1991, MD 1991 Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic – officially part of Moldova. Formerly part of the Soviet Union.
PNG Papua New Guinea
1978 PR* Puerto Rico
PS* Palestinian territories
PY Paraguay
1952 Q Qatar
1972 RA Argentina
1927 República Argentina (Spanish) RB Botswana
1966 BP Republic of Botswana. Unofficially uses BW. Formerly Bechuanaland Protectorate RC Republic of China (Taiwan)
1932 RCA Central African Republic
1962 République Centrafricaine (French) RCB Republic of the Congo
1962 République du Congo Brazzaville (French) RCH Chile
1930 República de Chile (Spanish) RG Guinea
1972 République de Guinée (French) RH Haiti
1952 République d'Haïti (French) RI Indonesia
1955 Republik Indonesia (Indonesian) RIM Mauritania
1964 République islamique de Mauritanie (French) RKS* Kosovo
2010 SRB; KS 1999–2010; RKS 2010 Serbia claims Kosovo as part of its territory. RL Lebanon
1952 République Libanaise (French) RM Madagascar
1962 République de Madagascar (French) RMM Mali
1962 AOF − 1960 République du Mali (French). Formerly part of French West Africa (Afrique Occidentale Française) RN Niger
1977 AOF − 1960 République du Niger (French). Formerly part of French West Africa (Afrique Occidentale Française) RO Romania
1981 R ROK Republic of Korea
1971 ROU Uruguay
1979 República Oriental del Uruguay (Spanish) RP Philippines
1975 Republic of the Philippines RSM San Marino
1932 Repubblica di San Marino (Italian) RU Burundi
1962? Belgian territory of Ruanda-Urundi RUS Russia
1992 SU Formerly part of the Soviet Union RWA Rwanda
1964 RU − 1962 Formerly part of Ruanda-Urundi − 1962 S Sweden
1911 SA Saudi Arabia
1973 SCO* Scotland
Part of the United Kingdom SD Swaziland
1935 SGP Singapore
1952 SK Slovakia
1993 CS 1919–39,1945–92, SQ 1939–45 Formerly Československo (Czechoslovakia) SLE* Sierra Leone
2002 officially WAL; SLE is only used on local licence plates, written below the national flag SLO Slovenia
1992 SHS 1919–29, Y 1929–53, YU 1953–92 Formerly part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, then part of Yugoslavia SME Suriname
1936 SMOM* Sovereign Military Order of Malta
SN Senegal
1962 SO Somalia
1974 SOL* Solomon Islands
SRB Serbia
2006 SB – 1919, SHS 1919–29, Y 1929–53, YU 1953–2003, SCG 2003–2006 Formerly part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (Srba, Hrvata i Slovenaca – Serbo-Croatian), then part of Yugoslavia and then Serbia and Montenegro (Srbija i Crna Gora – Serbian) STP* São Tomé and Príncipe
1975 P Formerly a territory of Portugal SUD Sudan
1963 SY Seychelles
1938 SYR Syria
1952 T Thailand
1955 TCH, TD Chad
1973 Tchad (French) TG Togo
1973 TJ Tajikistan
1992 SU − 1991 Formerly part of the Soviet Union TL* Timor-Leste
P, RI Formerly a territory of Portugal, then part of Indonesia TM Turkmenistan
1992 SU − 1991 Formerly part of the Soviet Union TN Tunisia
1957 F − 1956 Formerly a territory of France TO* Tonga
TR Turkey
1935 TT Trinidad and Tobago
1964 TUV* Tuvalu
UA Ukraine
1992 SU Formerly part of the Soviet Union UAE United Arab Emirates
USA United States
1952 Correctly used by U.S.-registered vehicles abroad. Today, U.S.-owned vehicles registered in Europe use the licence plate code of the country in which they are located. UZ Uzbekistan
1992 SU Formerly part of the Soviet Union V Vatican City
1931 VN Vietnam
1953 VU* Vanuatu
WAG Gambia
1932 West Africa Gambia WAL Sierra Leone
1937 West Africa Sierra Leone; on local licence plates SLE is used WAN Nigeria
1937 West Africa Nigeria WD Dominica
1954 Windward Islands Dominica WG Grenada
1932 Windward Islands Grenada WL Saint Lucia
1932 Windward Islands Saint Lucia WS Samoa
1962 formerly Western Samoa WSA* Western Sahara 1932 SE − 1976 formerly Sahara Español (Spanish); now mostly occupied by Morocco, with some territory administered by the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic WV Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
1932 Windward Islands Saint Vincent YAR Yemen
North Yemen formerly known as the Yemen Arab Republic YV Venezuela
the same code is used for aircraft Z Zambia
1964 NR formerly Northern Rhodesia ZA South Africa
1936 Zuid-Afrika (from Dutch; in Afrikaans it is Suid-Afrika[4]) ZRE Democratic Republic of the Congo
1971? CB, RCL, CGO, ZR Congo Belge (French), République de Congo Léopoldville (French), Congo (Kinshasa), Zaïre ZW Zimbabwe
1980 SR, RSR formerly Southern Rhodesia until 1965, Rhodesia unrecognised until 1980 Codes no longer in use
Code Country Until After Notes ADN Aden 1980 Y From 1938. a.k.a. South Yemen, People's Democratic Republic of Yemen (1967) BA Myanmar
1956 BUR From 1937. BP Bechuanaland Protectorate 1966 Now Botswana CS Czechoslovakia 1992 CZ / SK DA Free City of Danzig (Gdańsk) 1939 D (1939-1945)
PL (since 1945)Danzig (German for Gdańsk) DDR German Democratic Republic 1990 D Deutsche Demokratische Republik EW Estonia 1993 EST Eesti Vabariik (Estonian) FR Faroe Islands 1996 FO Føroyar (Faroese) GRO Greenland KN HV Haute Volta, now Burkina Faso 1984 BF Upper Volta LR Latvia 1927–1940 SU, LV Latvijas Republika (Latvian) R Romania 1981 RO RNY Rhodesia-Nyasaland Fed. 1953 - 1963 NP, NR, SR Now Malawi, Zambia and Zimbabwe RSR Southern Rhodesia 1965–1979 SR Now Zimbabwe RT Togo
1973 TG République togolaise (French). Formerly French Togoland − 1960 SA Saarland 1956 D also D between 1935 and 1945; SA is now Saudi Arabia SB Serbia 1919 SHS Serbia became part of Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes SCG Serbia and Montenegro 2006 MNE, SRB From Serbian name "Srbija i Crna Gora". Now Montenegro, Serbia SF Finland 1993 FIN SF from "Suomi – Finland" (the names of the country in its official languages, Finnish and Swedish) SHS Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes 1929 Y Srba, Hrvata i Slovenaca – Serbo-Croatian. Kingdom changed its name to Yugoslavia SU Soviet Union 1991 EST, LT, LV, BY, MD, UA, TJ, TUR, GE, KZ, UZ, KS, AZ, ARM, RUS SWA South West Africa 1990 now Namibia TS Free Territory of Trieste 1947–1954 I, YU, SLO Y Yugoslavia 1953 YU Yemen started using Y afterwards YU Yugoslavia 2003 BIH, HR, KS, MK, MNE, SRB, SLO Now Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, and Slovenia - Note1
- There are unofficial codes in common use, such as "BZH" for Brittany, "VL" for Flanders, "V" for Vojvodina/Vajdaság and "CD" for "Corps Diplomatique". These often signify places which are not internationally recognised as independent states. See http://www.kingkong.demon.co.uk/where/unoff.htm for a list of some of these.
- Note2
- Some licence plates indicate from which part of the country they originate. See http://www.kingkong.demon.co.uk/where/where.htm for these origins.
See also
References
- ^ Agreement between and among the Governments of the Kingdom of Cambodia, the People's Republic of China, the Lao People's Democratic Republic, the Union of Myanmar, the Kingdom of Thailand, and the Socialist Republic of Viet Nam for the Facilitation of Cross-Border Transport of Goods and People, Annex 2: Registration of Vehicles in International Traffic, 2004 (also here and here)
- ^ European Council (1998-11-10). "Council Regulation (EC) No 2411/98 of 3 November 1998 on the recognition in intra-Community traffic of the distinguishing sign of the Member State in which motor vehicles and their trailers are registered". Official Journal L 299. Eurlex. pp. 1–3. http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=CELEX:31998R2411:EN:HTML. Retrieved 2008-07-05. "Article 3: Member States requiring vehicles registered in another Member State to display a distinguishing registration sign when they are being driven on their territory shall recognise the distinguishing sign of the Member State of registration displayed on the extreme left of the registration plate in accordance with the Annex to this Regulation as being equivalent to any other distinguishing sign that they recognise for the purpose of identifying the State in which the vehicle is registered."
- ^ http://www.minbuza.nl/en/Key_Topics/Treaties/Search_the_Treaty_Database?verdragid=12396
- ^ See article .za
External links
- UN Economic Commission for Europe, Working Party on Road Transport (WP.11)
- Miscellaneous Proposals of Amendments to the Model Regulations on the Transport of Dangerous Goods: Identification of Approval Country in Marking, UN/SCETDG/33/INF.5 (table compares ISO 3166 and DSIT codes)
- Association Francoplaque: Collectionneurs de Plaques d'Immatriculation (data mostly from RPW, below)
- European Registration Plate Association: Registration Plates of the World Online (registration required; data mostly from RPW, below)
- "RPW": Neil Parker and John Weeks, Registration Plates of the World, Europlate; 3rd edition (May 1994)
Categories:- Country codes
- Lists of abbreviations
- Vehicle registration plates
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