License Plate With 1 Star on Blue Background

Indonesia vehicle registration plates

Current design of Indonesian registration plates for private vehicles first issued in April 2011,[1] with 2008 numbering scheme for high population regions

Current design of Indonesian registration plates only for private vehicles that uses customized vehicle registration numbers since August 2019. The Indonesian Police Traffic Corps logo is now printed on the lower left and more prominent.

Design of Indonesian registration plate for private vehicles from 2000s[2] to April 2011.[1]

All motorized vehicles including motorcycles in Indonesia are required to have registration plates. The plates is required to be displayed in front and at the back of the vehicles. The issuing of the number plates is regulated and administered by the One-stop Administration Services Office (Indonesian: Sistem Administrasi Manunggal Satu Atap) or Samsat, which is a collaboration between Indonesian National Police, provincial offices of regional revenue, and the national mandatory vehicle insurance operator Jasa Raharja.

Registration plate design [edit]

Design convention [edit]

Measured at approximately 460 by 135 mm and constructed from stamped metal sheet. With some exception (see below), vehicle registration plate in Indonesia use the following format: LL NNNN LL where "L" are letters of the Latin alphabet, and "N" numbers from "0" to "9" (note that the first number is never a "0"). The first single or double letter prefixes denote the area of registration. This is followed by number between 1 and 9999 without leading zeroes. This is then followed by one or two letters although they may be optional. For example: B 1577 RKJ is a vehicle registered in Jakarta Timur region, because it begins with B. A smaller, four digit numbers separated by dot is located at the top (old format, with horizontal line as divider) or bottom (newer format, commonly without divider) of the plate with following format: NN・NN which denote the month and year of when the plate will expire (e.g. 06•27 means until June 2027), and the owner must pay the tax to renew it every five years.[ citation needed ]

A separate format exists for private vehicles belonging to government, military or police officials. Because most of these officials are based in Jakarta, Vehicles belonging to state officials use the "B" suffix which indicates the vehicle is from Jakarta, along with the 4 numbers which are assigned to the vehicle. However, the sub-area suffix is replaced with an "RF" suffix code indicating that the vehicle belongs to a state official, followed by another letter which indicates the type of state official which owns the vehicle.[ citation needed ]

  • "RFS" - Vehicle registration code intended for civilian officials.
  • "RFD" - Vehicle registration code intended for Indonesian army officials.
  • "RFL" - Vehicle registration code intended for Indonesian navy officials.
  • "RFU" - Vehicle registration code intended for Indonesian air force officials.
  • "RFP" - Vehicle registration code intended for Indonesian police officials.

For example, "B 1703 RFS" indicates that the vehicle belongs to a civilian official, whilst "B 1148 RFP" indicates that the vehicle belongs to a police official.

Also in Jakarta, these codes are applied based on vehicle classes. These include:[ citation needed ]

  • A – Code for Sedan/Pick Up
  • D – Code for Truck
  • F – Code for Minibus, Hatchback, City Car
  • J – Code for Jeeps and SUVs
  • Q – Code for government staff
  • T – Code for Taxi
  • U – Code for government staff
  • V – Code for Minibus

For example, "B 2031 BAS" indicates that the vehicle is a sedan, whilst "B 8032 SFC" indicates that vehicle is a minibus.

Registration area codes [edit]

A map where area codes are assigned

The lettering convention to denote area of registration is a legacy of the Dutch colonial era and do not reflect the current regional divisions of the country into provinces. Instead, they follow the old system of Dutch Karesidenan or residencies lettering systems, which are established back in 1920s.[3]

The list of area codes are:[4]

Prefix Letter Division
A Banten, except Tangerang Regency
AA Central Java ex Kedu residency: Magelang Regency, City, Purworejo, Kebumen, Temanggung, Wonosobo
AB Yogyakarta
AD Central Java, ex Surakarta residency: Surakarta, Sukoharjo, Boyolali, Sragen, Karanganyar, Wonogiri, Klaten
AE East Java, ex Madiun residency: Madiun Regency, City, Ngawi, Magetan, Ponorogo, Pacitan
AG East Java, ex Kediri residency: Kediri Regency, City, Blitar Regency, City, Tulungagung, Nganjuk, Trenggalek
B Jakarta, Depok, Tangerang Regency, City, South Tangerang, Bekasi, Bekasi Regency
BA West Sumatra
BB North Sumatra, West coast region: Dairi, Pakpak Bharat, Samosir, Toba Samosir, North Tapanuli, Humbang Hasundutan, Central Tapanuli, Sibolga, South Tapanuli, Padangsidempuan, Padang Lawas, North Padang Lawas, Mandailing Natal, Gunungsitoli, Nias, South Nias, West Nias, North Nias
BD Bengkulu
BE Lampung
BG South Sumatra
BH Jambi
BK North Sumatra, East coast region: Medan, Binjai, Deli Serdang, Langkat, Karo, Serdang Bedagai, Tebing Tinggi, Simalungun, Pematangsiantar, Batubara, Asahan, Tanjungbalai, Labuhan Batu, North Labuhan Batu, South Labuhan Batu
BL Aceh
BM Riau
BN Bangka Belitung
BP Riau Islands
D West Java, ex Bandung residency: Bandung Regency, City, Cimahi, West Bandung
DA South Kalimantan
DB Mainland of North Sulawesi
DC West Sulawesi
DD South Sulawesi, South region: Makassar, Gowa, Maros, Pangkajene Islands, Takalar, Jeneponto, Bulukumba, Bantaeng, Selayar
DE Maluku
DG North Maluku
DH East Nusa Tenggara: Timor
DK Bali
DL North Sulawesi: Sangihe Islands, Talaud Islands, Sitaro Islands
DM Gorontalo
DN Central Sulawesi
DP South Sulawesi, North region: Barru, Parepare, Pinrang, Sidenreng Rappang, Enrekang, Tana Toraja, North Toraja, Luwu, Palopo, North Luwu, East Luwu
DR West Nusa Tenggara: Lombok Island
DT Southeast Sulawesi
DW South Sulawesi, Central Region: Bone, Soppeng, Wajo, Sinjai
E West Java, ex Cirebon residency: Cirebon Regency, City, Indramayu, Majalengka, Kuningan
EA West Nusa Tenggara: Sumbawa island
EB East Nusa Tenggara: Flores Island, Alor, Lembata
ED East Nusa Tenggara: Sumba Island
F West Java, ex Bogor residency: Regency, City, Cianjur, Sukabumi Regency, City
G Central Java, ex Pekalongan residency: Regency, City, Tegal Regency, City, Brebes, Batang, Pemalang
H Central Java, ex Semarang residency: Semarang Regency, City,Salatiga, Kendal, Demak
K Central Java, ex Pati residency: Pati, Kudus, Jepara, Rembang, Blora, Grobogan
KB West Kalimantan
KH Central Kalimantan
KT East Kalimantan
KU North Kalimantan
L East Java: Surabaya
M East Java: Madura Island
N East Java, ex Malang residency: Malang Regency, City, Regency, City, Pasuruan Regency, City, Lumajang, Batu
P East Java, ex Besuki residency: Bondowoso, Situbondo, Jember, Banyuwangi
PA Papua[5]
PB West Papua
R Central Java, ex Banyumas residency: Banyumas, Cilacap, Purbalingga, Banjarnegara
S East Java, ex Bojonegoro residency: Bojonegoro, Mojokerto Regency, City, Tuban, Lamongan, Jombang
SB Surabaya: Rickshaws
T West Java, ex Karawang residency: Purwakarta, Karawang, Subang
W East Java, ex Surabaya residency outside Surabaya City: Sidoarjo, Gresik
Z West Java, ex Eastern Parahyangan residency: Garut, Tasikmalaya Regency, City, Sumedang, Ciamis, Pangandaran, Banjar

Several areas provide license plates for non-motorized transport vehicles. In Yogyakarta, YB is used for rickshaws, while YK is used for andongs. A white-on-blue license plate with area code SB are issued for rickshaws operating in the city of Surabaya. In Banjarmasin, rickshaws operating in the city are issued with plate using an unique format, XXXX BS.[ citation needed ]

There were several area codes no longer in use. These include:

  • BR – ex Borneo Residency, western region[3]
  • DF – East Timor[6]
  • DS – Papua prior to 2016.[5]

Color coding [edit]

South Sulawesi dealership plate for new vehicles

Vehicles in Indonesia are coded based on their classes and uses. These include:[7]

Format scheme for Commercial vehicle or Public transportation.

Format scheme for Government-owned vehicle.

  • White on black: The most common type of registration plate, for privately owned vehicles. Trucks that are registered for private use were issued with this plate, so are the ambulance.
  • Red on white: Vehicles that have not been registered yet, or for new cars that have no owners yet or no legal identification.
  • Black on yellow: Commercial vehicle or public transportation, such as buses, taxis, angkot, auto rickshaws and commercial trucks.
  • White on red: Used by fire departments, government ambulances, government officials and other governmental vehicles administered under their respective local governments.
  • Black on Red: Vehicles belonging to foreign countries. Commonly used by foreign embassies or vehicles belonging to International organizations.
  • Black on White: Vehicles belonging to foreign countries. Commonly used by foreign embassies or vehicles belonging to International organizations.
  • Black on green: Free Zone vehicles i.e. Batam (see Indonesia–Malaysia–Singapore Growth Triangle).
  • Blue on white: Vehicles belonging to foreign countries, mainly used before the vehicle has been registered.

Special plate designs [edit]

Military and police vehicles [edit]

Plate design for military and police vehicles

Military and police vehicles have their own colors and alphanumeric conventions, including their insignia and/or the rank of the officer owning the vehicle, especially for high-ranking officers. Army-personnel vehicles are yellow on green background, plus a yellow star on the top. Navy-personnel plate is yellow on light blue, plus a yellow anchor. Air Force-personnel plate is yellow on dark blue, plus a red and white air force roundel. Police plate is yellow on black. Personnel in Armed Forces Headquarters uses yellow numbers on red background plates. Slightly similar, Ministry of Defence vehicles also uses yellow on red plates, only replacing Armed Forces' insignia with the Ministry's insignia. This is also being implemented on other military vehicles, such as motorcycles, jeeps, trucks, tanks, etc.

Senior government officials [edit]

Vehicle registration plates belonging to senior government officials like the President or Vice President always begin with RI (which stands for "Republik Indonesia") and are followed by a number. For example, the president's registration plate is "RI-1", and the vice president's is "RI-2". Other senior officials such as government ministers, Chairman of The House of Representatives, Commander of The National Armed Forces and Chief of National Police also share the same convention and get the numbers after the President and Vice President. These plates are used for everyday activities, so they are white on black design.

In a special case, there are some very special numbers which are "INDONESIA 1" and "INDONESIA 2" for the President and Vice President, respectively. These numbers are used for a ceremonial purposes, such as presidential/vice presidential inaugurations, national day ceremonies and armed forces day. On the inauguration day, at the time the new president/vice president take the oath, the plates are moved from the former presidential/vice presidential cars to the new car. These numbers also being used for all ceremonial presidential/vice presidential cars, no matters what the type of the vehicles used, and being white on red design.

Foreign countries or international organizations [edit]

An Indonesian diplomatic plate on a vehicle owned by the Norwegian embassy in Jakarta.

Registration plates for vehicles belonging to foreign countries or international organizations adopt a different convention. They have black letters on a white background.

The plates have the letter CD followed by two or three digits denoting the country or organization, followed by up to three digits of the serial number. For example, a car with number CD 66 88 is owned by Vietnam. Generally, the number 01 is reserved for the ambassador's official vehicle.

The numbers are ordered based on when they recognized Indonesia as a country. The United States was originally assigned CD 13; due to the stigma associated with the number 13, they asked the Indian delegation to exchange numbers.

The list of countries and organizations follows:

Code Country or Organization
CD 12 United States
CD 13 India
CD 14 France
CD 15 United Kingdom
CD 16 Philippines
CD 17 Vatican City
CD 18 Australia
CD 19 Norway
CD 20 Iraq
CD 21 Pakistan
CD 22 Belgium
CD 23 Myanmar
CD 24 United Arab Emirates
CD 25 China
CD 26 Sweden
CD 27 Saudi Arabia
CD 28 Thailand
CD 29 Egypt
CD 30 Italy
CD 31 Switzerland
CD 32 Germany
CD 33 Sri Lanka
CD 34 Denmark
CD 35 Canada
CD 36 Brazil
CD 37 Russia
CD 38 Afghanistan
CD 39 Serbia
CD 40 Czech Republic
CD 41 Finland
CD 42 Mexico
CD 43 Hungary
CD 44 Poland
CD 45 Iran
CD 47 Malaysia
CD 48 Turkey
CD 49 Japan
CD 50 Bulgaria
CD 51 Cambodia
CD 52 Argentina
CD 53 Romania
CD 54 Greece
CD 55 Jordan
CD 56 Austria
CD 57 Syria
CD 58 UNDP
CD 59 New Zealand
CD 60 Netherlands
CD 61 Yemen
CD 62 UPU
CD 63 Portugal
CD 64 Algeria
CD 65 North Korea
CD 66 Vietnam
CD 67 Singapore
CD 68 Spain
CD 69 Bangladesh
CD 70 Panama
CD 71 UNICEF
CD 72 UNESCO
CD 73 FAO
CD 74 World Health Organization
CD 75 South Korea
CD 76 Asian Development Bank
CD 77 World Bank
CD 78 International Monetary Fund
CD 79 International Labour Organization
CD 80 Papua New Guinea
CD 81 Nigeria
CD 82 Chile
CD 83 UNHCR
CD 84 WFP
CD 85 Venezuela
CD 86 ESCAP
CD 87 Colombia
CD 88 Brunei Darussalam
CD 89 UNIC
CD 90 International Finance Corporation
CD 91 UNTAET
CD 94 Belarus
CD 96 UNIDO
CD 97 Red Cross
CD 98 Morocco
CD 99 European Union
CD 100 ASEAN Secretariat
CD 101 Tunisia
CD 102 Kuwait
CD 103 Laos
CD 104 Palestine
CD 105 Cuba
CD 106 AIPO
CD 107 Libya
CD 108 Peru
CD 109 Slovakia
CD 110 Sudan
CD 111 ASEAN Foundation
CD 112 UTUSAN
CD 113 CIFOR
CD 114 Bosnia and Herzegovina
CD 115 Lebanon
CD 116 South Africa
CD 117 Croatia
CD 118 Ukraine
CD 120 Uzbekistan
CD 121 Qatar
CD 122 UNFPA
CD 123 Mozambique
CD 130 Azerbaijan
CD 136 Bahrain

Consulates also use the same format, but instead of using the letters CD, they use CC.

Some foreign countries and international organization vehicles in Jakarta use the " B xxxxx yyy " format and a normal white on black plate. Where "xxxxx" stands for five random digits, and "yyy" stands for the country / organization code (see above)

Vanity plates [edit]

An example of a vanity plate in Indonesia

A few vehicle owners pay an extra amount of money to get a certain plate as their desire. Because the convention is not flexible to include a full word, people try creative uses of numbers and letters. For example, Idris Sardi, a violin player, uses ( B 10 LA ) for his vehicle. It is a play on the word BIOLA which means "violin" in Indonesian. Leoni, a famous actress and singer, uses L 30 NI for her car. Even the former President Megawati Soekarnoputri chooses "M 3 GA" for her personal vehicle, as the plate resembles her broadly-known nickname. Edhie Bhaskoro Yudhoyono, former President Yudhoyono's younger son, has "B 24 EB", which "EB" is being his name initial. With the new format of three suffix alphabets, many vanity or personal registration plates are possible to be created. For example, a Toyota Fortuner owner may choose the plate B 42 NER which sounds like B four-two-NER. Syahrini, an Indonesian singer, has "B 1 SYR" as her registration plate number, with "SYR" being her initials.

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b "Pelat Nomor Baru Kendaraan Lebih Panjang 5 Cm" (in Indonesian). 2011-05-09. Retrieved 2011-06-04 .
  2. ^ Billy. "Bracket Plat Nomor Polisi, Maaf Masih Terbatas! - GridOto.com". otomotifnet.gridoto.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2021-10-28 .
  3. ^ a b "Mengapa Plat Kendaraan Bermotor Kalsel Harus DA? Inilah Catatan Sejarahnya". Jejakrekam (in Indonesian). Retrieved 10 July 2022.
  4. ^ "54 Daftar Resmi Kode Plat Nomor Polisi di Indonesia". Samsat Keliling (in Indonesian). Indonesia One-stop Administration Services Office. Archived from the original on 12 August 2020. Retrieved 10 July 2022.
  5. ^ a b "Papua Ubah Kode Plat Kendaraan.. | Jawapos.com". Archived from the original on 2016-07-03.
  6. ^ "License Plates of Timor Leste (East Timor)". worldlicenseplates.com . Retrieved 10 July 2022.
  7. ^ "Mengenal Pelat Nomor Kendaraan Berdasarkan Warna Dasarnya". kompas.com (in Indonesian). 23 January 2022. Retrieved 10 July 2022.

External links [edit]

  • Undang-Undang Republik Indonesia Nomor 22 Tahun 2009 Tentang Lalu Lintas Dan Angkutan Jalan – law regulating registration plates, among other things (in Indonesian)
  • Indonesian license plates – Operation of Indonesian license plates (in Spanish)

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vehicle_registration_plates_of_Indonesia

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