The most common format for vehicle registration plates in Romania consists of black letters on white background in the format CC 123 ABC
, where CC
is a one- or two-letter county code, 123
is a two- or three-digit group (with a leading zero for groups of two), and ABC
is a three-letter group. The left side of the plate bears a blue vertical strip (the "Euroband") displaying the 12 stars of the European Union and the country code of Romania (RO). Between 1992-2007 the band featured the Romanian flag instead of the 12 stars. All lettering comes from the Latin alphabet.
The rear plate usually carries a round label displaying the month and year when the technical inspection of the vehicle is due. These labels have different background colors depending on the year displayed. The label does not have a specific slot and can be placed anywhere, but the right side is preferred and plates usually come with a slot for them.
Video Vehicle registration plates of Romania
Regulations
License plates are mandatory on both the front and rear of vehicles (only on the rear for motorcycles).
It is mandatory for the paint on all plates to be reflective, and they must be kept clean and fully visible at all times.
Assignment rules
The plates are issued for each car and for each owner, and they must be returned when the car is either sold or scrapped, although the new buyer is entitled to request continued use of the old license plate.
The digits and letters for the standard license plates are usually assigned at random, unless a customization fee is paid. Customizing is limited to picking the digits and the 3 capital letters at the end, provided the chosen combination is not already assigned.
The letter Q
is not used as it may be confused with the letter O
. The three-letter code may not start with I
or O
, as they can be mistaken for 1
or 0
. (Until 1999, I
and O
were not used at all).
Several letter groups have been reserved for special use and may not be assigned to regular cars. These include POL
(Romanian Police), DEP
(Chamber of Deputies), SNT
(Romanian Senate), SRI
(Romanian Intelligence Service), GUV
(Romanian Government).
It is common for companies or organizations with large car fleets to use the same letter combination on all their cars. Such combinations are done only as a convenience; they are not reserved, are assigned only while numbers last, and can additionally be explicitly requested by anybody, regardless of affiliation to that company or organization.
Letter combinations that may form obscene words in the Romanian language are denied licensing, but may still be in use if they were issued before the combination was blocked.
Combinations which the public has consistently refused to use, such as JEG
(clunker, wreck of a car) or BOU
(insult with the meaning of "dumb") are not included in the random assignment pool, but may still be explicitly requested.
Size and font
There are three standard sizes for license plates:
- A (52 x 11 cm) is the most widely used type and is mandatory for the front on any type of car.
- B (34 x 20 cm) is a narrow type used on the back of certain types of cars, such as SUVs.
- C (24 x 13 cm) is used exclusively by motorcycles.
The font used for the main part of the plate is DIN 1451 Mittelschrift, while the RO country code on the Euroband uses DIN 1451 Engschrift.
Legislation
In Romania, vehicle license plates are issued based on:
- Article 19 from O.U.G. 195 from 12 December 2002 regarding traffic on public roads
- Order of Minister of Internal Affairs and Administration nr. 1501 from 13 November 2006, regarding the procedure of vehicle licensing, registering, striking out and issuing of provisional or running licenses.
- Romanian Standard SR 13078:1996 "Road vehicles. Retro-reflective registration plates for motor vehicles and trailers" with five updates.
- Romanian Standard SR 13140:1996 "Road vehicles. Content and structure of registration provisional and running test numbers to be relief embossed on retro-reflective registration plates" with three updates.
Maps Vehicle registration plates of Romania
Possible combinations
Given that Q
cannot be used at all, and that all letter combinations starting with O
or I
are forbidden in order to avoid confusion, there are roughly 23 x 25 x 25 = 14,375 letter combinations (but keep in mind that a couple of dozen specific combinations have been eliminated from the public pool for various reasons). Multiplying with the 99 numbers in the original scheme (00
is not a valid number) gives 1,423,125 possible combination for each of the 42 counties.
While the total 59,771,250 number of combinations is far in excess (about an order of magnitude greater) than the actual number of vehicles registered in the entirety of Romania, this does not take into account the particularities of specific counties.
Indeed, during 2010 it was estimated that the pool of combinations for Bucharest would run out during the year, a situation created by the city's unusually large vehicle pool when compared to other cities and even entire counties.
This has led to expanding the number code for Bucharest to 3 digits, raising the city's pool to 2,860,625 and the total number of combinations overall to 61,208,750.
Other license plate formats
There are several other types of license plates currently in use in Romania in addition to the standard format.
Short-term temporary plates
Coloqually referred to as red numbers, the short-term temporary plates consist of the European strip, followed by the county code and three to six digits, of which the first is always zero and the second is always non-zero. All the writing outside of the European-strip on this plate is in red font.
These plates are valid for a maximum of 30 days and they can be re-issued for a cumulative continuous period of no more than 90 days.
These plates can be used for any vehicle regardless of its technical road-worthy state and have been specially designed as a fallback for any case where it would be impractical or impossible for a vehicle to be issued regular plates.
They tend to be most often used by car leasing and rental companies for their new cars, or cars used as temporary replacement while the owner's car is being repaired.
There is a variation of this format used for test vehicles, having 3 digits following the county code, and the inscription "PROBE" (trials) after the digits. The smallest number used in this case is 101.
Long-term temporary plates
The long-term temporary plates are similar to the short-term plates but use a black inscription instead of red and the number never starts with zero. Additionally, on the right side there is a red strip containing the end date of the plate's validity in YY/MM format.
This kind of plate is used most often for foreign nationals who take temporary residence in Romania, and for cars that fall under a leasing agreement.
Diplomatic plates
The diplomatic plate contains the European strip followed by blue text. The text consists of a code which can be CD
(Diplomatic Corps), TC
(Consular Transport), or CO
(Consulate), followed by 6 digits.
The first three digits stand for the country or international organization, the last three usually for the rank of the owner. The lowest number for both sets of 3 is 101. Thus, a car with license plate number 123 101
would refer to Switzerland's (123
) ambassador (ambassadors and heads of mission are usually assigned code 101
).
This type of license plate is issued exclusively to diplomats, and cars having such plates enjoy diplomatic immunity. Initially, the countries or organizations received codes in their alphabetical order, but some countries, such as United States or Russia, have received more than one code because they have surpassed 899 registered cars.
Table of codes (incomplete):
Plates for special organizations
The Romanian Armed Forces and the Ministry of Administration and Interior are allowed to issue plates in a special format which does not fall under normal regulations.
The format, size and style is decided by each such organization via internal regulations and may not resemble other types of plates.
The Armed Forces use plates without the European strip (as their regulations predate the 1992 regulation imposing it), with the letter "A" (Armat?, military) followed by 3 to 7 digits (3 to 4 for small vehicles, and more than 4 for heavy vehicles). Military plates issued more recently (from 2002 onwards) tend to include the European strip.
Ministry of Administration and Interior plates start with "MAI" and are typically seen on cars belonging to the Gendarmerie, Romanian Police, firefighters, and some SMURD ambulances. MAI plates are not issued to cars used by local police employed by town hall, which use regular plates instead.
Local administration plates
Yellow background plates are issued by the local authorities such as town hall, municipalities, village or commune mayoralties for the registration of certain light vehicles, or other types of vehicles that do not need country-wide authorization, such as public utility vehicles, some light garbage trucks, lawn mowers, small sanitation vehicles, mass-transit vehicles tethered to local infrastructure, quad bikes, scooters, golf carts and non-road going agricultural vehicles, such as combine harvesters, non-road-going tractors, or horse-drawn carts.
The format of the plate is not standardized across all administrations. Most local authorities used a yellow plate, but there are exceptions like Cluj-Napoca, which used white plate similar to old German plates, but always bearing the letters CJ-N (from the city name's abbreviation), followed by 3 digits.
The coat of arms or initials of the city or village is often used on the left, followed by a number of fixed-length number (4 to 6 digits, always the same size within the same issuing authority). The first number to be issued is usually 1, zero-padded to the left.
Vehicles bearing yellow plates may not leave the jurisdiction of the authority that issued the plate, but some of them can cross county borders on occasion, for example rental scooters, vehicles being towed, or trolleybuses on their way from the factory to the depot. In the case of rental vehicles such as scooters or quad bikes, they tend to retain the registration plates issued by the authority of the region where the owner resides even when they are used in another jurisdiction.
Dual-powered buses are registered with standard number plates.
Trams may not bear the plate itself, but are required to somehow bear the registration number, either painted or printed on a sticker, usually next to their fleet number.
County codes
This is the table of counties, their county code and their county capital cities.
History
1900 - 1908
The first plate was issued in 1900 to Bazil C. Assan, bearing the number 1. This created a problem with Prince Bibescu, who wanted to have the first license plate, so he was issued plate number 0 (zero). Bibescu's car can be seen today at the National Museum of Romanian History.
The plates took the simple form of white numbers on a black background, and were home made. The numbers belonged to the owner and not the car, and the list of owners and their numbers was published monthly in the "Revista Automobil?" magazine, edited by the Romanian Royal Automobile club. As there were so few cars (139 in 1908), it was not necessary to note the region on the number plate. Registration was done by the Mayor of Bucharest.
The published lists show that the numbers were assigned in the order they were requested, without differentiating between physical persons and organizations.
1908 - 1966
On August 15, 1908, a letter sent by the Romanian Automobile Club to the Chief Commissioner of Police mentions the need for a new system of license plates, which would see that all plates use the same size and font and include the name of the city where the vehicle was registered. The new system was approved by the police very soon after and a car participating to a race on October 26, 1908 can already be seen bearing the number "9.BC" (Bucharest).
As the new system became more and more common-place, the county was usually indicated by adding a hyphen and the regional abbreviation. Bucharest, for example, was B (Bc before 1914), while Craiova was Cv. In smaller cities, however, the county code was not added until the 1920s.
Some period photos of, for example, Lugoj show the abbreviation Lgs appearing both before and after the number, depending on when the owner had changed the license plates to conform to the new regulations.
This system was in place until 1966, when the number of cars made it impractical and needed a more elaborate approach. The frequent territorial and administrative changes of the period meant that the codes changed often. For example, after 1960 a car registered in Craiova as 150-Cv would have changed its license plate to 150-OL, corresponding to the new administrative region Oltenia. Similarly, when Bra?ov changed its name to "Ora?ul Stalin" in 1952, the regional code was also changed to O.S., before reverting to Bv in 1960.
Special numbers were used occasionally to denote the type of vehicles they were on. For a while in the 1930s, in Bucharest, numbers between 10,000-B and 12,999-B (the comma was used as thousands separator) were taxis; some had Tx as an additional tag, as did buses, which started with 15,000-B. In the 1950s, small commercial vehicles were given numbers over 25,000, large commercial vehicles and buses numbers over 50,000, tractors over 65,000 and motorcycles over 75,000. By 1966, when the system was changed, the number of cars in Bucharest had surpassed over 23,000 and there were over 90,000 motorcycles. Although in the interbellum period 1 was the smallest number possible (0 in Bucharest), under Communism numbers started with 101, possibly influenced by the Soviet system, where they started with 01-01.
Pre-war county codes (1913)
Interwar-period county codes:
1966 - 1992
By the 1960s all regional codes were two letters long and capitalised. In 1966 the license plate system was completely overhauled. The new plates were issued in the format aa-BB-ccccc:
- The numbers in front (aa) were arranged as follows:
- 1 to 19 - automobiles, since 1990 all private vehicles, regardless of type
- 20 - reserved for automobiles, but never used
- 21 to 30 - freight transport vehicles, including lorry tractor units; also buses, if modified for freight transport
- 31 to 40 - buses, coaches and utility vehicles
- 41 to 45 - road tractors
- 46 to 50 - motorcycles.
- The letters (BB) denoted the administrative regions until 1968, and after that counties (jude?e). Following the 1968 reorganisation of Romania's counties, new codes were introduced. These represented generally the same counties as the ones used today (see the county codes). However, between 1966 and 1968, some old codes were used. Thus, a registration plate for Ploiesti region would be 1-PL-1234, which would have changed after 1968 to 1-PH-1234 (for Prahova). Many codes, however, did not need to change: Bucharest (B), Cluj (CJ) and Sibiu (SB), for example, remained the same.
- The numbers after the county abbreviation (ccccc) were in groups of either three, four or five digits, and were issued in ascending order, starting from 101. The old plates were declared invalid. 101 as the first number may have come from the Soviet-style "first number" 01-01.
- Numbers with 5 digits after the county code were issued only in Bucharest. It started with 1-B-10000 to 1-B-99999, then 2-B-10000 to 59999, until the change of the system. 9-B-10000 to 9-B-39999 were issued, between the early 1980s and 1992, for Ilfov (or the Ilfov Agricultural Sector). Up until the 1980s Ilfov plates were registered IF, an abbreviation which would return in 2005.
An interesting development was the connection between the license plate and the social status of the car owner. For example, the "important" cars (i.e. those belonging to the nomenklatura) generally used 1, then the county, then three digits. Nicolae Ceau?escu's ARO sported the "1-B-111" license plate. By the mid-1970s, any plate with three digits was considered important (regardless of the number at the front), and although older cars had been initially issued with three-digit combinations, many owners were "asked" by the authorities to change their numbers. In an age where most people had the same car - the Dacia - such distinguishing features were considered important. By the 1980s, in Bucharest 1-B with 3 or 4 digits and 2-B and 3-B with three digits were also considered important numbers. Furthermore, the legend that the three-digit formula, where the middle number was the sum of the other two numbers, signified real importance sprang up. Thus, many senior Communist leaders had numbers such as 1-B-363, while the Neam? County party secretary had 1-NT-165 on his black Volga.
Foreign citizens and organizations were issued plates with 12-B (later 12-xx in other counties). 14-B was used for rental cars, but since 1990 some official cars had such number plates too.
There were also some stylistic variations. Numbers on a yellow (rather than white) background were state property, but since all trucks, buses and other heavy vehicles were state property, those with yellow background plates belonged to ministries or other special state organizations. Numbers with white letters on a black background were issued to vehicles of the foreign organizations in Romania, but also to vehicles belonging to religious organizations.
Temporary plates had the county code and then a number beginning with 0; test drive plates had a number beginning with 0 and then the county.
In late 1977 the manufacture of plates was standardized and they were all made on a pressed steel rectangle; previously plates had been plastic, cast iron, enamel, porcelain or even plaster. In around 1982, after 19-B-9999 had been reached, it was decided to begin the series 1-B with five digits. In 1983, after a brief reorganization of the counties, IF (Ilfov County) was dropped, CL (C?l?ra?i County) and GR (Giurgiu County) were introduced, and the Bucharest Agricultural Sector (Sectorul Agricol Ilfov) issued plates beginning with 9-B and followed by five digits. The fonts used on the number plates changed slightly in 1988.
1992 - 2007
The modern plate style was changed in 1992, when new reflective plates were introduced, with the numbering system still in use today. For a brief while, plates were still issued under the old system, until the end of May 1993. The old plates remained valid until 2000.
On plates issued before January 1, 2007 the flag of Romania was used instead of the 12 European stars.
The new plate design fell in line with modern requirements, allowed far more combinations while simultaneously being simpler to read and remember, mandated the use of reflective plates thus contributing to road safety, and minimized the additional changes required for when Romania would join the European Union.
Special plates
Historical military plates
The license plates before around 1945 were white and had a number beginning with a zero. In front of the number was the initial of the Ministry of Defense State Undersecretaries:
- U for the Ground Forces (U for Uscat, Land)
- A for the Air Force (A for Aer, Air)
- M for the Navy (M for Marin?, Navy)
- I for the Logistics (I for Înzestrare, Logistics).
This system was subsequently abolished and all military vehicles switched to the prefix A (for Armat?, Armed forces) in front of the registered numbers, which start at 100. Numbers smaller than 10,000 tend to be reserved for cars.
Old diplomatic plates
Until 1956 these were standard plates, with "CD" prefix attached to them. In 1956 oval and square plates were introduced, oval for CD (Corps Diplomatique) and square for TC (auxiliary staff). CD or TC went above a three- or four-digit number. In the early years (at least up till 1959), CD plates had the year at the bottom, in small lettering.
Citizen of Honor
In the pre-1968 system, "CO" (Cet??ean de Onoare, Citizen of Honor) was occasionally seen on private cars before 1941.
Traffic monitoring
Vehicles belonging to traffic monitoring service had a plate with the text "Controlul circula?iei" (Traffic monitoring) and a serial number.
Transnistria
Wartime Transnistria occupied by Romanian forces briefly had its own special plates. These began Tr-number-regional suffix. Thus, the Cadillac of the regional administrator had Tr-1-Ods (for Odessa). These numbers were very short-lived.
Royal family
Vehicles belonging to Romanian royal family all had a rectangular white plate with a drawing of the Steel crown of Romania in the middle.
Urban myths and popular culture
- In Communist Romania, certain license plates such as those starting with 1-B were issued only to high-ranking Communist leaders and their proteges. Many of them changed their license plates to fake military plates in the weeks following the Romanian Revolution, in order to avoid trouble. Others, such as tennis player Ilie N?stase, chose to still drive cars with plates 1-B-101 and 1-B-106 for many years afterward.
- Urban myths ascribing special meaning to certain license plate combinations crop up all the time. Such combinations have included plates starting with B 06, plates where the letter groups includes or starts with a W, and plates where the letter group has additional spacing between the letters. Some myths have some connection to reality; for example, the W myth may be related to the fact that the Protection and Guard Service chose to assign the combination WST to their entire car fleet, leading people to surmise that a car with such a license plate would not be pulled over by Police.
- Some letter combinations are far more popular than others. Among these stand out XXX, HEL (hell), IAD (hell), RAY and GOD. The customized combinations outnumber random assignments almost 3:1.
- While they were standard until 1966, white on black plates are no longer used today and would not be cleared for use on public roads. However, rumour has it that there are cars using such plates belonging to the Romanian Orthodox Church. The font and format is reported to resemble standard ones.
References
External links
- Media related to License plates of Romania at Wikimedia Commons
Source of the article : Wikipedia