Vehicle registration plates of Laos: Difference between revisions

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|| {{lang|lo|ສທ}} – Diplomatic<br>{{lang|lo|ຂຕ}} – Foreigner guest<br>{{lang|lo|ສປຊ}} – [[United Nations]]<br>{{lang|lo|ສງ}} – [[International financial institution]]

|| {{lang|lo|ສທ}} – Diplomatic<br>{{lang|lo|ຂຕ}} – Foreigner guest<br>{{lang|lo|ສປຊ}} – [[United Nations]]<br>{{lang|lo|ສງ}} – [[International financial institution]]

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| Police and military ||

| Police and military ||

{| border=1

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| style=”background:red; font-size: 150%; color: white” | ປກສ 1111

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|| {{lang|lo|ປກສ}} – Public security<br>{{lang|lo|ກທ}} – National defence

|| {{lang|lo|ປກສ}} – Public security<br>{{lang|lo|ກທ}} – National defence

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Latest revision as of 15:16, 25 January 2026

Laos vehicle license plates

Lao People’s Democratic Republic

Laos Private Car License Plate (Vientiane Capital)

Country Laos
Country code LAO
Slogan Name of the prefecture
Size 520 mm × 110 mm
20.5 in × 4.3 in
Serial format AA 1234
Colour (front) Black on orange
Colour (rear) Black on orange

Vehicle registration plates of Laos were first introduced in 1950. The current version started in 2001. The background and text colour vary by type of vehicle. Ordinary plates use black on orange.[1]

Electric cars will have an EV banner at the top left corner.

The top of the plate displays the name of the province where the car is registered. The plates display a two-letter prefix. The first letter ກ, ຂ, ຄ, ນ, ມ, ຣ, ລ, ວ, ຫ, ອ or is for passenger cars; ຈ, ຍ, ດ, ຕ and is for motorbikes; is for tricycles such as tuk-tuks; is for heavy trucks. The second letter and a number are a register format. This format has been used since 2001.

Starting from 2024, EV license plates have a green sticker labeled “EV” at the top left corner.

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