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Vehicle registration plates of Russia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Russian Federation
Russian private vehicle registration plate fromTver Oblast.
CountryRussia
Country codeRUS
Current series
Size520 mm × 110 mm
20.5 in × 4.3 in
Serial formatA123BC4(56)
Colour (front)Black on white
Colour (rear)Black on white

Vehicle registration plates are the mandatory number plates used to display the registration mark of a vehicle, and have existed inRussia for many decades. Most motor vehicles which are used on public roads are required by law to display them. Having a number plate obstructed by snow, mud, paper, or any other tool that makes any of the digits and letters illegible is considered an administrative offense and results in a fine.

History

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This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding missing information.(March 2025)
Main article:Vehicle registration plates of the Soviet Union

Current plate format

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Breakdown of the main elements of the Russian vehicle registration plate.
The rightmost section of the registration plate with the region (177 denotesMoscow) and country (RUS) code

The current format uses a letter followed by 3 digits and two more letters. To improve legibility of the numbers for Russian cars abroad, only a small subset ofCyrillic characters thatlook like Latin characters are used (12 letters: А, В, Е, К, М, Н, О, Р, С, Т, У, Х), additionally D was issued on some very early plates.[1] Finally, the region number (77, 97, 99, 177, 197, 199, 777, 797 and 799 forMoscow; 78, 98, 178, and 198 forSaint Petersburg, etc.) and the international codeRUS with the 1991 to 1993 Russian flag typically to the right of it, however the flag is not mandatory, and since 2013 owners may order plates without it.[2]

There is a different format for trailers (2 letters and 4 digits). Motorcycles, mopeds and scooters plates are made of square reflective plates and its format is 4 digits at the top and two letters at the bottom. These plates lack a national flag.

The standard size for the license plate is 520 mm by 112 mm.

Vehicles used by certain organisations or categories of persons carry special plates:

ImageDescription
Police forces have special numbers on blue colored plates and the format is one letter and four digits. The letter signifies the branch of the police force, and its meaning may change from city to city; for example, in Moscow, A #### 99 rus stands for traffic police, У #### 99 rus for patrol cars, O #### 99 rus for police guard dog service etc.
Diplomatic cars have white characters on a red background. The first three digits on the plate are a code identifying the embassy to which they belong, assigned in order based on the date at which that country established diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union or post-Soviet Russia (but not Russian Empire, so it starts with the recognition of the Soviet Union by the Great Britain). For example, theUnited Kingdom is 001, theUnited States is 004, andSouth Sudan is 168. Numbers 500 and above identify international organizations, such as 505 forIMF. On ambassadors' cars this code is followed by CD and a digit (004 CD 1 77 rus), while cars assigned to rank-and-file diplomats have this code followed by D and three digits (for example, 004 D 108 77 rus). The lacking diplomatic status administrative and technical staff of embassies, consulates or international organizations have license plate format (004 T 001 77 rus).
The military license plates have white characters on a black background and the format is NNNN LL for vehicles and LL NNNN for trailers. In this case the two digits on the right are not a regional code but a code for the military district, armed forces branch or service, or federal executive body where military service is required by law. For example, NNNN LL 14 rus is a vehicle belonging to theRailway Troops, NNNN LL 18 rus denotes theMinistry of Emergency Situations, NNNN LL 23 rus is for theStrategic Missile Troops, NNNN LL 21 rus for theSouthern Military District etc. Unlike all other categories, the military number plates are not light reflective.[3]
Public transport vehicles (such as buses, licensed taxis and licensedshare taxis) have black characters on a yellow background and the format is LL NNN. Since such vehicles are relatively few, the region code does not change often; in Moscow, for example, yellow "public transport" plates are still issued with the code 77 in December 2009.[a]
Trailer plates have colors very similar to normal passenger vehicles, but have format LL NNNN. Until July 2008, these plates had to be duplicated on the rear surface of the trailer, in a large print.
Temporary and transit licence plates. Made from glossy laminated paper with holographic sticker in the upper left corner.
Temporary and transit licence plates for exported vehicles withТ digit in left part of plate.
Motorcycle registration plates. From 2019 updated standard introduced reduced size plates 190 mm (7.5 in)x145 mm (5.7 in) (with Russian national flag on it).
Country code on the bottom right.

Special plates in the above categories never carry the Russian flag, except for trailers.

There are special series (usually numbers starting with A) reserved for government officials (for example, A 001 AA usually belongs to thegovernor of the region). The license plates for federal government officials originally had a larger flag instead of the regional code but this type has now been withdrawn as well.

Rich businessmen, prominent politicians and crime lords often use para-legally acquired special licence plates (government or police) to get preferential treatment from the transport police and as a status symbol. Often, this is used in conjunction with a flashing siren. TheSociety of Blue Buckets is a protest movement that opposes this trend.[4]

As of 2014, there are new codes for Russian plates inoccupied territories; number 82 for the Republic of Crimea and 92 for Sevastopol. The Russian Federation annexed Crimea from Ukraine and now administers it as two federal subjects: the Republic of Crimea and the federal city of Sevastopol. Ukraine, backed by most of the international community, refuses to accept the annexation and continues to assert its right over the peninsula. Vehicles with such plates may have difficulty entering countries which recognize Crimea as Ukrainian territory and thus deem documents issued by the Russian Federation in Crimea to be invalid.[citation needed]

AfterRussia's February 2022 escalation of theRusso-Ukrainian War, Russia began issuing license plates for its conquered territories in Ukraine'sDonetsk,Kherson,Luhansk, andZaporizhzhia oblasts. It also began to issue plates numbered 188 inKupiansk for theKharkiv Oblast,[5] but its forces were pushed out of the oblast's territory during theKharkiv counteroffensive in the fall of 2022.

Runout problem

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As perGOST provision, only 1,726,272 combinations may be issued within one administration unit (the digits 000 are not allowed). In certain regions, the number of vehicles exceeds that number. Additionally, previous combinations cannot be reused after a vehicle has been de-registered. This scheme creates an issue where the number of possible license plate combinations cannot meet the demand of the number of vehicle registrations.

A short-term solution saw the introduction of additional codes for regions that suffered from this problem. Thus, some regions have two or three codes issued to them, the city ofSt. Petersburg has four,Moscow Oblast has six, and the federal city ofMoscow has ten codes. But this does not fully solve the problem, as the authorities may eventually run out of three-numeral regional codes, and a fourth digit will not fit without changing the standardised layout of the plate.[citation needed] Since October 2013, when a vehicle is registered to a new owner, the registration plate could remain on the vehicle and a new registration number is not required, even if the vehicle is registered in another region.

The problem was resolved by re-registering plates that are no longer in use. Also, since 2013, the owner can keep the license plate for himself personally, or leave it on the car when selling it to another person.

Regional codes

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Russian regional vehicle registration codes

The license plate regional codes from 01 to 89 originally matched the numerical order of thefederal subjects of Russia as listed in the Article 65 of theConstitution of Russia at the moment of the creation of the standard. In the following years some codes were reassigned or discontinued (for example code number 20 for theChechen Republic: to prevent illegal registrations, and due to the destruction of the database in the 1990s, all the vehicles of Chechnya were reregistered). As the populous regions started running out of license plate combinations, new codes past code 89 were assigned to them as well. Additional triple-digit codes were created by prepending a "1", "2", "7", or "9" to the existing regional code (e.g. 54 and 154 forNovosibirsk Oblast, or 16, 116 and 716 inTatarstan).[6] Those regions with an asterisk (*) beside them were involved in mergers with other regions, so are no longer issued, and have their codes listed with an asterisk with the region they are now a part of.

A car with its registration plate fromSaint Petersburg.

In June 2014, code 82 (formerly registered to theKoryak Autonomous District) was put back into registration for theRepublic of Crimea, whileSevastopol adopted the new code 92. The reason for the decision to use code 82 was because, between the beginning of this plate format and the merging of the district, Koryak AO only registered 1,548 civilian car license plates (starting at A001AA/82 and ending at B549AA/82) and far less of other types (some types, such as public transport plates, were never issued in the region).

CodeThe region of Russian Federation
01Republic of Adygea
02,102,702Republic of Bashkortostan
03Republic of Buryatia
04Altai Republic
05,105Republic of Dagestan
06Republic of Ingushetia
07Kabardino-Balkar Republic
08Republic of Kalmykia
09Karachay-Cherkess Republic
10Republic of Karelia
11Komi Republic
12Mari El Republic
13,113Republic of Mordovia
14Sakha Republic
15Republic of North Ossetia–Alania
16,116,716Republic of Tatarstan
17Tuva Republic
18Udmurt Republic
19Republic of Khakassia
(20)[b],95Chechen Republic
21,121Chuvash Republic
22, (122)Altai Krai
23,93,123,193,323Krasnodar Krai
24,84*[c],88*[d],124Krasnoyarsk Krai
25,125Primorsky Krai
26,126Stavropol Krai
27Khabarovsk Krai
28Amur Oblast
29Arkhangelsk Oblast
30Astrakhan Oblast
31Belgorod Oblast
32Bryansk Oblast
33Vladimir Oblast
34,134Volgograd Oblast
35Vologda Oblast
36,136Voronezh Oblast
37Ivanovo Oblast
38,85*[e],138Irkutsk Oblast
39, (91)[f]Kaliningrad Oblast
40Kaluga Oblast
41,82*[g]Kamchatka Krai
42,142Kemerovo Oblast
43Kirov Oblast
44Kostroma Oblast
45Kurgan Oblast
46Kursk Oblast
47,147Leningrad Oblast
48Lipetsk Oblast
49Magadan Oblast
50,90,150,190,750,790,250,550Moscow Oblast
51Murmansk Oblast
52,152, 252Nizhny Novgorod Oblast
53Novgorod Oblast
54,154Novosibirsk Oblast
55,155Omsk Oblast
56,156Orenburg Oblast
57Oryol Oblast
58Penza Oblast
59,81*[h],159Perm Krai
60Pskov Oblast
61,161,761Rostov Oblast
62Ryazan Oblast
63,163,763Samara Oblast
64,164Saratov Oblast
65Sakhalin Oblast
66,96,196Sverdlovsk Oblast
67Smolensk Oblast
68Tambov Oblast
69Tver Oblast
70Tomsk Oblast
71Tula Oblast
72,172Tyumen Oblast
73,173Ulyanovsk Oblast
74,174,774Chelyabinsk Oblast
75,80*[i]Zabaykalsky Krai
76Yaroslavl Oblast
77,97,99,177,197,199,777,797,799,977Moscow
78,98,178,198St. Petersburg
79Jewish Autonomous Oblast
80*[j][i], 180Donetsk People's Republic
81*[j][h], 181Luhansk People's Republic
82*[g]Republic of Crimea
83Nenets Autonomous Okrug
84*[c], 184Kherson Oblast
85*[e], 185Zaporozhye Oblast
86,186Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug
87Chukotka Autonomous Okrug
89Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug
92,192Sevastopol
94Baikonur and other territories outside of Russian Federation proper overseen by theMinistry of Internal Affairs
(188)Initially assigned toRussian-occupied territories of Kharkiv Oblast, but very few plates with this code were issued
Internationally disputed areas initalics

Codes of diplomatic representative offices and international organizations

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014 is the code for Norwegian diplomats in Russia
Diplomatic vehicle of the Finnish embassy in Moscow (as evidenced by the 069 number code).

According to the Ministry of Internal Affairs Order 282 from March 28, 2002.[7]

CodeCountry or organization
001United Kingdom
002Germany
003Canada
004United States
005Japan
006Spain
007France
008Belgium
009Greece
010Denmark
011Italy
012Luxembourg
013Netherlands
014Norway
015Turkey
016Australia
017Austria
018Algeria
019Egypt
020Rwanda
021Argentina
022 Afghanistan
023Myanmar
024Bolivia
025Brazil
026Burundi
027Ghana
028Bangladesh
029Guinea
030Zambia
031Peru
032India
033Indonesia
034Jordan
035Iraq
036Iran
037Ireland
038Iceland
039Cambodia
040Kenya
041Cyprus
042Congo
043Costa Rica
044Kuwait
045Laos
047Lebanon
048Libya
049Mali
050Morocco
051Mexico
052   Nepal
053Nigeria
054Venezuela
055New Zealand
056Pakistan
057Burkina Faso
058Senegal
059N/A[k]
060Somalia
061Sudan
062Sierra Leone
063Thailand
064Tanzania
065Tunisia
066Uganda
067Uruguay
068Philippines
069Finland
070Sri Lanka
071Chad
072  Switzerland
073Sweden
074Ecuador
075Ethiopia
076Angola
077Democratic Republic of Congo
078Colombia
079Cameroon
080Guinea-Bissau
081Portugal
082Bulgaria
083Hungary
084N/A
085N/A
086Poland
087North Korea
088Cuba
089Mongolia
090China
091Romania
092N/A[l]
093Serbia
094Benin
095Gabon
096Guyana
097Mauritania
098Madagascar
099Malaysia
100Niger
101Singapore
102Togo
103Central African Republic
104Jamaica
105Yemen
106N/A[m]
107Palestine
108Nicaragua
109Mozambique
110Equatorial Guinea
111Sovereign Military Order of Malta[n]
112Malta
113Cape Verde
114N/A
115Zimbabwe
116United Arab Emirates
117Ivory Coast
118Namibia
119N/A[o]
120Oman
121Qatar
122N/A[p]
123N/A[q]
124South Korea
125Chile
126Panama[r]
127Israel
128North Macedonia[s]
129Albania
130N/A[t]
131Vatican City
132Lithuania
133Syria
134Estonia
135Latvia
136Bahrain
137South Africa
138Armenia
139N/A[u]
140Saudi Arabia
141Slovenia
142Uzbekistan
143Kyrgyzstan
144Croatia
145Azerbaijan
146Ukraine
147Moldova
148Czech Republic
149Slovakia
150Belarus
151Tajikistan
152Turkmenistan
153Kazakhstan
154Guatemala
155Bosnia and Herzegovina
156Eritrea
157Paraguay
158Georgia
159Brunei
160Gambia
161Vietnam
162Mauritius
163Dominican Republic
164Montenegro
165South Ossetia
166Abkhazia
167Djibouti
168South Sudan
169El Salvador
499European UnionEuropean Commission
500European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
501N/A[v]
502N/A[w]
503Arab League
504International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
505International Monetary Fund
506International Organization for Migration
507International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies
508International Committee of the Red Cross
509International Finance Corporation
510United NationsUnited Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO)
511United Nations
512UNESCOUnited Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO); code 126 used earlier.
514International Bank for Economic Complementation
515International Investment Bank
516Intersputnik International Organization of Space Communications
517International Centre of Scientific and Technical Information
518N/A[x]
520International Labour Organization
521N/A[y]
522Coordination Centre of the Intergovernmental Commission for Cooperation in Computing Machinery
523Commonwealth of Independent States Executive Committee of theCIS
524European Space Agency
525Eurasian Patent Organization
526N/A[z]
527N/A[aa]
528Commonwealth of Independent StatesInterstate Bank
529N/A[ab]
530International Research Institute of Management Problems
531Collective Security Treaty OrganizationCollective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO)
532Commonwealth of Independent States Intergovernmental Statistical Committee of theCIS
533Commonwealth of Independent States Secretariate of Council of theCIS Interparliamentary Assembly
534Eurasian Economic UnionEurasian Development Bank
535Commonwealth of Independent States Intergovernmental Foundation for Humanitarian Cooperation of theCIS
555Eurasian Economic UnionEurasian Economic Commission
556Council of Europe Program Office of theCouncil of Europe in Russia
557Commonwealth of Independent States Antiterrorist Centre of theCIS member states
559Joint Institute for Nuclear Research
900Honorary consuls and offices headed by them[clarification needed]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^This type is not to be confused with the now defunct similar-looking yellow license plates having the format LL NNN L, which were issued prior to 2002 to cars registered to foreign companies operating in Russia; the latter type has now been withdrawn.
  2. ^Abolished in 2000 and superseded by 95; all vehicles bearing license plates with this regional code were subject to mandatory re-registration
  3. ^abPreviously belonged toTaymyr Autonomous Okrug, which became part ofKrasnoyarsk Krai in 2007
  4. ^Previously belonged toEvenk Autonomous Okrug, which became part ofKrasnoyarsk Krai in 2007
  5. ^abPreviously belonged toUst-Orda Buryat Autonomous Okrug, which became part ofIrkutsk Oblast in 2008
  6. ^Transit license plates only
  7. ^abPreviously belonged toKoryak Autonomous Okrug, which was merged withKamchatka Oblast in 2007
  8. ^abPreviously belonged toKomi-Permyak Autonomous Okrug, which was merged withPerm Oblast in 2005
  9. ^abPreviously belonged toAgin-Buryat Autonomous Okrug, which was merged withChita Oblast in 2008
  10. ^abTrailers and motorcycles only
  11. ^Code 059 is a former code forSyria. The current code for Syria is 133.
  12. ^Code 092 is a former code forCzechoslovakia. Currently, codes forCzech Republic andSlovakia are 148 (Czech Republic), and 149 (Slovakia).
  13. ^Code 106 is a former code for theCentral African Republic. The current code for the Central African Republic is 103.
  14. ^Earlier, code 111 belonged to theCouncil for Mutual Economic Assistance. Replaced by theSovereign Military Order of Malta.
  15. ^Code 119 is a former code forSouth Africa. The current code for South Africa is 137.
  16. ^Code 122 is a former code for theArab League. The current code for the Arab League is 503.
  17. ^Code 123 is a former code forLiechtenstein.
  18. ^Earlier, code 126 belonged toUNESCO. Replaced byPanama.
  19. ^Earlier, code 128 belonged to theEuropean Union. Replaced byNorth Macedonia.
  20. ^Code 130 is a former code for theInternational Organizations.
  21. ^Code 139 is a former code forGeorgia. The current code Georgia is 158.
  22. ^Code 501 is a former code for the Un International Centre.
  23. ^Code 502 is a former code for the Eurocommision. The current code for this organization is 499.
  24. ^Code 518 is a former code for theInternational Scientific and Technical Centre
  25. ^Code 521 is a former code for the Interelectro (International Organization for Economic, Scientific and Technical Cooperation in Electrical Industry)
  26. ^Code 526 is a former code for theTaipei-Moscow Coordination Commission for Economic and Cultural Cooperation
  27. ^Code 527 is a former code for the Headquarters for Coordination of Military Cooperation of theCIS
  28. ^Code 529 is a former code of theEurasian Economic Community (earlier - Integration Committee of the Eurasian Economic Community)

References

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toLicense plates of Russia.
  1. ^"Буква «D» на автомобильном номере в России – что это значит?".dzen.ru (in Russian). RetrievedMarch 13, 2023.
  2. ^"Номер без флага: зачем он нужен и сколько стоит".autonews.ru (in Russian). RetrievedMarch 13, 2023.
  3. ^"Russian plates information".Matriculasdelmundo.com (in Spanish). RetrievedJune 19, 2023.
  4. ^Elder, Miriam (May 28, 2010)."Moscow's limos halted by blue buckets".The Guardian. London.
  5. ^"Жителям Харьковской области будут выдавать номера автомобилей с кодом 188".РБК (in Russian). August 26, 2022. RetrievedDecember 14, 2023.
  6. ^"Ministry of Internal Affairs Order 282 from March 28, 2002 - Приказ МВД России от 28.03.2002 N 282 (ред. от 22.12.2014) "О государственных регистрационных знаках транспортных средств"". Archived fromthe original on March 6, 2016. RetrievedMarch 3, 2016.
  7. ^"Приказ МВД России от 28.03.2002 N 282 (ред. от 22.12.2014) "О государственных регистрационных знаках транспортных средств"" [Russian MVD Order 282 of March 28, 2002] (in Russian). Moscow, Russia: Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation. December 22, 2014. RetrievedMay 7, 2015.
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