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Vehicle registration plates of India

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India
High Security Registration Plate (HSRP) for a private LMV
Country India
Country codeIND
Current series
NameHSRP
Size
  • 34 cm x 20 cm
  • Medium & Heavy Commercial Vehicles (MCV, HCV)
  • 50 cm x 12 cm
  • Light Motor Vehicle (LMV)
  • 20 cm x 10 cm
  • Two-wheeler (Rear)
  • Tractor (Rear)
  • Three-wheeler
  • 28.5 cm x 4.5 cm
  • Two-wheeler (Front)
  • Tractor (Front)
MaterialAluminium with Chromium hologram
Serial formatRefer section Private and Commercial Vehicles
Front plateMandatory
Rear plateMandatory
Colour (front)Refer section Colour coding
Colour (rear)Refer section Colour coding
Introduced2005 (19 years ago) (2005)
DesignerMinistry of Road Transport and Highways
Availability
Issued byRegional Transport Office of relevant district
Manufactured byVendors authorised by Ministry of Road Transport and Highways
History
First issuedAugust 1947 (77 years ago) (1947-08)

All motorised vehicles plying on public roads in India are tagged with a registration or licence number. The vehicle registration plate (known colloquially as number plate) is issued by a Regional Transport Office (RTO), the district-level authority on vehicular matters in the respective state or Union Territory. The number plates are mandatory on both front and rear of the vehicle and are required to be in modern Hindu-Arabic numerals with latin letters.[1] Complete specification of registration plates are specified under the HSRP: High Security Registration Plate rules.

The international vehicle registration code for India is IND.

Colour coding

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Registration plates are specified in multiple combinations of text colour and background colour to distinctively identify different categories of vehicles.[2]

Following combinations have been specified:

Vehicle Category Sub-category
(if any)
Text
Colour
Background
Colour
Example
Permanent Registration
Private - Black White AN 01 Z 0123
Electric White Green AN 01 Z 0123
Commercial
(Transport)
- Black Yellow AN 01 Z 0123
Electric Yellow Green AN 01 Z 0123
Commercial
(Rental)
- Yellow Black AN 01 Z 0123
Electric Black Green AN 01 Z 0123
Indian Armed Forces - White Black ↑24B 123456Z
Electric[3] Green ↑24B 123456Z
Diplomatic mission Embassy, or
United Nations mission
White Blue 199 CD 99
Consulate Yellow 199 CC 0123
Non-permanent Registration
Temporary
(awaiting permanent)
- Red Yellow T0124AN0123A
Trade
(Manufacturers, dealers etc.)
- White Red AN01C0123TC0123

For colour coding no longer in use, refer section Historical Colour Coding.

Permanent registration format

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Private and commercial vehicles

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Default registration format for private and commercial vehicles as per Motor Vehicles Act, 1988.

The current format for the registration of private and commercial came into force on 1 July 1989 as part of Motor Vehicles Act, 1988. The format consists of four parts:

  • Part 1: Two-letter State Code; two letters which indicates the State or Union Territory in which the vehicle is registered.
  • Part 2: RTO Number; a two-digit number allocated to a district RTO within the respective state or Union Territory. Due to heavy volume of vehicle registration, unique numbers may be allocated to multiple RTOs within a single district.
  • Part 3: Single or multiple letters; consists of one, two or three letters or may not exist at all. These show the ongoing registration series of respective RTO and can indirectly indicate the number of registered vehicles (in some cases, also indicate vehicle type). 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; issued sequentially and unique to each registration.

The advantage with this format is that the state and district of a particular vehicle is immediately identifiable. This can be useful in e.g. a police investigation as witnesses usually remember the initial few characters.

Vintage series (VA) and Bharat series (BH) registration have their own unique format. For formats prior to 1 July 1989, refer section Historical Registration Formats.

VA (Vintage) series

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Sample VA-series vehicle registration plate, for a vehicle registered in Maharashtra.

On 15 July 2021, the Ministry of Road Transport issued a notification[4] regarding a special registration process for vintage vehicles. It was introduced to provide exemption from various pollution and scrappage norms and thus, facilitate promotion of heritage of vintage vehicles. A vehicle is eligible for this registration process if it fulfils following criteria:

  • Two-wheeler or car (specifically, categories L1, L2 and M1)
  • More than 50 years have passed since first registration
  • Vehicle is maintained in its original form

Vintage series registration however restricts free usage of the vehicle. Vehicle may only be used for specific purposes on public roads (e.g. vintage car rally) and not for generic private or commercial use. VA-series registration has a unique format:

Vintage Registration Format
AB VA XX 1234

Characters are representative of following:

  • 'AB': Part 1: Two-letter State Codes; two letters which indicates the State or Union Territory in which the vehicle is registered
  • 'VA': Short for ‘Vintage’
  • 'XX': Two letter sequence, starting from ‘AA’, followed by ‘AB’ and so on. 'O' and 'I' are not used here to avoid confusion with the digits 0 or 1
  • '1234': Part 4: Unique number between 1 and 9999

BH (Bharat) series

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A vehicle registered under BH-series.
Sample BH-series vehicle registration plate, for a vehicle registered in 2021.

On 26 August 2021, the Ministry of Road Transport issued a notification[5] 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 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.[6] BH-series registration follows a unique format:

Bharat Registration Format
12 BH 3456 XX

Characters are representative of following:

  • '12': Represents the last two digits of the year in which the vehicle was registered, e.g. '22' for a vehicle registered in 2022
  • 'BH': Short for Bharat (Hindi: भारत)
  • '3456': Unique number between 1 and 9999, issued randomly
  • 'XX': One or two letters. Sequence starting from ‘A’, followed by ‘B’ and so on. 'O' and 'I' are not used here to avoid confusion with the digits 0 or 1

Vehicles of Indian Armed Forces

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Registration plate of an Indian Military vehicle procured in 2002

Registration of vehicles belonging to Indian Armed Forces (Army, Navy and Air Force) is administered by armed forces themselves. Following registration format is used:

Armed Forces Registration Format
↑ 01Z 012345A

Characters are representative of following:

  • '↑': The first character is an upward-pointing Broad Arrow, whose origins lie in the UK Office of Ordnance.
  • '01': Represents the last two digits of the year in which the armed forces procured the vehicle, e.g. '22' for a vehicle procured in 2022.
  • 'Z': Represents the type or class of vehicle:
    • A - Two-wheel vehicle (e.g. motorcycles)
    • B - Four-wheel vehicle (e.g. passenger cars)
    • C - Truck (Up to 3 tonnes) or pick-up trucks
    • D - Truck (More than 3 tonnes)
    • E - Multi-Axle driven truck (e.g. 4x4 or 6x6 truck)
    • F - Specialist light vehicle (e.g. Mahindra Marksman)
    • G - Trailer
    • H - High Mobility Vehicle (HMV) (e.g. Tata LPTA 2038 6x6)
    • J - Snow removal vehicles
    • K - Ambulance
    • P - Bus, Fire Truck, Tanker, Recovery Vehicle etc.
    • Q - Construction vehicles (e.g. Backhoe loader)
    • R - Missile launcher etc.
    • X - Active Combat Vehicle (e.g. tank, armoured personnel carrier)
  • '012345': Six digit unique serial number
  • 'A': Last character is a check letter.

Vehicles of diplomatic missions

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Registration plate of a vehicle belonging to diplomatic mission of The Netherlands

Registration of vehicles belonging to a diplomatic mission is carried out by Indian Ministry of External Affairs. Following registration format is used:

Diplomatic Mission Registration Format
123 XX 4567

Characters are representative of following:

  • '123': Unique number of atmost 3 digits allocated to the diplomatic mission by the Ministry of External Affairs (see list below). Leading zero is not used.
  • 'XX': Represents the type of mission to which the vehicle is registered:
    • 'CD' which is short for corps diplomatique, for vehicles registered to an embassy
    • 'CC' which is short for corps consulaire, for vehicles registered to a consulate
    • 'UN' which is short for United Nations, for vehicles registered to one of the UN missions
    • 'IOD' which is short for 'International Organisation Diplomat', for vehicles registered to international organisations (apart from the UN) which are recognised by Ministry of External Affairs. List of these organisations is available here
  • '4567': Unique number of atmost 4 digits issued sequentially (leading zeroes are not used)
    • Number '1' is reserved for vehicle(s) used by the head of respective diplomatic mission e.g. an ambassador. To distinguish multiple vehicles of the head of mission, a suffix is added e.g. '1A', '1B' and so on.

Vehicles belonging to diplomatic 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 in absence of an accredited member of the diplomatic or consular corps.

Unique numbers allocated to different diplomatic missions for the CD and CC registrations:

Number Country
1  Afghanistan
2  Algeria
3  Egypt
4  Argentina
5  Australia
6  Austria
7  Bangladesh
8  Belgium
9  Bhutan
10  Brazil
11 United Kingdom 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 SeeHoly 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
87  Zambia
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

Format for private and commercial vehicles

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

Part 1: Two-letter state code

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Two-letter state codes of India as used on vehicles

All Indian states and Union Territories have a designated two-letter code. This code referencing came into force on 1 July 1989 as part of Motor Vehicles Act, 1988. Before that, each district or RTO had three-letter code(s) at their disposal which did not clearly identify the state. This led to a fair degree of confusion — for example, MMC 0123 could fit in anywhere in the country. To avoid this ambiguity, a unique state code was included in format.

A specific state or union territory maybe chosen to register a vehicle due to differences in the amount of taxes involved in registration process. One such example is of Puducherry, where many luxury cars have been known to be registered by residents of other states, sometimes fraudulently, leading to crackdowns by those states.[7]

Current codes

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Two-letter codes currently in use for different states and union territories are as follows:

Code State or Union Territory
AN Andaman and Nicobar Islands
AP Andhra Pradesh
AR Arunachal Pradesh
AS Assam
BR Bihar
CG[8] Chhattisgarh
CH Chandigarh
DD[9] Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu
DL Delhi
GA Goa
GJ Gujarat
HP Himachal Pradesh
HR Haryana
JH Jharkhand
JK Jammu and Kashmir
KA Karnataka
KL Kerala
LA[10][11] Ladakh
LD Lakshadweep
MH Maharashtra
ML Meghalaya
MN Manipur
MP Madhya Pradesh
MZ Mizoram
NL Nagaland
OD[12] Odisha
PB Punjab
PY Puducherry
RJ Rajasthan
SK Sikkim
TG[13] Telangana
TN Tamil Nadu
TR Tripura
UK Uttarakhand
UP Uttar Pradesh
WB West Bengal

Former codes

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Codes no longer in use for new registrations but still the valid code for already registered vehicles:

Inactive since Code State or Union Territory Reason for change
January 2007 UA Uttarakhand State renamed from 'Uttaranchal' to Uttarakhand
1 September 2012[14][15] OR Odisha State renamed from 'Orissa' to Odisha
26 January 2020[16] DN Dadra and Nagar Haveli Erstwhile UT merged to create new UT of Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu
12 March 2024[17] TS Telangana State code reverted to original proposal 'TG'

Part 2: RTO number

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As all states have at least two districts, the district's RTO is the authority for registering vehicles. A vehicle can be registered in a particular district if the owner has a registered residence or business entity in that district. Each RTO is allotted unique two digit number(s) and vehicles registered with a specific RTO have the corresponding RTO number as part of their registration number. Thus, in most cases, district of registration can be uniquely identified from the registration number. Andhra Pradesh follows a separate format and a common district number (AP 40 as of 2023) is used across all districts/RTOs in the state.

Due to heavy volume of vehicle registration in highly populated districts, multiple RTOs may operate within that district, with each RTO being allotted a unique number. As an example, Bengaluru uses 11 RTOs in different parts of district, each with distinct numbers: KA 01, KA 02, KA 03, KA 04, KA 05, KA 41, KA 50, KA 51, KA 53, KA 57 and KA 59. In such cases, each number corresponds to a specific region within a single district.

In some cases, a number is reserved for certain category of vehicles, and a single RTO thus uses multiple numbers. As an example, Rohtak RTO (in Haryana) uses number HR 12 for private vehicles and HR 46 for commercial vehicles, thus both '12' and '46' correspond to Rohtak district. In some states/UTs, numbers can be reserved for even more specific categories, for example in Meghalaya, ML 01 is reserved for government vehicles, ML 02 for police department and ML 03 for state transport department. In such cases, RTO number no longer corresponds to a specific district.

Union territory and capital, Delhi has the exception of not using leading zero in the RTO numbers, and vehicle registration number can therefore start as ‘DL 1’ (instead of ‘DL 01’).

Overview of special usage of numbers in states/UTs:

State/UT Remarks
Andhra Pradesh A common district number (AP 40 as of 2023) is used across all districts in the state.
Assam AS 20 is reserved for state transport department and AS 30 and AS 31 is reserved for police department
Chhattisgarh CG 01 is reserved for vehicles of office of governor, CG 02 for all state government vehicles and CG 03 for police department
Haryana Different numbers are used for commercial and private vehicles in some districts
Himachal Pradesh HP 01 and HP 02 are reserved for tourist vehicles (buses and taxis)
Kerala KL 15 is reserved for the Kerala State Road Transport Corporation buses
Madhya Pradesh MP 01 is reserved for vehicles of office of governor, MP 02 for all state government vehicles and MP 03 for police department
Meghalaya ML 01 is reserved for government vehicles, ML 02 for police department and ML 03 for state transport department
Nagaland NL 10 and NL 11 is reserved for government vehicles, for non-transport and transport vehicle respectively
Punjab PB 01 is reserved for taxis
West Bengal Different numbers are used for commercial and private vehicles by districts

Part 3: Single or multiple letters

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The default use of letter(s) is as registration series of an RTO i.e. when initial 9999 registrations have been done and all unique 4-digit numbers used up, a prefix A is added and the number sequence reset to 1. Thus, letter(s) can indirectly indicate the number of registered vehicles (in some cases, also indicate vehicle class).

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 Assam, to register commercial vehicles, the letter C is used and goes on like AC, BC, etc.

In West Bengal, 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.

In Jammu and Kashmir, the letter Y is used for all government buses.

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 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.

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, 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, 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.

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.

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. GJ 18 V was used earlier. After the completion of this series GJ 18 Y was used. 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.

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.

Part 4: Unique number between 1 and 9999

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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.[18]

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.

Non-permanent registration format

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Temporary registration format

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After a new vehicle is purchased and while the permanent registration number is pending, a temporary registration number is issued by RTO of the district from where the vehicle was purchased.

Vehicle registration plate with temporary number, for a vehicle purchased in November 2023 in Kerala.

On 31 March 2021, the Ministry of Road Transport issued a notification[19] regarding amendment to Motor Vehicles Act. Rule 53C in the amendment introduced a homogenised alphanumeric format for temporary registration:

Temporary Registration Format
T MMYY AA 0123 ZZ

Characters are representative of following:

  • 'T': Registration number always starts with character 'T' to represent 'Temporary'
  • 'MMYY': Reperesents the month and year in which vehicle was purchased e.g. '1223' for vehicle purchase in December 2023
  • 'AA': Represents the state in which vehicle is purchased, same code as specified in Part 1: Two-letter State Codes is used
  • '0123': Four digit number issued sequentially
  • 'ZZ': One or two letters, sequence starting from ‘A’, followed by ‘B’ and so on. 'O' and 'I' are not used here to avoid confusion with the digits 0 or 1.

Example: T1123LA0123A for a vehicle purchased in Ladakh in November 2023

Temporary registration has a validity of up to six months, states however may use a stricter validity time. During this period owner must obtain a permanent registration from the RTO of their choosing. Some states may only allow limited use of vehicles with temporary registration.

To register a vehicle, it may need to be presented to the RTO, 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.

Trade registration format

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Government issues trade certificate to businesses which deal with unregistered vehicles and therefore, need to be exempted from the legal requirement of plying vehicles on road with a (permanent or temporary) registration number. Business or agency which may use trade certificate can be a vehicle manufacturer, dealer, vehicle testing agency or a vehicle importer.

Registration authority allots a group of trade registration numbers to the holder of a trade certificate. Trade number is not assigned to a specific vehicle directly by the registration authority (like permanent or temporary number), the holder of trade certificate instead assigns a number to a vehicle themselves from their available allotment. Trade number can only be used on vehicles of category for which it has been issued and should not be assigned to more than one vehicle at once. Trade registration number can be valid for up to five years.

Vehicle registration plate with trade number, for a test car registered in Chengalpattu in Tamil Nadu.

On 14 September 2022, the Ministry of Road Transport issued a notification[20] regarding amendments to trade certificate and trade registration number. A homogenised alphanumeric format for trade registration number was also introduced:

Trade Registration Format
AB 12 Z 0123 TC 0001

Characters are representative of following:

  • 'AB': Represents the state in which institute is located, same code as specified in Part 1: Two-letter State Codes
  • '12': Represents the district or RTO which issues the trade registration number, same number as defined in Part 2: District Number
  • 'Z': Represents the category of vehicle for which the trade registration number has been issued. Character used for different categories are:
    • A – Two-wheel vehicle (e.g. motorcycle, scooter)
    • B – Invalid carriage (vehicle designed specifically for differently abled person)
    • C – Light motor vehicle (e.g. car)
    • D – Medium passenger motor vehicle (e.g. minibus)
    • E – Medium goods vehicle (e.g. truck)
    • F – Heavy passenger motor vehicle (e.g. bus)
    • G – Heavy goods vehicle (e.g. truck)
    • H – E-rickshaw
    • I – E-cart (cargo variant of E-rickshaw)
    • J – any other category not covered above
  • '0123': Four digit unique number assigned to the holder of trade certificate e.g. vehicle dealer or manufacturer
  • 'TC': Short for ‘Trade Certificate’
  • '0001': Number of up to four digits to be assigned to one specific vehicle by holder of trade certificate, as allowed by registration authority

Example: LA01C0001TC0001 for a light motor vehicle (e.g. car) registered for trade in Kargil in Ladakh.

For old format, refer section Pre-2022 Trade Registration.

HSRP: High security registration plate

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On 1 June 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.[21][22] 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,[21] 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.[21] However it has yet to be implemented since the various state Governments has not yet appointed an official source for manufacture of these plates,[23] due to disputes which are currently in various Indian courts.[22][23] 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.[24] The Supreme Court on 30 November 2004, had clarified that all states had to comply with the scheme.[24] 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.[24] Besides these states some of the other states have also taken action to implement the new scheme.[24]

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.[25]

Maharashtra announced that it had planned to implement new number plates soon.[26]

Historical registration plates

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Historical colour coding

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Following colour coding have been discontinued for different reasons:

Vehicle
Category
Old colour scheme Example Officially Inactive
since
Remarks
Commercial
(except rental)
Black text
White background
AN 01 A 0123 1 February 2002[27] Discontinued to better align with international standard
Private White text
Black background
AN 01 A 0123 1 July 2002
Registered with
Consulate
Black text
Yellow background
199 CC 0123 23 June 2017[28] Discontinued to differentiate from new colour coding of commercial vehicles

In case of changes in 2002, due to large number of vehicles and therefore slow enforcement, old colour coding was in use well after the official discontinuation date.

Historical registration formats

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Pre-1940

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Vehicle with Bombay registration, circa 1928 with prefix 'Y'.

Before the introduction of Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 (enforced during 1940), a nationwide format did not exist. Initial vehicle registration format in country was simply a number of up to five digits. Gradually, a prefix of single or two letter(s) was introduced which was representative of province/city, and was followed by a number of (up to) four digits, e.g. K 1234[29] or FP 1234.

There were some exceptions as few places had already started to use three-letter prefix codes before 1940.

From 1940 till independence

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Vehicle registration plate with 1939 format. 'U' and 'SJ' corresponded to United Provinces and Lucknow respectively.

After the introduction of Motor Vehicles Act (1939), many three-letter codes were introduced and this format gradually became the most common.

Old Registration Format
XAA 1234

Characters are representative of following:

  • 'X': Represents the province, e.g. 'B' for Bombay Presidency, 'C' for Central Provinces
  • 'AA': Two letter code allotted to registration authority of a specific district.[30]
  • '1234': Unique number between 1 and 9999

In the case of Central Provinces, three-letter codes used for vehicle registration were:

  • CPZ — For government vehicles
  • CPP — Central Province Police vehicles
  • CPX — where 'X' represents the district code (e.g. CPJ for Jabalpur)

Format of using single letter prefix was also phased out.

Post-independence

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By 1947 i.e. India's independence, format of using three-letter codes was almost standard throughout the country, with the exception of the colonies which were not yet incorporated into India. Certain states/UTs in India also remained exceptions as they continued to use two-letter codes for some more years: Chandigarh (CH), Pondicherry (PY), Andaman & Nicobar islands (AN) and Jammu & Kashmir (JK).

Other colonies in India

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Colonies in India (other than British) had different registration formats until they were incorporated into independent India.

  • French Colonies: Pondicherry used the following formats:
    • Until the de facto incorporation into India in 1954: Letter 'P' as prefix followed by a number of (up to) four digits, e.g. P 1234.
    • Post-incorporation: At some point prefix was changed to 'PY'.
  • Portuguese Colonies: Goa used the following formats:
    • Until around 1957: Letter 'G' as prefix followed by a number of (up to) four digits, e.g. G 1234.
    • From 1957 until annexation by India in 1961: Three-letter prefix followed by a four digit number in style 'IGx–12–34', 'x' being the sequence letter i.e. A, B and so on.
    • Post-annexation: Vehicles were re-registered with new format as per Motor Vehicles Act (1939), with 'GDA' as the three-letter prefix.

Princely states

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Vehicle registration plate from Udaipur State (aka Kingdom of Mewar)

Princely states had a different registration format compared to rest of the country until they acceded to independent India. Colour scheme used was white text on red background and the format was state's name followed by a number.

Princely State Registration Format
X 1234

'X' represents the name of state. Example: MYSORE 1, JODHPUR 5

Top constitutional authorities

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Emblem of India used on an old official car of Indian president

It used to be a general practice for offices of top constitutional authorities in India (i.e. President, Vice-president, Governors and lieutenant governors and to some extent Ministry of External Affairs) to not register their official vehicles. Instead of registration plates, an embossed Emblem of India was used (sometimes in combination with a red plate). In 2018, above offices were instructed to get all their official vehicles registered as per applicable laws.[31][32]

Pre-2022 trade registration

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Vehicle registration plate with old trade number format of Uttar Pradesh, for a car registered in Noida.

Before the introduction of 2022 notification,[20] the defined format for trade registration was more generic and only specified following:

Old Trade Registration Format
AB 12 TC XXXX
  • 'AB', '12' and 'TC' : Same representation as in current format, detailed in Trade Registration Format
  • 'XXXX': Format consisting of alphanumeric characters, as decided by respective state or Union Territory. Most states/UTs (at the time of introduction of new format in 2022) used the following scheme:
    • '123 456' where '123' is a number (of up to 3 digits) allocated to holder of trade certificate and '456' is a unique number (of up to 3 digits) assigned to a specific vehicle. Example: UP 16 TC 020 007

Trade numbers with old format can continue to be used as per validity period.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Central Motor Vehicle Rules 1989, Rule-50(2)(d)" (PDF). Government of India - Ministry of Road Transport & Highways. 1989. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  2. ^ "Notification GSR 512 (E) regarding HSRP" (PDF). Government of India - Ministry of Road Transport & Highways. 18 July 2019. Retrieved 8 April 2024.
  3. ^ "Indian Air Force Inducts Tata Nexon EV". Mobility Outlook Bureau. 21 November 2022. Retrieved 20 March 2024.
  4. ^ "Vintage Motor Vehicle Rules" (PDF). Government of India - Ministry of Road Transport & Highways. 2021. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  5. ^ "Central Motor Vehicles (Twentieth Amendment) Rules, 2021" (PDF). 21 September 2021.
  6. ^ "Bharat series vehicle registration: Here's how to get a BH plate and its benefits". Firstpost. 3 March 2022. Retrieved 23 August 2022.
  7. ^ Prakash, Asha (15 November 2017). "The rise and fall of the Pondicherry (Puducherry) number plate". The Times of India. Retrieved 29 January 2023.
  8. ^ "CG Vehicle Registration Mark, Amendment in the Notification No. S.O. 444(E) dated 12th June, 1989". eGazette of India. Retrieved 22 January 2020.
  9. ^ "DD Vehicle Registration Mark, Amendment in the Notification No. S.O. 444(E) dated 12th June, 1989". eGazette of India. Retrieved 22 January 2020.
  10. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 November 2020. Retrieved 16 January 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  11. ^ "Ladakh vehicles to have new initials post bifurcation". 27 November 2019. Retrieved 21 November 2020.
  12. ^ "OD Vehicle Registration Mark, Amendment in the Notification No. S.O. 444(E) dated 12th June, 1989". eGazette of India. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
  13. ^ "TG Vehicle Registration Mark, Amendment in the Notification No. S.O. 444(E) dated 12th June, 1989". eGazette of India. Retrieved 12 March 2024.
  14. ^ "Number plates to sport OD". Times of India. 1 September 2012. Retrieved 29 April 2024.
  15. ^ "OD Vehicle Registration Mark, Amendment in the Notification No. S.O. 444(E) dated 12th June, 1989". eGazette of India. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
  16. ^ "DD Vehicle Registration Mark, Amendment in the Notification No. S.O. 444(E) dated 12th June, 1989". eGazette of India. Retrieved 22 January 2020.
  17. ^ "TG Vehicle Registration Mark, Amendment in the Notification No. S.O. 444(E) dated 12th June, 1989". eGazette of India. Retrieved 12 March 2024.
  18. ^ "To Obtain Advance Registration Mark (Fancy Registration Number)". Transport Dept, Karnataka. Archived from the original on 15 February 2012. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
  19. ^ "Notification GSR 240 (E) Central Motor Vehicles (Sixth Amendment) Rules" (PDF). Government of India - Ministry of Road Transport & Highways. 31 March 2021. Retrieved 18 April 2024.
  20. ^ a b "Notification GSR 703 (E) Central Motor Vehicles (Fifteenth Amendment) Rules" (PDF). Government of India - Ministry of Road Transport & Highways. 14 September 2022. Retrieved 3 May 2024.
  21. ^ a b c "HIGH SECURITY REGISTRATION PLATES". Ministry of Road Transport and Highways. Retrieved 29 June 2010.
  22. ^ a b "M J Antony: Number plate logjam". Sify Finance. 9 June 2010. Archived from the original on 11 August 2011. Retrieved 29 June 2010.
  23. ^ a b "Don't buy high-security number plates, it's illegal'". Hindustan Times. 20 June 2010. Archived from the original on 27 September 2015. Retrieved 29 June 2010.
  24. ^ a b c d "Number plate scheme: SC notices to UP, Delhi, Haryana". Indian Express. 8 April 2011. Retrieved 11 April 2011.
  25. ^ High Security Registration Plates http://iharnews.com/index.php/government/274-high-security-registration-plates Archived 2017-10-24 at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^ Sen, Somit (28 May 2012). "High-tech number plates for 20 lakh vehicles soon". The Times Of India. Times of India. Retrieved 20 July 2012.
  27. ^ "Switch to new colour scheme". The Times of India. 7 March 2002.
  28. ^ "GSR 633 (E) regarding registration mark" (PDF). The Ministry of Road Transport and Highways. 23 June 2017.
  29. ^ "License Plates of India". www.worldlicenseplates.com. Retrieved 21 November 2020.
  30. ^ "MVDKerala - Registration Numbers". Keralamvd.gov.in. Archived from the original on 10 July 2013. Retrieved 6 July 2013.
  31. ^ "Vehicles of President, vice president to soon have number plates: Delhi HC told". The Times of India. 4 March 2018. Retrieved 21 November 2020.
  32. ^ "Vehicles Of President, Vice President To Have Number Plates, Court Told". NDTV.com. Retrieved 21 November 2020.
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