Vehicle registration plates of Norway

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Norwegian implementation of a format similar to the EU format. Both the EU format and the Norwegian format satisfy the Vienna Convention on Road Traffic. Non-EU-section-with-N.svg
Norwegian implementation of a format similar to the EU format. Both the EU format and the Norwegian format satisfy the Vienna Convention on Road Traffic.

The registration plates of cars in Norway are maintained by the Norwegian Ministry of Transport and Communications. As in most countries, cars are identified only by number plates read visually. Each plate is a legal document that both identifies the vehicle and permits its use, and shall be returned to the registration authority when the vehicle is no longer in use.

Contents

The current alphanumerical system (two letters followed by four or five numbers) was introduced in 1971. The design of the plates remained the same until 2002, when the road authorities decided on a new font which standardized the width of each character. [1] The new design was unsuccessful due to legibility issues, for example the letters "A" and "R" were often hard to distinguish. From 2006 the font was changed again to improve legibility, and space was provided for a blue nationality stripe with a Norwegian flag. [2] From 2009, plates were made of plastic, and produced in a factory at Tønsberg. [3] From 2012, plates are again produced in aluminum due to the plastic plates easily getting damaged in winter. [4]

Licence plate design

The licence plates may have one of the following designs:

A – White reflective plate, black print

For cars, trucks, buses, etc. taxed and fit to drive on public roads. Most cars in Norway have these plates. Motorcycles, mopeds, moped cars, trailers, caravans etc have plates with two letters and four digits.

Flag of Norway.svg
N
 DA 12345 
Flag of Norway.svg
N
 DA 1234 

B – Black plate, yellow print

These are for all vehicles that are approved and deemed safe but never drive on public roads. This includes logging and mining equipment, snowmobiles, various transports at airports and ports, etc. Such vehicles are tax exempt. Vehicles registered on Svalbard also use these plates, as according to the Svalbard Treaty, national taxes may not be levied on Svalbard.

DJ 45765

C – Black plate, white print

Rally and other competition cars. The vehicle may be driven legally on the road to and from training and events if a NMF licence and a statement from the local club on training times is presented. Insurance and road tax has to be paid, but there is no import tax on new vehicles.

AA 12345

D – Orange plates, black print

Military cars, trucks, buses, tanks etc.

Orange plates with red print are military cars, such as tanks etc., see class I below

12345

E – Green reflective plate, black print

For cars, vans, small trucks, etc. taxed and fit to drive on public roads, equipped with only one row of seats (driver included) and with sufficient internal volume to fit a crate 140 cm long by 90 cm wide by 105 cm high. This category is primarily intended for tradesmen, couriers and such, but there is no restriction on who can own or operate such a vehicle. Vehicles with green plates are taxed more lightly than vehicles with white plates.

Flag of Norway.svg
N
 DA 12345 

F – Blue plate, yellow print

These are diplomatic corps plates; they are used on official cars of foreign embassies and consular services. These plates always use prefix CD. The first two digits shows which diplomatic mission the vehicle belongs to. They are tax exempt.

CD 12345
CD 1234

G – Red plate, white print

Dealer plates. These plates are assigned to car dealerships and used for ferrying or test driving. They can be moved freely from car to car.

DA 12

Since mid 2015 there is a new format starting from AAA10. This format is centrally issued.

ABC 12

Dealer plates for trailers has a T as suffix.

DA 12T
ABC 12T

H – Red plate, black print

Stickers used for ferrying or testing unregistered but roadworthy vehicles, prototypes etc. Issued on day-to-day basis at a cost of NOK 310 per day. The date of issue is printed to the right of the registration number. [5]

DA123

I – Orange plate, red print

Military test plates, with two or three letters (FMU or T-U) followed by three number with leading zero. FMU is for "Forsvarsmuséet" (the Armed Forces Museum) or T-U for "Test og utvikling" (testing and development).

T-U 001
FMU 001

J – White plates, black print, red margins

Export and tourist plates. No letters. Left and right is a red border with the month/year of expiry written vertically.

001234500

Personalised number plates

Starting in 2017, it is possible to apply for personalised number plates bearing any combination of two to seven letters and digits, with certain exceptions, mainly for offensive words or phrases and registered trademarks. Subject to those conditions, and upon payment of a NOK 9 000 fee, the applicant is granted the exclusive right to use the requested registration number on any class A or E vehicle they own for ten years. [6]

Flag of Norway.svg
N
 PERSONA 
Flag of Norway.svg
N
 PS 

Validation sticker

Oblat.jpeg

Between 1993 and 2012, self-adhesive validation stickers in primary colours were issued annually to every car that had valid road tax and insurance and had passed its latest biennial safety and emissions test. The stickers included the registration number in the form of a bar code, and changed colour every year on a three-year cycle: red, blue and yellow.

The use of validation stickers was discontinued from May 2012. The police will now rely on automated systems which photograph the number plate, identify the registration number using optical character recognition, and check the car's status in a database. [7]

Nationality stripe

A licence plate from Hafslund Norwegian number plate.jpg
A licence plate from Hafslund

Norwegian plates manufactured after 1 November 2006 have a nationality stripe on the left end of the plates. This stripe is blue with Norway's national flag and international vehicle registration code "N", in a similar format to that used by many central European countries before they became EU members. The resemblance to EU registration plates infuriated some adherents of the anti-EU movement, leading the Public Roads Administration to issue white or black adhesive labels with which they could cover the blue stripe. [8]

Manufacture of licence plates

The manufacture of licence plates is strictly controlled by the authorities. Plates are provided when a registration application is accepted. If plates are stolen, new ones will not be issued until a police enquiry is complete. Plates of all types, except some F-type plates, were previously produced in aluminium. Between 1 January 2009 and 31 December 2011, plates were made of plastic, which made them slightly thicker than the older aluminium ones (requiring thicker plate holders). These plates were much less expensive. They had a transparent plastic layer on top of the layer with the writing, which was especially prone to breaking on impact during cold weather (such as being hit by another car's trailer hitch). This, in addition to the higher recycling costs of plastic compared to aluminium led to the cessation of plastic plates in favour of aluminium ones as of 1 January 2012, although with the same price as the plastic plates. [4]

Prefixes and sequence numbers

Corps Diplomatique plate CD license plate of Norway.jpg
Corps Diplomatique plate
The Norwegian license plates of all-electric vehicles have a prefix "EL", "EK", "EV", "EB", "EC", "ED", "EE", "EF" or "EH" to enforce the privileges zero emission vehicles are entitled to. Skilt elbil.jpg
The Norwegian license plates of all-electric vehicles have a prefix "EL", "EK", "EV", "EB", "EC", "ED", "EE", "EF" or "EH" to enforce the privileges zero emission vehicles are entitled to.

All Norwegian licence plates for civilian vehicles have a prefix of two letters, followed by a sequence of numbers. Military licence plates have numbers only. Most vehicles have five-digit registration numbers between 10000 and 99999. Motorcycles, farming equipment and trailers have four-digit registration numbers between 1000 and 9999 is used. Temporary plates have three-digit registration numbers between 100 and 999. Dealer plates have two-digit registration numbers between 10 and 99.

Special prefixes are: [9]

Ordinary vehicle plates have a prefix based on the geographic location for the first registration, and will be unchanged later. [12] [13]

AreaCountyRegistration series
Halden Østfold AA AB AC
Hafslund ØstfoldAD AR AS AT AU AV AW DW FL ES
Moss ØstfoldAX AY AZ BA
Mysen ØstfoldAJ AK AL AN AP FN BW
Sarpsborg ØstfoldAE AF AH
Asker and Bærum Akershus BL BN BP BR BS BT BU BV BX BY BZ CA CB
Drøbak AkershusBC BD BE BF BH BJ BK
Jessheim AkershusCV CX CY CZ CU
Lillestrøm AkershusCC CE CF CH CJ CK CL CN CP CR CS CT CU
Drammen Buskerud KE KF KH KJ KK KL KN KP KR KS
Gol BuskerudKB KC KD
Hønefoss BuskerudJU JV JX JY JZ KA
Kongsberg BuskerudKT KU KV KX KY
Oslo Oslo DA DB DC DD DE DF DH DJ DK DL DN DP DR DS DT DU DV DX DY DZ EA EF EH EJ EN EP ER EU
Elverum Innlandet HB HC HD HE HA FZ
Fagernes InnlandetJR JS JT
Gjøvik InnlandetJC JD JE JF JH JJ JK JL JN JP
Hamar InnlandetFS FT FU FV FX FY FZ FW ET
Kongsvinger InnlandetHJ HK HL HN HP HR
Lillehammer InnlandetHS HT HU HV HX FB
Otta InnlandetHZ JA JB
Tynset InnlandetHF HH
Horten Vestfold KZ LA LB LC LD
Larvik VestfoldLS LT LU LV LX LZ NA NB NC
Sandefjord VestfoldLY NA
Tønsberg VestfoldLH LJ LK LL LN LP LR LD
Notodden Telemark NV NX NY NZ
Rjukan TelemarkPA PB
Skien TelemarkND NE NF NH NJ NK NL NN NP NR NT NU
Arendal Agder PC PD PE PF PH PJ PK
Flekkefjord AgderRA RB
Kristiansand AgderPN PP PR PS PT PU PV PW
Mandal AgderPX PY PZ RC RD
Setesdal AgderPL LF
Egersund Rogaland RZ SA SB
Haugesund RogalandSC SD SE SF SH SJ SK SL
Stavanger RogalandRE RF RH RJ RK RL RN RP RR RS RT RU RV RX RY RW
Bergen Vestland SN SP SR SS ST SU SV SX SY SZ TA TB TC TD TE HW
Førde VestlandTV TX TY TZ
Nordfjordeid VestlandUA UB
Odda VestlandTS TT TU
Sogndal VestlandUC UD
Stord VestlandTL TN TP TR
Voss VestlandTF TH TJ TK
Kristiansund Møre og Romsdal UX UY UZ VA
Molde Møre og RomsdalUR US UT UU UV
Sunndalsøra Møre og RomsdalVB VC
Ørsta Møre og RomsdalUN UP BB
Ålesund Møre og RomsdalUE UF UH UJ UK UL
Brekstad Trøndelag XA XB XC
Levanger TrøndelagXK XL VW
Namsos TrøndelagXR XS XT XU
Orkdal TrøndelagVX VY VZ
Steinkjer TrøndelagXD XE XF XH XJ XW
Stjørdal TrøndelagXN XP YW
Støren TrøndelagVS VT
Trondheim TrøndelagFP VD VE VF VH VJ VK VL VN VP VR VS VU VV NW
Bodø Nordland YE YF YH YJ FD EZ
Fauske NordlandYK YL
Mo i Rana NordlandYA YB YC YD
Mosjøen NordlandXV XX XY XZ FA
Narvik NordlandYN YP YR YS
Sortland NordlandYU YV YX
Svolvær NordlandYT YY
Finnsnes Troms ZD ZF ZJ EX
Harstad TromsYZ ZA ZB TW
Storslett TromsFK SW
Tromsø TromsZC ZE ZH ZK ZL FC
Alta Finnmark ZT ZU ZV ZY ZW UW
Hammerfest FinnmarkZX FF EX
Kirkenes FinnmarkZS EY
Lakselv FinnmarkZZ CW
Vadsø FinnmarkFR ZP ZR LE
Longyearbyen Svalbard ZN FH

The letters G, I, O and Q are not used due to their similarity with other letters or numbers; an exception is that CNG vehicles such as gas buses use "GA". M and W were originally not used as they are much wider than other letters, [14] but some codes including W are now assigned. The Norwegian letters Æ, Ø, and Å are not used either. Additionally, the combinations "NS" and "SS" have been omitted because of their connotations to World War II. (Although SS is in use on four-digit plates used for motorcycles, tractors and trailers etc.)

When a vehicle is scrapped or exported, the registration number/chassis is tagged as such, and the vehicle is no longer allowed to travel by road. Neither can the registration number be reused. Example; BL50000 will always be the real-life version of the legendary " Il Tempo Gigante  [ nb ]" from the Flåklypa Grand Prix movie.

Single-letter plates are reused when vacant, but only available for vintage vehicles from 1971 or earlier.

If a set of licence plates is stolen, the vehicle will be re-registered on different plates.

Diplomatic Corps codes

The diplomatic fleet is identified by a code built up by CD <nn><abc> where <nn> is the country identifier as described below and <abc> is a sequence number.

CodeCountry or Organization
10Flag of the United States.svg  United States
11Flag of Argentina.svg  Argentina
12Flag of the Taliban.svg  Afghanistan
14Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Belgium
15Flag of Brazil.svg  Brazil
16Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  United Kingdom
17Flag of Bulgaria.svg  Bulgaria
20Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada
21Flag of Chile.svg  Chile
22Flag of Colombia.svg  Colombia
23Flag of Cuba.svg  Cuba
26Flag of Denmark.svg  Denmark
28Flag of Europe.svg  European Union
29Flag of Egypt.svg  Egypt
30Flag of Ecuador.svg  Ecuador
33Flag of Finland.svg  Finland
34Flag of France.svg  France
37Flag of Greece.svg  Greece
40Flag of India.svg  India
41Flag of Indonesia.svg  Indonesia
42Flag of Iran.svg  Iran
43Flag of Iceland.svg  Iceland
44Flag of Israel.svg  Israel
45Flag of Italy.svg  Italy
48Flag of Japan.svg  Japan
52Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China
53Flag of South Korea.svg  South Korea
54Flag of North Korea.svg  North Korea
57Flag of Mexico.svg  Mexico
60Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Netherlands
63Flag of Panama.svg  Panama
64Flag of Poland.svg  Poland
65Flag of Portugal.svg  Portugal
68Flag of Romania.svg  Romania
71Flag of Russia.svg  Russia
72Flag of Spain.svg  Spain
73Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg   Switzerland
74Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden
75Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa
76Flag of Thailand.svg  Thailand
77Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic
78Flag of Turkey.svg  Turkey
80Flag of Germany.svg  Germany
83Flag of Hungary.svg  Hungary
86Flag of Venezuela.svg  Venezuela
89Flag of Austria.svg  Austria

Other issues

Norway does not have any particular numbering scheme or plate kind to indicate vehicle usage such as police, taxi, ambulance or others, except for type E plates used by foreign diplomats.

The numbers for all plates except type C have a code consisting of two letters and a serial number. Class C only carries a sequence number. The letters identify the district in which the vehicle was first registered. For example, in Stavanger, prefixes like RE, RH and RJ are used. The car registration number is not altered when the owner moves to another town, or if it is sold.

The registration number is assigned to a vehicle's chassis number (often etched into the wall, or on a plaque inside the engine room (older cars), or on a small plate in the lower corner of the windscreen (newer cars)) when it is first imported to Norway. Example; A Toyota Corolla from 1972 imported and first-time registered in Oslo would have the letters DA assigned to its chassis number (KE20-XXXXX) + the five numbers that makes the car unique. Also, registration numbers are usually assigned to groups of cars imported into Norway. Another example; If a car dealer imports 16 cars to Hamar in one shipment, the entire shipment would, as an example, be registered as FS10000, FS10001, and so on, up to FS10015. A way of seeing how old a car is from its registration number is noticing the car's age and compare it to the registration number, as a 1970–1973 model car registered in Oslo will have the DA-prefix. This is not always the cause, as it depends on when the car is imported into Norway. Oslo began in 1971 with "DA", and proceeded to "DB" around 1974, to DC in 1977, DD around 1980, DE around 1984, DF around 1987, DH in 1992, DJ around 1997, DK around 2000, DL around 2006, DN around 2008, and DP around 2010. A car may also have been assigned a new registration number after its former one has been reported stolen or lost.

The city of Bergen has previously used the SV-series. However, SV is also used as the short form for "Sosialistisk Venstreparti," (Socialist Left Party) a political party. This caused some people from Bergen to register their cars elsewhere.

History

License plate from 1900-1913: later reproduction Automobile license plate Norway 1899-1913 KRA198.JPG
License plate from 1900–1913: later reproduction
License plate from 1913-1929: later reproduction Norway C539.JPG
License plate from 1913–1929: later reproduction
License plate from 1929-1971: later reproduction Norway license plate E6813.jpg
License plate from 1929–1971: later reproduction

From 1 April 1900 to 31 March 1913 regional license plates with only digits were in use. The license plates were in black with digits and the name of the province/town in white. Surviving vehicles from the period may use the original license plates. Only a handful of such vehicles exist today.

From 1 April 1913 to 31 March 1971 only a single letter was used on Norwegian vehicle license plates. From 1958 an additional series with 6 digits in 3 groups was in use in Oslo. Vehicles older than 1971 (import or Norwegian) may use single-letter plates of the current owners choice, although within existing letter codes and 3–6 digits, or 6 digits without letter. Once chosen, the license plates follow the vehicle. Common practice is to use the earliest known or available single-letter plates on which the car was registered.

Registration letter codes 1913–1971

County (name before / from 1918):

See also

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