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Vehicle registration plates of India

All motorised road vehicles in India are tagged with a registration or licence number. The Vehicle registration plate (commonly known as number plate) is issued by the district-level Regional Transport Office (RTO) of respective states — the main authority on road matters. The number plates are placed in the front and back of the vehicle. By law, all plates are required to be in modern Arabic numerals with Latin letters.[1] The international vehicle registration code for India is IND.

A high-security registration plate issued in Karnataka

Colour coding Edit

Permanent Registration Edit

  • Private vehicles:
    • Private vehicles, by default, have black lettering on a white background (e.g. TN 75 AA 7106).
    • Vehicles which run purely on electricity have white lettering on a green background (e.g. AP 21 BP 7331)
  • Commercial vehicles:
    • Commercial vehicles such as taxis, buses and trucks, by default, have black lettering on a yellow background (e.g. UP 19 D 0343).
    • Vehicles available on rent for self-drive have yellow lettering on a black background (e.g. KA 08 J 9192).
    • Vehicles which run purely on electricity have yellow lettering on a green background (e.g. MH 12 RN 1289)
  • Vehicles belonging to foreign missions:
    • Vehicles registered to an embassy or United Nations have white lettering on a blue background (e.g. 199 CD 1 and 23 UN 1[2] respectively).
    • Vehicles registered to a consulate have yellow lettering on a blue background (e.g. 199 CC 999).[3]
  • Vehicles registered by Indian Armed Forces have white lettering starting with an arrow on a black background (e.g. ↑03D 153874H).

Temporary Registration Edit

  • Unsold vehicles belonging to a vehicle manufacturer or a dealer have white lettering on a red background (e.g. HR 26 TC 7174).
  • Sold vehicles awaiting a permanent registration have red lettering on a yellow background (e.g. TS 07 D TR 2020).

Permanent Registration Format Edit

Private and Commercial Vehicles Edit

The current format for the registration of private and commercial consists of four parts:

  • Part 1: Two-letter State Codes; two letters which indicates the State or Union Territory to which the vehicle is registered.
  • Part 2: District Number; a two-digit number allocated to a district within the respective state or Union Territory. Due to heavy volume of vehicle registration, unique numbers may be allocated to multiple RTO offices within a single district.
  • Part 3: Single or multiple letters; consists of one, two or three letters or may not exist at all. This shows the ongoing series of an RTO (also acts as a counter of the number of vehicles registered) and/or vehicle classification. The letters 'O' and 'I' are not used here to avoid confusion with digits 0 or 1.
  • Part 4: Unique number between 1 and 9999; it's issued sequentially and is unique to each registration.

This scheme of numbering has some advantages:

  • The state or district of registration of a particular vehicle is immediately identifiable.
  • In the case of a police investigation of an accident or vehicle-related crime, witnesses usually remember the initial area code letters - it is then quite simple to narrow down suspect vehicles to a much smaller number by checking the database without having to know the full number.

BH (Bharat) series Edit

 
A Vehicle registered under BH-series.

On 26 August 2021, the Ministry of Road Transport issued a notification[4] regarding a unified pan-India registration of private vehicles. This special registration process was introduced to ease inter-state mobility by eliminating the hassles of re-registering a vehicle when its owner relocates to a new state or Union Territory.

BH-series registration follows a separate format and can be issued to public sector employees of central and state governments, and also to private sector employees of firms with offices in four or more states or union territories.[5]

The format for BH-series registration consists of four parts:

  • The first part is a two-digit number which indicates the last two digits of the year in which the vehicle was registered. (example: '22' for a vehicle registered in 2022)
  • The second part is 'BH', which is short for Bharat (Hindi: भारत)
  • The third part is a number ranging between 1 and 9999, issued randomly and unique to each registration.
  • The fourth part consists of one or two letters. 'O' and 'I' are not used here to avoid confusion with the digits 0 or 1.

Vehicles of Foreign Missions Edit

 
Indian vehicle registration plate of a car belonging to diplomatic mission of The Netherlands (code 52)

Registration of vehicles belonging to a foreign mission is carried out by Indian Ministry of External Affairs. The registration format for vehicles consists of three parts:

  • The first part is a unique number allocated to the foreign mission by the Ministry of External Affairs.
  • The second part consist of two characters, which can be,
  • The third part is a number ranging between 1 and 9999, issued sequentially to each mission and unique to each registration

Vehicles belonging to foreign missions are granted the level of diplomatic immunity or consular immunity corresponding to whom the vehicle has been attributed to by the Ministry of External Affairs. Immunity is void if a UN, CD or CC vehicle is driven by a chauffeur or non-diplomat in an absence of an accredited member of the diplomatic or consular corps.

Unique number allocated to different foreign missions which forms the first part of CD and CC registration are listed below, click on 'show' to expand the list:

Number Country
1   Afghanistan
2   Algeria
3   Egypt
4   Argentina
5   Australia
6   Austria
7   Bangladesh
8   Belgium
9   Bhutan
10   Brazil
11   Britain (United Kingdom)
12   Bulgaria
13   Cameroon
14   Cyprus
15   Canada
16   Chile
17   China
18   Colombia
19   Cuba
20   Czech Republic
21   Denmark
22   Brunei
23   Ethiopia
24   Finland
25   France
26   Angola
27   Germany
28   Ghana
29   Greece
30   Kyrgyzstan
31  Holy See (Vatican City)
32   Hungary
33   Indonesia
34   Iran
35   Iraq
36   Ireland
37   Italy
38   Japan
39   Jordan
40   Kenya
41   North Korea
42   South Korea
43   Kuwait
44   Laos
45   Gabon
46   Malaysia
47   Mauritius
48   Mexico
49   Mongolia
50   Morocco
51     Nepal
52   Netherlands
53   New Zealand
54   Nicaragua
55   Nigeria
56   Poland
57   Portugal
58   Romania
59   Saudi Arabia
60   Serbia
61   Sierra Leone
62   Singapore
63   Slovenia
64   Somalia
65   Spain
66   Sudan
67   Sweden
68    Switzerland
69   Syria
70   Tanzania
71   Thailand
72   Trinidad and Tobago
73   Turkey
74   Uganda
75   Russia
76   United Arab Emirates
77   United States
78   Uruguay
79   Venezuela
80   Vietnam
84   Democratic Republic of the Congo
85   Slovakia
89   Pakistan
93   Belarus
94   Ukraine
95   South Africa
97   Senegal
98   Uzbekistan
99   Kazakhstan
102   Iceland
105   Cambodia
104   Tunisia
106   Yemen
109   Israel
111   Rwanda
112   Bosnia and Herzegovina
113   Suriname
117   Luxembourg
119   Eritrea
120   Azerbaijan
121   Maldives
122   Fiji
123   Ivory Coast
125   Ecuador
126   Djibouti
128   Tajikistan
133   Botswana
134   Dominican Republic
135   Malawi
137   Malta
141   Burkina Faso
145   Burundi
147   Georgia
149   Mali
152   Niger
153   Guinea
155   South Sudan
156   Estonia
157   Bolivia
159   Latvia
160   Equatorial Guinea

Vehicles of Indian Armed Forces Edit

 
A registration plate on an Indian Army truck at Mhow
 
Indian Military vehicle's (NCC) registration plate

The registration format for vehicles belonging to Indian Armed Forces (Army, Navy and Air Force) has five parts:

  • The first (or the third) character is an upward-pointing arrow. This is known as a Broad Arrow, whose origins lie in the UK Office of Ordnance and is still used in many parts of the British Commonwealth on assorted army items, not just vehicles.
  • The next two digits (or the two succeeding the arrow) indicate the last two digits of the year in which the armed forces procured the vehicle. (example: '22' for a vehicle procured in 2022)
  • The third part is a single letter indicating the type or class of vehicle:
    • A - Two-wheel Vehicle (e.g. motorcycles)
    • B – Light Motor Vehicle (e.g. passenger cars)
    • C – Truck (Up to 2.5 tonnes)
    • D – Truck (3 - 5 tonnes)
    • E – Specialist Truck
    • F – Specialist Light Vehicle (e.g. Light Strike Vehicle)
    • K – Ambulance
    • P – Bus, Fire Truck, Tanker, Recovery Vehicle etc.
    • R – Missile launcher
    • X – Armoured or Combat Vehicle (e.g. tank, armoured personnel carrier)
  • The fourth part is a six digit serial number, unique to each registration.
  • The fifth part and the last letter in registration is a check letter.

Format for private and commercial vehicles Edit

Here is a detailed overview of the format for permanent registration of private and commercial vehicles.

Part 1: Two-letter State Codes Edit

 
Two-letter state codes of India as used on vehicles

All Indian states and Union Territories have their own two-letter code. This two-letter referencing came into action in the 1980s. Before that each district or Regional Transport Officer's office had a three-letter code which did not mention the state. This led to a fair degree of confusion — for example, MMC 8259 could fit in anywhere in the country. To avoid this ambiguity the state code was included along with the district or RTO's office. In some states, such as Maharashtra, licence plates before 1960, when the state was known as Bombay Presidency, bear notations such as BMC.

The newly created states of Uttarakhand, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand and Telangana (from Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar and Andhra Pradesh respectively), are registering vehicles under their new two-letter codes, while the old numbers registered in the RTO offices of these states under the RTO code of the parent state still stay valid. In 2007, the state of Uttaranchal was renamed as Uttarakhand, thus the state code changed from UA to UK. In 2011, the state of Orissa was renamed as Odisha, thus the state code changed from OR to OD.

The Government of India, Ministry of Road Transport and Highways, the nodal ministry, has formulated strict specifications and enforcement rules for the new High Security Registration Plates (new number plates). The states have recently started introducing them in a phased manner. This standardisation, along with strict enforcement, is expected to bring about a change in law enforcement and in the registration process of vehicles in the country.

The amount of taxes to be paid when purchasing and registering a car are chosen by the state or union territory, with the latter tending to have lower taxes. In particular, Puducherry is known for its low taxes, with many luxury cars being registered there by residents of other places to save money, sometimes fraudulently, leading to crackdowns by states affected by revenue loss in recent years.[6][7]

Current codes Edit

The list of two-letter codes for states and Union Territory codes is as follows:

Former codes Edit

List of codes no longer in use but legally use/ seen in older Vehicles

Code State or Union Territory
UA Uttaranchal
DN Dadra and Nagar Haveli
OR Orissa

Part 2: District Number Edit

Since all states have two or more districts, the district is in charge of registering the vehicle. A vehicle bears the registration of the district in which it is bought rather than the district of residence of the owner. In many states, officials insist that the plates be changed to the local numbers if the owner shifts residence.

The number of districts in the state need not equal the number of permutations of the district field of the licence plate. Often, in districts with large cities the geographical district can be split into two or more administered regions, each governed by an RTO. A case is the 11 RTOs of Bengaluru Urban District in the state of Karnataka which has the plate bearings KA 01 for HSR Layout (Bengaluru Central), KA 02 for Rajajinagara (Bengaluru West), KA 03 for Kasturinagara (Bengaluru East), KA 04 for Yeshwanthapura (Bengaluru North), KA 05 for Jayanagara (Bengaluru South), KA 41 for Kengeri (Bengaluru West Suburban), KA 50 for Yelahanka (Bengaluru North Suburban), KA 51 for Electronic City (Bengaluru South Suburban), KA 53 for Krishnarajapura (Bengaluru East Suburban), KA 59 for Chandapura (Anekal). Certain RTOs can be set up for dedicated purposes. KA 57 in Shantinagara is dedicated for autorickshaws of Bengaluru Urban District and KA 57 F is registration of the same RTO is exclusive for KSRTC and BMTC buses plying in and out of the district.

In some states such as West Bengal, each RTO issues two numbers i.e., separate numbers for commercial vehicles and private vehicles. E.g. Asansol RTO, has the numbers WB 38 for private vehicles and WB 37 for commercial or public ones.

Also the 01 digit may reflect the capital district of the state, though it may not always be the case.

In some states (such as the state of Delhi, and previously in Gujarat and Bihar) the initial 0 of the district code is omitted; thus Delhi district 2 numbers appear as DL 2 not DL 02. The union territory of Delhi has an additional code in the registration code: DL 9 CAA 1111 where DL is the two letter code for Delhi (DL). The additional C (for category of vehicle) is the letter S for two-wheelers, C for cars and SUVs, E for electric vehicles (in some cases only), P for public passenger vehicles such as buses, R for three-wheeled rickshaws, T for tourist-licensed vehicles and taxis, V for pick-up trucks and vans and Y for hire vehicles. This system is also applicable in other states. (For example, Rajasthan, where RJ is the two letter code, P is for passenger vehicles, C for cars, S for scooters and G for goods vehicles.) Also, A for Ambulance, M for Milk Van, P for Police

Part 3: Single or multiple letters Edit

When the initial 9999 numbers are used up, the RTO adds the letter A before the unique 4 digit number. In some states, the two letters also give the description of the make of the vehicle.

The letters may also reflect the subdivision of the district if the district is geographically large.

In Tamil Nadu, the letter G is reserved for Government (both the Union Government of India and State Governments) vehicles and the letter N is reserved for Government Transport Buses, while A to F, H to M and P to Z are for passenger vehicles of all kinds, including commercial vehicles. For e.g. TN 60 AG 3333 could be a government vehicle registered in Theni, whereas a TN 58 N 4006 could be a government Bus registered in Madurai District.

In Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, the letter Z is reserved for the State Road Transport (APSRTC) and TSRTC buses (AP**Z, TS**Z, and so on). The letter P (AP 18P, TS 9P, and so on;— Vijayawada RTO and Khairatabad RTO) is reserved for the state police vehicles. The letters T, U, V, W, X, Y is reserved for commercial ones, going on as TA, TB..., UA, UB... and so on whereas rest of the letters are reserved for private passenger vehicles of all kinds.

In Kerala, the number series KL 15 is reserved for the Kerala State Road Transport Corporation (KSRTC) buses. For e.g. KL 15 3431 is an Ashok Leyland KSRTC bus with vehicle code TS-340. Otherwise, all registrations are common, even for commercial vehicles. Also, KL 01 (Thiruvananthapuram RTO) issues registrations for police vehicles around the state.

In Assam, AS 20 is reserved for government buses and AS 30 and AS 31 is reserved for Assam state police. To register commercial vehicles, the letter C is used and goes on like AC, BC, etc. For private vehicles of all kinds, registrations are common.

In West Bengal, there are different number codes for commercial vehicles and private vehicles. RTOs have assigned the letter T to some commercial vehicles, e.g. WB 04 TE, and so on. In areas like Alipur, Barasat, Barrackpore and Howrah, letters were assigned for different classes of vehicles for private vehicles. Now, the same letters are used for all types of vehicles. Kolkata's main RTO at Beltala (WB01, WB02, WB03 and WB04) also has separate RTO number codes for two wheelers and private cars, as well as goods and passenger vehicles

In Odisha, all registrations are common, even for commercial vehicles. Bhubaneswar has two registration numbers OD 02 and OD 33. The OD 02 is used for RTO jurisdiction of Old Bhubaneswar and OD 33 is used for RTO jurisdiction of Patia, Bhubaneswar.

In Jammu and Kashmir, all registrations are common, even for commercial vehicles. However, the letter Y is used for all government buses.

In Punjab, all registrations are common, even for commercial vehicles. PB 01 is used to register tourist vehicles.

In Bihar, all RTO's assigns the letter P for passenger vehicles (Commercial vehicles and SUVs) and G for goods vehicles, e.g. BR 01 PC 2433 is a BSRTC bus in Patna. However, for private vehicles, all registrations are common.

In Himachal Pradesh HP 01 and HP 02 are reserved for tourist vehicles and also the first letter of the district is used, e.g. HP 01 D refers to a taxi in Dharamshala. Otherwise, all registrations are common, even for commercial vehicles.

In Maharashtra, the two letters in each RTO is classified for a different kind of vehicle, e.g. MH 14 BT is assigned for MSRTC buses built in the bus building facility Pimpri, MH 02 CR is for commercial vehicles in Mumbai, MH 10 CJ is for two wheelers in Sangli, MH 04 GM is for cars in Thane, MH 12 JK is for special purpose vehicles in Pune and MH 47 D is for autorickshaws in North Mumbai. For e.g. after letter A letter B will be given after z letter AAwill be given and so on.

In Karnataka, blank, A, B, C, D is used for commercial vehicles; T for tractors and trailers; E, H, J, K, L, Q, R, S, U, V, W, X, Y for two wheelers; M, N, P, Z for private passenger vehicles. G is used for Government Vehicles and F is used for KSRTC/NWKRTC/NEKRTC/BMTC buses. Additional letters are added as each series is exhausted e.g. M, MA, F, FA and so on.

In Madhya Pradesh the numbering system is similar to other states, with a few exceptions: MP 01 are reserved for Madhya Pradesh Raj Bhavan i.e. Madhya Pradesh Governor's Secretariat and Governor's Household Establishment, MP 02 are reserved for the state government vehicles, MP 03 is reserved for the Madhya Pradesh Police, while MP 04 are reserved for state capital RTO i.e. Bhopal. This pattern is followed in Chhattisgarh also with CG 01 for vehicles of Governor's Office, CG 02 for state government vehicles, CG 03 for Chhattisgarh Police and CG 04 for state capital RTO i.e. Raipur. In Madhya Pradesh vehicles used in agricultural purpose are numbered with series A (e.g. AA, AB, AC etc.), big cars by B, small cars by C, special purpose vehicle such as ambulance, crane etc. by D, medium size goods vehicle by G, heavy vehicles by H, small loading vehicle by L, motor cycles by M, passenger buses by P, passenger auto by R, Scooter by S, taxis by T and passengers by E, F, I, J, K, N, Q, U to Z.

When a series is exhausted or reaches MZ, the RTO can start any other series. For example, Bhopal adopted AM, DM, EM following M while Indore started NA, NB, NC, and now series Q is running. This allocation is similar in Chhattisgarh also.

In Goa, the letter X is reserved for the State Road Transport (Kadamba Transport Corporation) buses (e.g. GA 03 X 0109). The letters T, U, V, W, Y, Z are reserved for commercial vehicles, whereas the letter G is reserved for government vehicles. Again, the two letter in each RTO is classified for a different kind of vehicle, e.g. GA 07 C is for cars in Panaji and GA 03 AB is for two wheelers in Mapusa.

In Uttar Pradesh, all registrations are common for private vehicles. Districts use G for government vehicles and any letter for commercial. Currently most districts use T, AT, BT, etc.; some use N, AN, BN, etc., and a few use B, H, etc.

In Uttarakhand, the letter C is reserved for goods vehicles, T for Taxis, P for public transport vehicles and G for government vehicles and A, B, D to O, Q to S, and U to Z for private passenger vehicles of all kinds, with an additional letter added later such as TA, CA, GA, PA and so on.

For example, the official vehicle of the state Home Secretary uses the number "UK 07 GF 9999" and that of the Director General (Information and Public Relations) uses the number "UK 07 GE 9000". The vehicle of the Chairman of the State Sugar Corporation has the number "UK 07 GE 0900".

The registration number of the official vehicle of the now ousted Chief Minister read "UK 07 GB 0999".

Further, UK 07 TA 0251 could be a taxi in Dehradun and UK 07 PA 0250 could be a local bus in Dehradun.

In the North East excluding Assam:

  • Meghalaya issues ML 01, ML 02, ML 03 for government vehicles, while ML 02 specifically for the Police department and ML 03 for the transport department, and registration is common for all vehicles.
  • Sikkim issues the letter P as prefix for all types of private vehicles and T for taxis, J for commercial jeeps, B for buses, and Z, D for other commercial vehicles. For state transport buses, the SK 04 XXXX series of Jorethang was used and have now gone back to register them under B series.
  • Arunachal Pradesh issues AR 02 for its government buses, otherwise all registrations are common, even for commercial vehicles.
  • Nagaland issues different letters for all types of vehicles.
  • In Tripura, Mizoram and Manipur, all registrations are common, even for commercial vehicles.

In Gujarat, government vehicles have number plate with letter G and GJ, which is reserved for government firm vehicles. (e.g. : GJ 18 G 5123 and GJ 18 GJ 6521). All other letters except G are used by passenger vehicles. The letters T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z are reserved for commercial vehicles and goes on in the series AT, AU, ..., BT, BU, ..., and so on.

Also, the number series GJ 18 Y is reserved for the Gujarat State Road Transport Corporation (GSRTC) buses (e.g. GJ 18 Y 5432). GJ 18 V was used earlier. After the completion of this series GJ 18 Y was used (e.g. GJ 18 V 8844). Currently, GJ 18 Z is in use. All other letters used for passengers. Also a letter is prefixed for usage in all classes of vehicles, e.g. GJ 01 J to JS are for two wheelers in Ahmedabad, and GJ 01 R to RZ are reserved for private four wheelers in Ahmedabad. However, after the exhaustion of private series in Ahmedabad, vehicles are being registered with the T to Z suffix pattern to meet the demand.

In Delhi, the following letters are used for registration- A for ambulances, B for mini buses, C for cars, F for numbers on demand for private vehicles, G for trucks, K for school vehicles, L for trucks, N for NRIs (e.g. DL 3C NA, DL 2S ND), P is for buses, Q are for commercial three wheelers, R for autorickshaws and radio taxis, S for two wheelers, T for city taxis, Y for private taxis, V, W, E, U, M, Z for other commercial vehicles. DL 1 at Mall Road registers only A, E, G, K, L, M, P, Q, R, T, U, V, W, Y and Z.

In Chandigarh, the following letters are used for registration: T is for trucks, G is for government vehicles. CH 02 registers commercial vehicles. Registration for all private vehicles is common.

In Rajasthan, the following letters are used for registration: M, S, B for two wheelers, C for cars, P for buses, G for trucks, T for taxis and tourist passenger vehicles. Earlier, numbers between 1 and 50 were used, e.g. RJ 14 2M and RJ 14 6C were used for vehicles but now this system has been stopped.

In Haryana, there are different codes for commercial vehicles and different for private vehicles. Private registrations are common.

In the union territories of Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu, Lakshadweep and Puducherry all registrations are common, even for commercial vehicles.

Part 4: Unique number between 1 and 9999 Edit

The last four numbers are unique to the vehicle. Usually, the lower 100 numbers are government registered numbers, but it may not always be the case. Special "lucky" numbers (also called fancy numbers) such as 3333, 0001 or 6666 fetch a premium and may touch above 1,000,000.

Prior to 2005, Karnataka used to charge 1000 for obtaining a unique last four digit number. These numbers used to be issued either from the current running series or from one or two future series. When the numbering system was computerized, numbers could be issued from any future series. However the Karnataka RTO steeply hiked these charges to 6,000 if the number to be obtained is in the current series, and 25,000 if it was to be issued from a future series. It was increased again in 2010 from 6,000 to 20,000, and from 25,000 to 75,000.[14]

As of 2007, Maharashtra has increased the price of unique numbers to the range of 25,000 to 1,25,000. In 2012, Maharashtra increased the price from 1,25,000 to 2,00,000.

In Uttarakhand, number 0001 and 0786 has the highest charge of 50,000.

In Gujarat, RTO is charging 500 for 2-wheeler vehicles and 1,000 for 4-wheeler vehicles for chosen number plate, but the chosen number plate not be unique, Ex 4521, 6523, etc. For VIP number 1 (4-wheeler vehicle), RTO distribute an application form to bid for unique number plate which will be attached with amount of money. The highest payer of the amount will get the unique number like 1. Sometimes it takes 2,00,000 to 5,00,000 (maximum) for this type of number. Currently, Gujarat RTO has revised the amount for chosen number (not unique numbers like single, double digit), which is 1000 for 2-wheeler vehicles and 5000 for 4-wheeler vehicles.

In Andhra Pradesh the RTO Follows the Auction system for unique numbers. The highest bidder gets the number. Numbers like 0909 0999 0099 0009 are in high demand always and have a high premium and maximum bidders for the auction.

Temporary Registration Format Edit

As soon as a vehicle is purchased, the dealer of the vehicle issues a temporary license sticker known colloquially as a TR (To Register) number. In Maharashtra (TC test certificate no.is given). This is valid for one month, during which the owner must register the vehicle in the controlling RTO of the area in which the owner is residing to get a standard license plate. Some states like Tamil Nadu do not allow vehicles with TR numbers on the road, the dealer will hand over the vehicle to the purchaser only after the registration process is done. To register a vehicle, it has to be presented to the RTO's office, where a Motor Vehicle Inspector will verify the applicant's address and other details, confirm that the engine and chassis numbers are identical to what is written in the application and issues a permanent registration certificate which is usually valid for 20 years. The permanent registration certificate is one of the four important documents a vehicle plying on the road should always have; the others being a valid insurance certificate, a pollution under control (PUC) certificate and the driver's license. For public utility vehicles like buses, trucks, taxis and pick-up vans, there are a number of additional documents like a road-worthiness certificate and a transportation permit.

HSRP: High Security Registration Plate Edit

On June 1, 2005, the Government of India had amended rule 50 of the Central Motor Vehicles Rules, 1989, mandating introduction of new tamper proof High Security Registration (HSRP) number plates.[15][16] All new motorised road vehicles that came into the market after that needed to adhere to the new plates, while existing vehicles had been given two years to comply. Features incorporated include the number plate having a patented chromium hologram,[15] a laser numbering containing the alpha-numeric identification of both the testing agency and manufacturers and a retro-reflective film bearing a verification inscription "India" at a 45-degree inclination. The characters are embossed on the plate for better visibility. The letters "IND" were printed in a light shade of blue on the observers left side under the hologram.[15] However it has yet to be implemented since the various state Governments has not yet appointed an official source for manufacture of these plates,[17] due to disputes which are currently in various Indian courts.[16][17] On 8 April 2011 the Supreme Court of India summoned the transport secretaries of Delhi, Punjab and Uttar Pradesh for contempt of court proceedings regarding nonenforcement of the high-security registration plates.[18] The Supreme Court on 30 November 2004, had clarified that all states had to comply with the scheme.[18] Currently all of North East including Assam, Gujarat, Rajasthan, Jammu and Kashmir, West Bengal, Karnataka, Andaman & Nicobar Islands (UT) and Goa are the only states which have complied in full. The states of Bihar, Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Odisha and Maharashtra have not proceeded after having called tenders.[18] Besides these states some of the other states have also taken action to implement the new scheme.[18]

Haryana and Punjab has launched the High Security Registration Plates Scheme in the state. High Security Registration Plates have been made mandatory in for all new and old vehicles.[19]

Maharashtra announced that it had planned to implement new number plates soon.[20]

History Edit

Between 1902 and 2009, all plates were owner provided; since 2009, plates are officially issued, however previous registrations are still valid.[21]

Before 1939, only one letter with four numbers were issued (e.g. N 7612).

From 1939 until 1947, two letters and four numbers scheme were issued (e.g. KA 9823).

From 1947 until the late 1980s (June 30, 1989), the Indian licence plate system followed the scheme:

BMU 7711

Where B was the state code (e.g. C for Karnataka since K was allotted to Kerala); MU were letters of the specific RTO; and 7711 was the unique licence plate number.[22] Older vehicles still exhibit this legally valid numbering scheme.

In Portuguese Goa, which was annexed by India in 1961, the scheme was Ixx-99-99 (before 1937 I-99999), second letters and third letters reserved by district.

When Madhya Pradesh was known as Central Province (then using code C), all vehicle licence plates began with:

  • CPZ — For All Government vehicles
  • CPP — Central Province Police
  • CPX — where "X" represented the district code (for example, vehicles registered in Jabalpur had a registration plate starting with CPJ)

When renamed to Madhya Pradesh, then using code M:

  • MPZ — For all Government vehicles
  • MPP — Madhya Pradesh Police
  • MPX — where "X" represented the district (for example, vehicles registered in Jabalpur had a registration plate starting with MPJ)

In the early 2000s, the number plate colouring scheme changed from white over black (BMU 7711) to black over white (BMU 7711) for private non-commercial vehicles, and from black over white (BMU 7711) to black over yellow (BMU 7711) for all other vehicles. The usage of the older colour scheme was made illegal after a period during which both styles were tolerated.

The President of India and The Governors of Indian States used to travel in official cars without license plates. Instead, they had the Emblem of India in gold embossed on a red plate. (for. eg- the president's old Mercedes-Benz) [23] But now they also have ordinary license plates.[24][25][26]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Central Motor Vehicle Rules 1989, Rule-50(2)(d)" (PDF). GOI. Government of India - Department of Road Transport & Highways. 1989. Retrieved 2019-01-19.
  2. ^ GHeather_UK [cancellato] (2007-06-09). . Flickr.com. Archived from the original on 2013-10-23. Retrieved 2013-07-06.
  3. ^ "Consular vehicle registration". Hindustan Times. 2017-01-29. Retrieved 2022-11-05.
  4. ^ "Central Motor Vehicles (Twentieth Amendment) Rules, 2021" (PDF). 21 September 2021.
  5. ^ "Bharat series vehicle registration: Here's how to get a BH plate and its benefits". Firstpost. 3 March 2022. Retrieved 23 August 2022.
  6. ^ Prakash, Asha (15 November 2017). "The rise and fall of the Pondicherry (Puducherry) number plate". The Times of India. Retrieved 2023-01-29.
  7. ^ "From Amala Paul to Fahadh, why luxury car owners go to Puducherry to register vehicles". The News Minute. 2 November 2017. Retrieved 2023-01-29.
  8. ^ "New vehicle registration mark DD for Dadra & Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu". Deccan Herald. 23 January 2020. Retrieved 21 November 2020.
  9. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-11-30. Retrieved 2020-01-16.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  10. ^ "Ladakh vehicles to have new initials post bifurcation". 27 November 2019. Retrieved 21 November 2020.
  11. ^ "Number plates to sport OD". telegraphindia.com. Calcutta, India. 2012-07-19. Archived from the original on February 3, 2013. Retrieved 30 August 2012. the vehicles will have OD instead of OR
  12. ^ "Telangana begins vehicles registration with Prefix TS". IANS. news.biharprabha.com. Retrieved 18 June 2014.
  13. ^ "TS registration series rolls out in Telangana". The Hindu. Hyderabad. 19 June 2014. Retrieved 24 June 2014.
  14. ^ . Transport Dept, Karnataka. Archived from the original on 2012-02-15. Retrieved 2012-03-13.
  15. ^ a b c "HIGH SECURITY REGISTRATION PLATES". Ministry of Road Transport and Highways. Retrieved 2010-06-29.
  16. ^ a b . Sify Finance. 2010-06-09. Archived from the original on 2011-08-11. Retrieved 2010-06-29.
  17. ^ a b . Hindustan Times. 2010-06-20. Archived from the original on 2015-09-27. Retrieved 2010-06-29.
  18. ^ a b c d "Number plate scheme: SC notices to UP, Delhi, Haryana". Indian Express. 2011-04-08. Retrieved 2011-04-11.
  19. ^ High Security Registration Plates http://iharnews.com/index.php/government/274-high-security-registration-plates 2017-10-24 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ Sen, Somit (2012-05-28). "High-tech number plates for 20 lakh vehicles soon". The Times Of India. Times of India. Retrieved 2012-07-20.
  21. ^ "License Plates of India". www.worldlicenseplates.com. Retrieved 21 November 2020.
  22. ^ . Keralamvd.gov.in. Archived from the original on 2013-07-10. Retrieved 2013-07-06.
  23. ^ kukunmishra [TOI] (2018-06-09). "Indian Presidency vehicle". imgur.com. Retrieved 2018-12-10.
  24. ^ "Vehicles of President, vice president to soon have number plates: Delhi HC told". The Times of India. 4 March 2018. Retrieved 21 November 2020.
  25. ^ Staff Reporter (4 March 2018). "Now, cars of President, Vice-President to have number plates". The Hindu. Retrieved 21 November 2020 – via www.thehindu.com.
  26. ^ "Vehicles Of President, Vice President To Have Number Plates, Court Told". NDTV.com. Retrieved 21 November 2020.

External links Edit

  • List of two-letter codes
  • Government of Tamil Nadu - State Transport Authority
  • HSRP Registration
  • HSRP Punjab
  • Ministry of Road transport and Highways

vehicle, registration, plates, india, motorised, road, vehicles, india, tagged, with, registration, licence, number, vehicle, registration, plate, commonly, known, number, plate, issued, district, level, regional, transport, office, respective, states, main, a. All motorised road vehicles in India are tagged with a registration or licence number The Vehicle registration plate commonly known as number plate is issued by the district level Regional Transport Office RTO of respective states the main authority on road matters The number plates are placed in the front and back of the vehicle By law all plates are required to be in modern Arabic numerals with Latin letters 1 The international vehicle registration code for India is IND A high security registration plate issued in Karnataka Contents 1 Colour coding 1 1 Permanent Registration 1 2 Temporary Registration 2 Permanent Registration Format 2 1 Private and Commercial Vehicles 2 1 1 BH Bharat series 2 2 Vehicles of Foreign Missions 2 3 Vehicles of Indian Armed Forces 3 Format for private and commercial vehicles 3 1 Part 1 Two letter State Codes 3 1 1 Current codes 3 1 2 Former codes 3 2 Part 2 District Number 3 3 Part 3 Single or multiple letters 3 4 Part 4 Unique number between 1 and 9999 4 Temporary Registration Format 5 HSRP High Security Registration Plate 6 History 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksColour coding EditPermanent Registration Edit Private vehicles Private vehicles by default have black lettering on a white background e g TN 75 AA 7106 Vehicles which run purely on electricity have white lettering on a green background e g AP 21 BP 7331 Commercial vehicles Commercial vehicles such as taxis buses and trucks by default have black lettering on a yellow background e g UP 19 D 0343 Vehicles available on rent for self drive have yellow lettering on a black background e g KA 08 J 9192 Vehicles which run purely on electricity have yellow lettering on a green background e g MH 12 RN 1289 Vehicles belonging to foreign missions Vehicles registered to an embassy or United Nations have white lettering on a blue background e g 199 CD 1 and 23 UN 1 2 respectively Vehicles registered to a consulate have yellow lettering on a blue background e g 199 CC 999 3 Vehicles registered by Indian Armed Forces have white lettering starting with an arrow on a black background e g 03D 153874H Temporary Registration Edit Unsold vehicles belonging to a vehicle manufacturer or a dealer have white lettering on a red background e g HR 26 TC 7174 Sold vehicles awaiting a permanent registration have red lettering on a yellow background e g TS 07 D TR 2020 Permanent Registration Format EditPrivate and Commercial Vehicles Edit The current format for the registration of private and commercial consists of four parts Part 1 Two letter State Codes two letters which indicates the State or Union Territory to which the vehicle is registered Part 2 District Number a two digit number allocated to a district within the respective state or Union Territory Due to heavy volume of vehicle registration unique numbers may be allocated to multiple RTO offices within a single district Part 3 Single or multiple letters consists of one two or three letters or may not exist at all This shows the ongoing series of an RTO also acts as a counter of the number of vehicles registered and or vehicle classification The letters O and I are not used here to avoid confusion with digits 0 or 1 Part 4 Unique number between 1 and 9999 it s issued sequentially and is unique to each registration This scheme of numbering has some advantages The state or district of registration of a particular vehicle is immediately identifiable In the case of a police investigation of an accident or vehicle related crime witnesses usually remember the initial area code letters it is then quite simple to narrow down suspect vehicles to a much smaller number by checking the database without having to know the full number BH Bharat series Edit nbsp A Vehicle registered under BH series On 26 August 2021 the Ministry of Road Transport issued a notification 4 regarding a unified pan India registration of private vehicles This special registration process was introduced to ease inter state mobility by eliminating the hassles of re registering a vehicle when its owner relocates to a new state or Union Territory BH series registration follows a separate format and can be issued to public sector employees of central and state governments and also to private sector employees of firms with offices in four or more states or union territories 5 The format for BH series registration consists of four parts The first part is a two digit number which indicates the last two digits of the year in which the vehicle was registered example 22 for a vehicle registered in 2022 The second part is BH which is short for Bharat Hindi भ रत The third part is a number ranging between 1 and 9999 issued randomly and unique to each registration The fourth part consists of one or two letters O and I are not used here to avoid confusion with the digits 0 or 1 Vehicles of Foreign Missions Edit nbsp Indian vehicle registration plate of a car belonging to diplomatic mission of The Netherlands code 52 Registration of vehicles belonging to a foreign mission is carried out by Indian Ministry of External Affairs The registration format for vehicles consists of three parts The first part is a unique number allocated to the foreign mission by the Ministry of External Affairs The second part consist of two characters which can be CD which is short for corps diplomatique indicating that vehicle is registered to an embassy CC which is short for corps consulaire indicating that vehicle is registered to a consulate UN which is short for United Nations indicating that vehicle is registered to one of the UN missions The third part is a number ranging between 1 and 9999 issued sequentially to each mission and unique to each registrationVehicles belonging to foreign missions are granted the level of diplomatic immunity or consular immunity corresponding to whom the vehicle has been attributed to by the Ministry of External Affairs Immunity is void if a UN CD or CC vehicle is driven by a chauffeur or non diplomat in an absence of an accredited member of the diplomatic or consular corps Unique number allocated to different foreign missions which forms the first part of CD and CC registration are listed below click on show to expand the list Number Country1 nbsp Afghanistan2 nbsp Algeria3 nbsp Egypt4 nbsp Argentina5 nbsp Australia6 nbsp Austria7 nbsp Bangladesh8 nbsp Belgium9 nbsp Bhutan10 nbsp Brazil11 nbsp Britain United Kingdom 12 nbsp Bulgaria13 nbsp Cameroon14 nbsp Cyprus15 nbsp Canada16 nbsp Chile17 nbsp China18 nbsp Colombia19 nbsp Cuba20 nbsp Czech Republic21 nbsp Denmark22 nbsp Brunei23 nbsp Ethiopia24 nbsp Finland25 nbsp France26 nbsp Angola27 nbsp Germany28 nbsp Ghana29 nbsp Greece30 nbsp Kyrgyzstan31 nbsp Holy See Vatican City 32 nbsp Hungary33 nbsp Indonesia34 nbsp Iran35 nbsp Iraq36 nbsp Ireland37 nbsp Italy38 nbsp Japan39 nbsp Jordan40 nbsp Kenya41 nbsp North Korea42 nbsp South Korea43 nbsp Kuwait44 nbsp Laos45 nbsp Gabon46 nbsp Malaysia47 nbsp Mauritius48 nbsp Mexico49 nbsp Mongolia50 nbsp Morocco51 nbsp Nepal52 nbsp Netherlands53 nbsp New Zealand54 nbsp Nicaragua55 nbsp Nigeria56 nbsp Poland57 nbsp Portugal58 nbsp Romania59 nbsp Saudi Arabia60 nbsp Serbia61 nbsp Sierra Leone62 nbsp Singapore63 nbsp Slovenia64 nbsp Somalia65 nbsp Spain66 nbsp Sudan67 nbsp Sweden68 nbsp Switzerland69 nbsp Syria70 nbsp Tanzania71 nbsp Thailand72 nbsp Trinidad and Tobago73 nbsp Turkey74 nbsp Uganda75 nbsp Russia76 nbsp United Arab Emirates77 nbsp United States78 nbsp Uruguay79 nbsp Venezuela80 nbsp Vietnam84 nbsp Democratic Republic of the Congo85 nbsp Slovakia89 nbsp Pakistan93 nbsp Belarus94 nbsp Ukraine95 nbsp South Africa97 nbsp Senegal98 nbsp Uzbekistan99 nbsp Kazakhstan102 nbsp Iceland105 nbsp Cambodia104 nbsp Tunisia106 nbsp Yemen109 nbsp Israel111 nbsp Rwanda112 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina113 nbsp Suriname117 nbsp Luxembourg119 nbsp Eritrea120 nbsp Azerbaijan121 nbsp Maldives122 nbsp Fiji123 nbsp Ivory Coast125 nbsp Ecuador126 nbsp Djibouti128 nbsp Tajikistan133 nbsp Botswana134 nbsp Dominican Republic135 nbsp Malawi137 nbsp Malta141 nbsp Burkina Faso145 nbsp Burundi147 nbsp Georgia149 nbsp Mali152 nbsp Niger153 nbsp Guinea155 nbsp South Sudan156 nbsp Estonia157 nbsp Bolivia159 nbsp Latvia160 nbsp Equatorial GuineaVehicles of Indian Armed Forces Edit nbsp A registration plate on an Indian Army truck at Mhow nbsp Indian Military vehicle s NCC registration plateThe registration format for vehicles belonging to Indian Armed Forces Army Navy and Air Force has five parts The first or the third character is an upward pointing arrow This is known as a Broad Arrow whose origins lie in the UK Office of Ordnance and is still used in many parts of the British Commonwealth on assorted army items not just vehicles The next two digits or the two succeeding the arrow indicate the last two digits of the year in which the armed forces procured the vehicle example 22 for a vehicle procured in 2022 The third part is a single letter indicating the type or class of vehicle A Two wheel Vehicle e g motorcycles B Light Motor Vehicle e g passenger cars C Truck Up to 2 5 tonnes D Truck 3 5 tonnes E Specialist Truck F Specialist Light Vehicle e g Light Strike Vehicle K Ambulance P Bus Fire Truck Tanker Recovery Vehicle etc R Missile launcher X Armoured or Combat Vehicle e g tank armoured personnel carrier The fourth part is a six digit serial number unique to each registration The fifth part and the last letter in registration is a check letter Format for private and commercial vehicles EditHere is a detailed overview of the format for permanent registration of private and commercial vehicles Part 1 Two letter State Codes Edit nbsp Two letter state codes of India as used on vehiclesMain article List of RTO districts in India All Indian states and Union Territories have their own two letter code This two letter referencing came into action in the 1980s Before that each district or Regional Transport Officer s office had a three letter code which did not mention the state This led to a fair degree of confusion for example MMC 8259 could fit in anywhere in the country To avoid this ambiguity the state code was included along with the district or RTO s office In some states such as Maharashtra licence plates before 1960 when the state was known as Bombay Presidency bear notations such as BMC The newly created states of Uttarakhand Chhattisgarh Jharkhand and Telangana from Uttar Pradesh Madhya Pradesh Bihar and Andhra Pradesh respectively are registering vehicles under their new two letter codes while the old numbers registered in the RTO offices of these states under the RTO code of the parent state still stay valid In 2007 the state of Uttaranchal was renamed as Uttarakhand thus the state code changed from UA to UK In 2011 the state of Orissa was renamed as Odisha thus the state code changed from OR to OD The Government of India Ministry of Road Transport and Highways the nodal ministry has formulated strict specifications and enforcement rules for the new High Security Registration Plates new number plates The states have recently started introducing them in a phased manner This standardisation along with strict enforcement is expected to bring about a change in law enforcement and in the registration process of vehicles in the country The amount of taxes to be paid when purchasing and registering a car are chosen by the state or union territory with the latter tending to have lower taxes In particular Puducherry is known for its low taxes with many luxury cars being registered there by residents of other places to save money sometimes fraudulently leading to crackdowns by states affected by revenue loss in recent years 6 7 Current codes Edit The list of two letter codes for states and Union Territory codes is as follows State or Union Territory CodeAndaman and Nicobar Islands ANAndhra Pradesh APArunachal Pradesh ARAssam ASBharatFor pan India registration BHBihar BRChandigarh CHChhattisgarh CGDadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu DD 8 Delhi DLGoa GAGujarat GJHaryana HRHimachal Pradesh HPJammu and Kashmir JKJharkhand JHKarnataka KAKerala KLLadakh LA 9 10 Lakshadweep LDMadhya Pradesh MPMaharashtra MHManipur MNMeghalaya MLMizoram MZNagaland NLOdisha OD 11 Puducherry PYPunjab PBRajasthan RJSikkim SKTamil Nadu TNTelangana TS 12 13 Tripura TRUttar Pradesh UPUttarakhand UKWest Bengal WBFormer codes Edit List of codes no longer in use but legally use seen in older Vehicles Code State or Union TerritoryUA UttaranchalDN Dadra and Nagar HaveliOR OrissaPart 2 District Number Edit Since all states have two or more districts the district is in charge of registering the vehicle A vehicle bears the registration of the district in which it is bought rather than the district of residence of the owner In many states officials insist that the plates be changed to the local numbers if the owner shifts residence The number of districts in the state need not equal the number of permutations of the district field of the licence plate Often in districts with large cities the geographical district can be split into two or more administered regions each governed by an RTO A case is the 11 RTOs of Bengaluru Urban District in the state of Karnataka which has the plate bearings KA 01 for HSR Layout Bengaluru Central KA 02 for Rajajinagara Bengaluru West KA 03 for Kasturinagara Bengaluru East KA 04 for Yeshwanthapura Bengaluru North KA 05 for Jayanagara Bengaluru South KA 41 for Kengeri Bengaluru West Suburban KA 50 for Yelahanka Bengaluru North Suburban KA 51 for Electronic City Bengaluru South Suburban KA 53 for Krishnarajapura Bengaluru East Suburban KA 59 for Chandapura Anekal Certain RTOs can be set up for dedicated purposes KA 57 in Shantinagara is dedicated for autorickshaws of Bengaluru Urban District and KA 57 F is registration of the same RTO is exclusive for KSRTC and BMTC buses plying in and out of the district In some states such as West Bengal each RTO issues two numbers i e separate numbers for commercial vehicles and private vehicles E g Asansol RTO has the numbers WB 38 for private vehicles and WB 37 for commercial or public ones Also the 01 digit may reflect the capital district of the state though it may not always be the case In some states such as the state of Delhi and previously in Gujarat and Bihar the initial 0 of the district code is omitted thus Delhi district 2 numbers appear as DL 2 not DL 02 The union territory of Delhi has an additional code in the registration code DL 9 CAA 1111 where DL is the two letter code for Delhi DL The additional C for category of vehicle is the letter S for two wheelers C for cars and SUVs E for electric vehicles in some cases only P for public passenger vehicles such as buses R for three wheeled rickshaws T for tourist licensed vehicles and taxis V for pick up trucks and vans and Y for hire vehicles This system is also applicable in other states For example Rajasthan where RJ is the two letter code P is for passenger vehicles C for cars S for scooters and G for goods vehicles Also A for Ambulance M for Milk Van P for Police Part 3 Single or multiple letters Edit When the initial 9999 numbers are used up the RTO adds the letter A before the unique 4 digit number In some states the two letters also give the description of the make of the vehicle The letters may also reflect the subdivision of the district if the district is geographically large In Tamil Nadu the letter G is reserved for Government both the Union Government of India and State Governments vehicles and the letter N is reserved for Government Transport Buses while A to F H to M and P to Z are for passenger vehicles of all kinds including commercial vehicles For e g TN 60 AG 3333 could be a government vehicle registered in Theni whereas a TN 58 N 4006 could be a government Bus registered in Madurai District In Andhra Pradesh and Telangana the letter Z is reserved for the State Road Transport APSRTC and TSRTC buses AP Z TS Z and so on The letter P AP 18P TS 9P and so on Vijayawada RTO and Khairatabad RTO is reserved for the state police vehicles The letters T U V W X Y is reserved for commercial ones going on as TA TB UA UB and so on whereas rest of the letters are reserved for private passenger vehicles of all kinds In Kerala the number series KL 15 is reserved for the Kerala State Road Transport Corporation KSRTC buses For e g KL 15 3431 is an Ashok Leyland KSRTC bus with vehicle code TS 340 Otherwise all registrations are common even for commercial vehicles Also KL 01 Thiruvananthapuram RTO issues registrations for police vehicles around the state In Assam AS 20 is reserved for government buses and AS 30 and AS 31 is reserved for Assam state police To register commercial vehicles the letter C is used and goes on like AC BC etc For private vehicles of all kinds registrations are common In West Bengal there are different number codes for commercial vehicles and private vehicles RTOs have assigned the letter T to some commercial vehicles e g WB 04 TE and so on In areas like Alipur Barasat Barrackpore and Howrah letters were assigned for different classes of vehicles for private vehicles Now the same letters are used for all types of vehicles Kolkata s main RTO at Beltala WB01 WB02 WB03 and WB04 also has separate RTO number codes for two wheelers and private cars as well as goods and passenger vehiclesIn Odisha all registrations are common even for commercial vehicles Bhubaneswar has two registration numbers OD 02 and OD 33 The OD 02 is used for RTO jurisdiction of Old Bhubaneswar and OD 33 is used for RTO jurisdiction of Patia Bhubaneswar In Jammu and Kashmir all registrations are common even for commercial vehicles However the letter Y is used for all government buses In Punjab all registrations are common even for commercial vehicles PB 01 is used to register tourist vehicles In Bihar all RTO s assigns the letter P for passenger vehicles Commercial vehicles and SUVs and G for goods vehicles e g BR 01 PC 2433 is a BSRTC bus in Patna However for private vehicles all registrations are common In Himachal Pradesh HP 01 and HP 02 are reserved for tourist vehicles and also the first letter of the district is used e g HP 01 D refers to a taxi in Dharamshala Otherwise all registrations are common even for commercial vehicles In Maharashtra the two letters in each RTO is classified for a different kind of vehicle e g MH 14 BT is assigned for MSRTC buses built in the bus building facility Pimpri MH 02 CR is for commercial vehicles in Mumbai MH 10 CJ is for two wheelers in Sangli MH 04 GM is for cars in Thane MH 12 JK is for special purpose vehicles in Pune and MH 47 D is for autorickshaws in North Mumbai For e g after letter A letter B will be given after z letter AAwill be given and so on In Karnataka blank A B C D is used for commercial vehicles T for tractors and trailers E H J K L Q R S U V W X Y for two wheelers M N P Z for private passenger vehicles G is used for Government Vehicles and F is used for KSRTC NWKRTC NEKRTC BMTC buses Additional letters are added as each series is exhausted e g M MA F FA and so on In Madhya Pradesh the numbering system is similar to other states with a few exceptions MP 01 are reserved for Madhya Pradesh Raj Bhavan i e Madhya Pradesh Governor s Secretariat and Governor s Household Establishment MP 02 are reserved for the state government vehicles MP 03 is reserved for the Madhya Pradesh Police while MP 04 are reserved for state capital RTO i e Bhopal This pattern is followed in Chhattisgarh also with CG 01 for vehicles of Governor s Office CG 02 for state government vehicles CG 03 for Chhattisgarh Police and CG 04 for state capital RTO i e Raipur In Madhya Pradesh vehicles used in agricultural purpose are numbered with series A e g AA AB AC etc big cars by B small cars by C special purpose vehicle such as ambulance crane etc by D medium size goods vehicle by G heavy vehicles by H small loading vehicle by L motor cycles by M passenger buses by P passenger auto by R Scooter by S taxis by T and passengers by E F I J K N Q U to Z When a series is exhausted or reaches MZ the RTO can start any other series For example Bhopal adopted AM DM EM following M while Indore started NA NB NC and now series Q is running This allocation is similar in Chhattisgarh also In Goa the letter X is reserved for the State Road Transport Kadamba Transport Corporation buses e g GA 03 X 0109 The letters T U V W Y Z are reserved for commercial vehicles whereas the letter G is reserved for government vehicles Again the two letter in each RTO is classified for a different kind of vehicle e g GA 07 C is for cars in Panaji and GA 03 AB is for two wheelers in Mapusa In Uttar Pradesh all registrations are common for private vehicles Districts use G for government vehicles and any letter for commercial Currently most districts use T AT BT etc some use N AN BN etc and a few use B H etc In Uttarakhand the letter C is reserved for goods vehicles T for Taxis P for public transport vehicles and G for government vehicles and A B D to O Q to S and U to Z for private passenger vehicles of all kinds with an additional letter added later such as TA CA GA PA and so on For example the official vehicle of the state Home Secretary uses the number UK 07 GF 9999 and that of the Director General Information and Public Relations uses the number UK 07 GE 9000 The vehicle of the Chairman of the State Sugar Corporation has the number UK 07 GE 0900 The registration number of the official vehicle of the now ousted Chief Minister read UK 07 GB 0999 Further UK 07 TA 0251 could be a taxi in Dehradun and UK 07 PA 0250 could be a local bus in Dehradun In the North East excluding Assam Meghalaya issues ML 01 ML 02 ML 03 for government vehicles while ML 02 specifically for the Police department and ML 03 for the transport department and registration is common for all vehicles Sikkim issues the letter P as prefix for all types of private vehicles and T for taxis J for commercial jeeps B for buses and Z D for other commercial vehicles For state transport buses the SK 04 XXXX series of Jorethang was used and have now gone back to register them under B series Arunachal Pradesh issues AR 02 for its government buses otherwise all registrations are common even for commercial vehicles Nagaland issues different letters for all types of vehicles In Tripura Mizoram and Manipur all registrations are common even for commercial vehicles In Gujarat government vehicles have number plate with letter G and GJ which is reserved for government firm vehicles e g GJ 18 G 5123 and GJ 18 GJ 6521 All other letters except G are used by passenger vehicles The letters T U V W X Y Z are reserved for commercial vehicles and goes on in the series AT AU BT BU and so on Also the number series GJ 18 Y is reserved for the Gujarat State Road Transport Corporation GSRTC buses e g GJ 18 Y 5432 GJ 18 V was used earlier After the completion of this series GJ 18 Y was used e g GJ 18 V 8844 Currently GJ 18 Z is in use All other letters used for passengers Also a letter is prefixed for usage in all classes of vehicles e g GJ 01 J to JS are for two wheelers in Ahmedabad and GJ 01 R to RZ are reserved for private four wheelers in Ahmedabad However after the exhaustion of private series in Ahmedabad vehicles are being registered with the T to Z suffix pattern to meet the demand In Delhi the following letters are used for registration A for ambulances B for mini buses C for cars F for numbers on demand for private vehicles G for trucks K for school vehicles L for trucks N for NRIs e g DL 3C NA DL 2S ND P is for buses Q are for commercial three wheelers R for autorickshaws and radio taxis S for two wheelers T for city taxis Y for private taxis V W E U M Z for other commercial vehicles DL 1 at Mall Road registers only A E G K L M P Q R T U V W Y and Z In Chandigarh the following letters are used for registration T is for trucks G is for government vehicles CH 02 registers commercial vehicles Registration for all private vehicles is common In Rajasthan the following letters are used for registration M S B for two wheelers C for cars P for buses G for trucks T for taxis and tourist passenger vehicles Earlier numbers between 1 and 50 were used e g RJ 14 2M and RJ 14 6C were used for vehicles but now this system has been stopped In Haryana there are different codes for commercial vehicles and different for private vehicles Private registrations are common In the union territories of Andaman and Nicobar Islands Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu Lakshadweep and Puducherry all registrations are common even for commercial vehicles Part 4 Unique number between 1 and 9999 Edit The last four numbers are unique to the vehicle Usually the lower 100 numbers are government registered numbers but it may not always be the case Special lucky numbers also called fancy numbers such as 3333 0001 or 6666 fetch a premium and may touch above 1 000 000 Prior to 2005 Karnataka used to charge 1000 for obtaining a unique last four digit number These numbers used to be issued either from the current running series or from one or two future series When the numbering system was computerized numbers could be issued from any future series However the Karnataka RTO steeply hiked these charges to 6 000 if the number to be obtained is in the current series and 25 000 if it was to be issued from a future series It was increased again in 2010 from 6 000 to 20 000 and from 25 000 to 75 000 14 As of 2007 Maharashtra has increased the price of unique numbers to the range of 25 000 to 1 25 000 In 2012 Maharashtra increased the price from 1 25 000 to 2 00 000 In Uttarakhand number 0001 and 0786 has the highest charge of 50 000 In Gujarat RTO is charging 500 for 2 wheeler vehicles and 1 000 for 4 wheeler vehicles for chosen number plate but the chosen number plate not be unique Ex 4521 6523 etc For VIP number 1 4 wheeler vehicle RTO distribute an application form to bid for unique number plate which will be attached with amount of money The highest payer of the amount will get the unique number like 1 Sometimes it takes 2 00 000 to 5 00 000 maximum for this type of number Currently Gujarat RTO has revised the amount for chosen number not unique numbers like single double digit which is 1000 for 2 wheeler vehicles and 5000 for 4 wheeler vehicles In Andhra Pradesh the RTO Follows the Auction system for unique numbers The highest bidder gets the number Numbers like 0909 0999 0099 0009 are in high demand always and have a high premium and maximum bidders for the auction Temporary Registration Format EditAs soon as a vehicle is purchased the dealer of the vehicle issues a temporary license sticker known colloquially as a TR To Register number In Maharashtra TC test certificate no is given This is valid for one month during which the owner must register the vehicle in the controlling RTO of the area in which the owner is residing to get a standard license plate Some states like Tamil Nadu do not allow vehicles with TR numbers on the road the dealer will hand over the vehicle to the purchaser only after the registration process is done To register a vehicle it has to be presented to the RTO s office where a Motor Vehicle Inspector will verify the applicant s address and other details confirm that the engine and chassis numbers are identical to what is written in the application and issues a permanent registration certificate which is usually valid for 20 years The permanent registration certificate is one of the four important documents a vehicle plying on the road should always have the others being a valid insurance certificate a pollution under control PUC certificate and the driver s license For public utility vehicles like buses trucks taxis and pick up vans there are a number of additional documents like a road worthiness certificate and a transportation permit HSRP High Security Registration Plate EditOn June 1 2005 the Government of India had amended rule 50 of the Central Motor Vehicles Rules 1989 mandating introduction of new tamper proof High Security Registration HSRP number plates 15 16 All new motorised road vehicles that came into the market after that needed to adhere to the new plates while existing vehicles had been given two years to comply Features incorporated include the number plate having a patented chromium hologram 15 a laser numbering containing the alpha numeric identification of both the testing agency and manufacturers and a retro reflective film bearing a verification inscription India at a 45 degree inclination The characters are embossed on the plate for better visibility The letters IND were printed in a light shade of blue on the observers left side under the hologram 15 However it has yet to be implemented since the various state Governments has not yet appointed an official source for manufacture of these plates 17 due to disputes which are currently in various Indian courts 16 17 On 8 April 2011 the Supreme Court of India summoned the transport secretaries of Delhi Punjab and Uttar Pradesh for contempt of court proceedings regarding nonenforcement of the high security registration plates 18 The Supreme Court on 30 November 2004 had clarified that all states had to comply with the scheme 18 Currently all of North East including Assam Gujarat Rajasthan Jammu and Kashmir West Bengal Karnataka Andaman amp Nicobar Islands UT and Goa are the only states which have complied in full The states of Bihar Jharkhand Uttar Pradesh Madhya Pradesh Chhattisgarh Odisha and Maharashtra have not proceeded after having called tenders 18 Besides these states some of the other states have also taken action to implement the new scheme 18 Haryana and Punjab has launched the High Security Registration Plates Scheme in the state High Security Registration Plates have been made mandatory in for all new and old vehicles 19 Maharashtra announced that it had planned to implement new number plates soon 20 History EditBetween 1902 and 2009 all plates were owner provided since 2009 plates are officially issued however previous registrations are still valid 21 Before 1939 only one letter with four numbers were issued e g N 7612 From 1939 until 1947 two letters and four numbers scheme were issued e g KA 9823 From 1947 until the late 1980s June 30 1989 the Indian licence plate system followed the scheme BMU 7711 Where B was the state code e g C for Karnataka since K was allotted to Kerala MU were letters of the specific RTO and 7711 was the unique licence plate number 22 Older vehicles still exhibit this legally valid numbering scheme In Portuguese Goa which was annexed by India in 1961 the scheme was Ixx 99 99 before 1937 I 99999 second letters and third letters reserved by district When Madhya Pradesh was known as Central Province then using code C all vehicle licence plates began with CPZ For All Government vehicles CPP Central Province Police CPX where X represented the district code for example vehicles registered in Jabalpur had a registration plate starting with CPJ When renamed to Madhya Pradesh then using code M MPZ For all Government vehicles MPP Madhya Pradesh Police MPX where X represented the district for example vehicles registered in Jabalpur had a registration plate starting with MPJ In the early 2000s the number plate colouring scheme changed from white over black BMU 7711 to black over white BMU 7711 for private non commercial vehicles and from black over white BMU 7711 to black over yellow BMU 7711 for all other vehicles The usage of the older colour scheme was made illegal after a period during which both styles were tolerated The President of India and The Governors of Indian States used to travel in official cars without license plates Instead they had the Emblem of India in gold embossed on a red plate for eg the president s old Mercedes Benz 23 But now they also have ordinary license plates 24 25 26 See also EditPortals nbsp India nbsp TransportReferences Edit Central Motor Vehicle Rules 1989 Rule 50 2 d PDF GOI Government of India Department of Road Transport amp Highways 1989 Retrieved 2019 01 19 GHeather UK cancellato 2007 06 09 Idiot No 3 at DEL Flickr Condivisione di foto Flickr com Archived from the original on 2013 10 23 Retrieved 2013 07 06 Consular vehicle registration Hindustan Times 2017 01 29 Retrieved 2022 11 05 Central Motor Vehicles Twentieth Amendment Rules 2021 PDF 21 September 2021 Bharat series vehicle registration Here s how to get a BH plate and its benefits Firstpost 3 March 2022 Retrieved 23 August 2022 Prakash Asha 15 November 2017 The rise and fall of the Pondicherry Puducherry number plate The Times of India Retrieved 2023 01 29 From Amala Paul to Fahadh why luxury car owners go to Puducherry to register vehicles The News Minute 2 November 2017 Retrieved 2023 01 29 New vehicle registration mark DD for Dadra amp Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu Deccan Herald 23 January 2020 Retrieved 21 November 2020 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2020 11 30 Retrieved 2020 01 16 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Ladakh vehicles to have new initials post bifurcation 27 November 2019 Retrieved 21 November 2020 Number plates to sport OD telegraphindia com Calcutta India 2012 07 19 Archived from the original on February 3 2013 Retrieved 30 August 2012 the vehicles will have OD instead of OR Telangana begins vehicles registration with Prefix TS IANS news biharprabha com Retrieved 18 June 2014 TS registration series rolls out in Telangana The Hindu Hyderabad 19 June 2014 Retrieved 24 June 2014 To Obtain Advance Registration Mark Fancy Registration Number Transport Dept Karnataka Archived from the original on 2012 02 15 Retrieved 2012 03 13 a b c HIGH SECURITY REGISTRATION PLATES Ministry of Road Transport and Highways Retrieved 2010 06 29 a b M J Antony Number plate logjam Sify Finance 2010 06 09 Archived from the original on 2011 08 11 Retrieved 2010 06 29 a b Don t buy high security number plates it s illegal Hindustan Times 2010 06 20 Archived from the original on 2015 09 27 Retrieved 2010 06 29 a b c d Number plate scheme SC notices to UP Delhi Haryana Indian Express 2011 04 08 Retrieved 2011 04 11 High Security Registration Plates http iharnews com index php government 274 high security registration plates Archived 2017 10 24 at the Wayback Machine Sen Somit 2012 05 28 High tech number plates for 20 lakh vehicles soon The Times Of India Times of India Retrieved 2012 07 20 License Plates of India www worldlicenseplates com Retrieved 21 November 2020 MVDKerala Registration Numbers Keralamvd gov in Archived from the original on 2013 07 10 Retrieved 2013 07 06 kukunmishra TOI 2018 06 09 Indian Presidency vehicle imgur com Retrieved 2018 12 10 Vehicles of President vice president to soon have number plates Delhi HC told The Times of India 4 March 2018 Retrieved 21 November 2020 Staff Reporter 4 March 2018 Now cars of President Vice President to have number plates The Hindu Retrieved 21 November 2020 via www thehindu com Vehicles Of President Vice President To Have Number Plates Court Told NDTV com Retrieved 21 November 2020 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to License plates of India List of two letter codes Government of Tamil Nadu State Transport Authority HSRP Registration HSRP Punjab Ministry of Road transport and Highways Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vehicle registration plates of India amp oldid 1179379639, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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