Vehicle registration plates of Denmark

Contemporary Danish registration plates come with the optional EU stripe.

Danish vehicle licence plates normally have two letters and five digits and are issued by authorities. Plates can be obtained at authorized car dealers, vehicle inspection stations or official registration centers (Skat Motor center) The combination is simply a serial and has no connection with a geographic location, but the digits have number series based on vehicle type.[1][2]

Danish license plates do not follow the owner or the vehicle, when a car is sold the plates are turned in and the new owner must apply for new plates. Exception is from this rule when a car is sold privately from one person to another person, the new owner can use the current plates that are on the car.

Numbering

On the number combination one can see the type of a vehicle:

Vehicle type Serial range Highest assigned serial letters
(without EU stripe)[3]
Highest assigned serial letters
(with EU stripe)[3]
Large mopeds 001 - 699 RV
Tractors 700 - 999 VU DF
Trailers 10 00 - 29 99 YM EF
Trailers and semi-trailers 55 00 - 99 99 PZ HF
Small mopeds 5 500 - 9 999 XY
Motorcycles 10 000 - 18 999 HT AW
Tractors 19 000 - 19 499 ML EG
Common vehicles (rectangular format) 20 000 - 59 999 FC JF
Common vehicles (square format) 60 000 - 75 999 DT AF
Diplomatenfahrzeuge 76 000 - 76 999 AX AF
Diplomatic vehicles 77 000 - 77 999 AN AF
Trucks, buses, vans (rectangular format) 78 000 - 87 999 DH, privat: GA AF, privat: FA
Trucks, buses, vans (square format) 88 000 - 97 999 XS, privat: GE DG, privat: FK
Taxis (rectangular format) 98 000 - 99 699 JH BF
Taxis (square format) 99 700 - 99 999 BN AW

Types

Type Appearance Additional explanation
Private use
The grey stripe in these images represents the security hologram fitted to all new plates. Registration tax: Up to 150% of car value.
Commercial use
Registration tax: normal VAT rate only. Rear seats not allowed.
"Parrot-plate"
"Papegøje-plade"
Commercial vehicles that can also be used privately (this to make sure that nobody uses tax relieved vans (yellow plates) for personal use). Registration tax: around 50% of car value. Rear seats not allowed.
Diplomatic use

Blue plates with white text. The same format as the (old) format for private vehicles. EU strip and hologram now on all new plates.
Historical Black background, white text Style used before 1976. For historical/antique vehicles, available upon special request. Plates representing 1950-1958 use only one prefix letter, with the letter corresponding to a Danish city or country.
Armed forces (top-down): Army, Navy, Air Force, and the newer symbol common to all three branches.
Royal The Queen's personal car used for official occasions only features a royal crown on a white background.
DEMA -
"Fixed" temporary plate For the special use of vehicle manufacturers, importers, distributors or car repairers[4]
Vanity plates
These plates cost 6200 DKK per set as of 2006. 26 Roman letters, numbers and Danish letters like Ø, Æ, Å can be used in combination. The EU strip can be chosen optionally.
Ambulances and fire trucks
These plates employ the insignia of the local fire brigade between the serials; this insignia often features a version the local coat of arms

Hearses are registered as yellow-plate cars (commercial use). The actual plates are, however, white (personal use), reflecting the view that the deceased is a passenger rather than commercial freight.

EU plates

The EU stripe of Denmark
Oval DK sign

A new design with an EU stripe was expected in 2008, but has been delayed to 12 October 2009.[5] This makes Denmark potentially the last EU country to adopt euro plates (Vehicle registration plates of Europe). The EU stripe is, however, currently optional.[5] In preparation for the new design the font has been slightly condensed on some new plates issued since mid-2008. Since July 2009, buyers of a car can pick a license plate with or without an EU strip.[6]

If a Danish registered vehicle does not have the plate with the EU stripe then it must be equipped with an approved oval DK-sign when driving abroad. If one drives both with a car and a caravan/trailer, both must bear the label. The sign shall be elliptical (oval) 175×115 mm, white background with black lettering. The letters must be 80 mm in height, the distance between them shall be 10 mm, and there shall be no advertising.[7]

Faroe Islands

Faroese plate issued before 1996.
Faroese plate issued since 1996.

Cars registered in the Faroe Islands before 1996 have plates with white background, black text in Danish style, but with only one letter, F.

Cars registered after 1996 have white background, blue text in their own style, two letters and three digits. There is a blue stripe to the left with the Faroese flag and the code "FO". The Faroe Islands are outside the EU.

Greenland

Plates have a white background, and black text in Danish style with the serial letters "GR" reserved for Greenland. The EU stripe is not applicable since Greenland is a non-EU member.

References

  1. skat.dk
  2. skat.dk
  3. 1 2 nrpl.dk
  4. "PLADER PÅ PRØVE" (in Danish). Retrieved 12 October 2012.
  5. 1 2 Page from the Danish EU Information Centre (Danish)
  6. The Copenhagen post - 2 July 2009
  7. fdm.dk

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, December 22, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.