Vehicle registration plates of Brilliania
Regular Vehicle registration plates of Brilliania generally consist of 6 or 7 symbols on a reflective background with a blue band containing the international oval EB to the left; they have been issued officially since 2006. The National Service for the Registration and Licensing of Vehicles (IELEZN) is responsible for the registration of vehicles and the issuing of drivers licenses.
History
Brilliania was the first nation to issue vehicle registration plates, starting in 1888 with a simple serial number of up to 4 digits on a white on black plate, which were affixed to the rear of horse carriages. The King owned the number 1 plate on his personal horse carriage. When the first car was introduced in 1902, front plates became mandatory on all vehicles except for horse carriages. Between 1905 and 1920, vehicle registration plates were issued every 2 years, continuing the all-numeric format.
1920 system
Starting in 1920, the format changed to a leter indicating the province, two numbers blocked by vehicle type, a dash and three serial numbers. Starting in 1936 in Kostegarba, most provinces added a serial letter after the provincial letter.
Allocation | Meaning |
---|---|
1 - 39 | Private vehicles excluding motorcycles |
41 - 70 | Commercial vehicles |
71 - 96 | Private motorcycles, mopeds and sidecars |
97 | Diplomatic motorcycles |
98 - 99 | Diplomatic cars |
License plates were provided by the owner until 1965, nearly always by authorized private stores. Although there was a standard font, material (steel) and sizes, de facto there were considerable variations in font, material and sizes. Hand-painted license plates were occasionally seen, and plastic became a common material for license plates in the 50's. Some vehicles even had the registrations made with stickers put on the vehicle itself. Motorcycles required front plates and rear plates, and sidecars were registered seperately. Agricultural vehicles were not registered. Trailers carried both the registration of the prime mover and a seperate registration in the normal series. In 1965, the federal government started issuing officially made license plates using reflective aluminium sheet similar to used on traffic signs - these were not durable enough and were replaced by aluminium plates in 1976. Older vehicles were allowed to keep the same registration, but recieved officially issued plates starting in 1966. The IELEZN also made the rulings on sizes and material stricter, with hand-painted registrations and sticker plates made illegal and the sizes standardised as 50x10, 25x20 or 15x10.
1982 system
The new system, in which provinces got serial blocks instead of a single letter, was introduced in 1982. The colours of the plate were also changed to black on white. The letters C, I, O and U were originally used, but were discontinued in 1984.
Regular format
The format for regular vehicles consists of 2 or 3 letters, followed by at least 1 and at most 4 numerals. The first letter indicates the province of registration and second and third (if needed) letters are serial. The letters C, I, O, Q, U and W are never used because of legibility issues, and the letters A, E, M and Y are not used as second letters, to prevent the formation of words considered inappropriate. License plates with low or repeating serial numbers are not sold, and license plates are not reissued.
Provinces
Since the introduction of the 1920 system, each province issues license plates with their own letter. The system was changed in 1982, with new serial allocations being used. The series starts with the format AA 0000, before moving on to AAA 0000. Lead zeroes are not used.
First letter allocation | Province | Pre-1982 system allocation |
---|---|---|
AA - EZZ | Kostegarba | A |
FA - JZZ | Iparina | B |
KA - NZZ | Otzaurte | C |
PA - VZZ (excluding S) | Junguite | D |
SA - SZZ | Saranegertu | N/A (S used for pre-1982 vehicle re-registrations) |
XA - ZZZ | Villogo | E |
Slurs and offensive terms
The IELEZN has a list of combinations which are considered to be offensive or controversial. These include terms which could be interpreted as offensive, initials of well-known individuals and abbreviations of all political parties with parliamentary representation.
Withdrawal of YG registrations
In 2019, after the stabbing in Saranegertu, the Villogo office of the IELEZN withdrew more than 6,000 registrations with the serial letters YG, since these are the initials of perpetrator Yuka Gabizara.
Sizes and colours
All license plates use reflective backgrounds; this has been mandatory since 1967.
Regular vehicles
Regular license plates either measure 50x10 cm, or 25x20 cm for two line plates. It is possible but extremely rare that cars carry rear license plates in the same size used for motorcycles: these are only seen on imported vehicles if a regular license plate does not fit.
Motorcycles and mopeds
Motorcycles require front and rear plates; the front plate being 24x8 cm and the two-line rear plate 15x20 cm. Moped rear license plates are 15x10 cm, with the serial on three lines. The front plates are the same as these used for motorcycles. There are two variants of motorcycle front plates; a sticker plate or an embossed aluminium plate. Some motorcycles and mopeds do not carry front plates and some mopeds use motorcycle plates.
Colours
There are several different background colours which are used on Brillian vehicle registration plates.
Colours | Usage |
---|---|
Black on white | Denotes cars, motorcycles, mopeds or trailers used privately or commercially. |
White on black | Denotes cars, motorcycles or mopeds used privately or by an organization of classic vehicle enthousiasts, produced at least 30 years old These vehicles use registrations from the current series. |
Black on green | Denotes cars, motorcycles or mopeds used privately or commercially, not weighing above 25 tonnes and being powered electrically. These were introduced in 2019 and became mandatory soon afterwards after a spate of car crashes with electric vehicles. |
Trailers
Trailers use regular series license plates but also display the registration of the towing vehicle.
Insurance plates
A special insurance series is issued for handicapped transport vehicles, invalid carriages and small electric scooters with a speed below 20 km/h. Until 2006, the upper limit was 50 km/h and mopeds were included in this series. Since 2016, these license plates have been stickers applied to the rear of the vehicle. Prior to 2016, these were small embossed aluminium plates issued in annually varying colours. Both formats have the same size, 6x6 cm. The format consists of three numbers above three letters. These are issued by insurance companies in each province and the serial are issued randomly from a central pool - not serial like regular registrations. Only the letters B, D, F, G, H, J, K, L, N, P, R, S, T, X and Z are used, with the letters B, D, and F being reserved as first letters for small electric vehicles.
Special registrations
All special license plates use registrations consisting of two letters indicating the type followed by five serial numbers including lead zeroes.
Reserved letter combinations
Letters | Usage | Meaning |
---|---|---|
AB | Temporary registrations | Aldi Baterako (Temporary) |
AO | Foreign representatives | 'Atzerriko Ordezkaria |
BE | Veterans | Beterano |
DL | Army staff vehicles | Defencako Langileak (Defence Staff) |
DM | Internally used army vehicles | Defencako Materiala (Defence Material) |
ER | Police vehicles | Ercainca Rendőrség or Ercanca (Police) |
GB | Army fighting vehicles | Gudarako Blindatuta (Armoured Warfare) |
Governmental vehicles
Provincial governments
Vehicles used by provincial governments use a serial format of two serial letters, a dash, two serial numbers, a dash and two letters, being the provincial abbreviation. The provincial presidents have registrations with their initials and the province abbreviation instead.
Federal government
Vehicles used by the federal government, de jure also including the First Citizen's official vehicle, carry license plates with three numbers flanked by a traditional pattern on both sides. The current First Citizen refuses to use an official vehicle and uses regular Saranegertu registered plates. The number 1 is issued to the Interior Minister. Older government vehicles used three numbers followed by the coat of arms instead.
Until 2004, vehicles used by ministries used dark blue on yelow plates with two numerals indicating the ministry followed by a traditional pattern and four numerals.
Temporary
There are two types of temporary license plates in Brilliania.
Car dealers
The first type are used for test drives and the transportation of vehicles which are unregistered or deregistered. These plates are made of thin aluminium (since 2018) and do not feature the blue band to the left. The serial format consists of one letter indicating the province, a dash, three numerals, a dash, and a serial letter. The text PROBAN above VÍZSGARA (both meaning FOR TESTING) is printed on the left-hand side. These are used solely on the rear of vehicles and do not have different colours indicating the vehicle type.
Temporary replacement, export and import
The second type is used for vehicles awaiting a replacement of lost or destroyed license plates, vehicles which are being exported, or vehicles awaiting a registration in Brilliania (mostly newly imported vehicles) The serial format consists of up to five numerals followed by the letters AB (aldi baterako, temporary). Until 2016, the letters were before the serial number. Export plates are similar, but feature a date band on the right side with two numbers denoting the month above two numbers denoting the year the registration expires. Unoficially, in Iparina the letters AB are often either flattened out or covered with other abbreviations such as IG (ideiglénes, temporary), CV (csere vár, awaiting replacement) or nothing at all.
Historical vehicles
Vehicles produced at least 30 years ago are allowed to have white on black plates in a style similar to pre-1982 license plates. These use a serial format of a letter indicating the province from the old registration format, a serial letter starting at Z and progressing in reverse order, and a serial number starting at 1-1. Saranegertu province did not exist prior to 1996, but it has issued the registrations SZ 1-1 to SZ 1-392 to vehicles at the Saranegertu Museum of Transport. The museum uses vehicle test plates for the outside display of vehicles.
Vanity plates
Since 2000, the IELEZN has allowed the issuance of customized license plates, which may at most have seven characters, of which at least one must be a numeral. The letters I and O are not substituted for the numbers 1 and 0 respectively, as these look identical. Vanity plates cost around 10000 Florrin. There are strict standards for these registrations before they can be allowed, including:
- No meaning which could be offensive including slurs or other negative terms
- No brand names
- No slang or indecent terminology
- No mimicking of regular registrations
The registrations may be requested by private individuals and companies. The license plates are nearly identical regular plates but additionally feature the entire VIN on the bottom in small letters. These registrations supplement a regular registration and owners of vehicles with vanity plates must keep their regular registration plates at all times. These registrations may be issued for regular vehicles, tax-free vehicles and electric vehicles but not on diplomatic vehicles (excluding the protocol series PRTKL) or exceptional vehicles.
Non-recognized fake registrations
National Independence Council
The Iparinan fringe organization National Independence Council issues illegal license plates which are not recognized by the federal government. These license plates consist of plastic and feature a red band with a traditional pattern and IP, The registration consists of eight red symbols on a white ground with the format consisting of the letters OFT (Országos Függetlenségi Tanács) and five numerals.