Vehicle registration plates of Indonesia - Biblioteka.sk

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Vehicle registration plates of Indonesia
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Indonesia
Tanda Nomor Kendaraan Bermotor
Design of Indonesian registration plates for private vehicles since November 2022
(Plates with customized numbers have already used this design since June 2022).
CountryIndonesia
Country codeRI
Current series
Size430 mm × 135 mm (16.9 in × 5.3 in) (cars)
275 mm × 115 mm (10.8 in × 4.5 in) (motorcycles)
MaterialAluminium
Availability
Issued byIndonesian National Police Traffic Corps
The former design of Indonesian registration plates for private vehicles from April 2011 until June 2022,[1][2] with 2008 numbering scheme for high population regions
The former design of Indonesian registration plates only for private vehicles that uses customized vehicle registration numbers from August 2019 to June 2022.[3] The Indonesian Police Traffic Corps logo is printed on the lower left and more prominent.

Motorized vehicles in Indonesia are required to have registration plates, which must be displayed both at the front and back of the vehicles. The issuing of number plates is regulated and administered by SAMSAT (Sistem Administrasi Manunggal Satu Atap), which is a collaboration between the Indonesian National Police, provincial offices of regional revenue, and the national mandatory vehicle insurance operator Jasa Raharja.

Registration area codes

The lettering convention denoting the area of registration is a legacy of the Dutch colonial era and does not reflect the current regional divisions of the country into provinces. They follow the old system of Dutch Karesidenan or residencies lettering systems, which were adopted in the 1920s,[4] and the Territorial Police system which was abolished in 2010.

The list of area codes are:[5]

Where area codes are assigned
Prefix Division
A Banten, except Tangerang Regency (West region), South Tangerang, and Tangerang City
AA Central Java ex Kedu residency: Magelang Regency, City, Purworejo, Kebumen, Temanggung, Wonosobo
AB Yogyakarta
AD Central Java, ex Surakarta Sunanate: Surakarta, Sukoharjo, Boyolali, Sragen, Karanganyar, Wonogiri, Klaten
AE East Java, ex Madiun residency: Madiun Regency, City, Ngawi, Magetan, Ponorogo, Pacitan
AG East Java, ex Kediri residency: Kediri Regency, City, Blitar Regency, City, Tulungagung, Nganjuk, Trenggalek
B Jakarta, Depok, Tangerang Regency (East region), City, South Tangerang, Bekasi, Bekasi Regency
BA West Sumatra
BB North Sumatra, West Coast region: Dairi, Pakpak Bharat, Samosir, Toba Samosir, North Tapanuli, Humbang Hasundutan, Central Tapanuli, Sibolga, South Tapanuli, Padangsidempuan, Padang Lawas, North Padang Lawas, Mandailing Natal, Gunungsitoli, Nias, South Nias, West Nias, North Nias
BD Bengkulu
BE Lampung
BG South Sumatra
BH Jambi
BK North Sumatra, East Coast region: Medan, Binjai, Deli Serdang, Langkat, Karo, Serdang Bedagai, Tebing Tinggi, Simalungun, Pematangsiantar, Batubara, Asahan, Tanjungbalai, Labuhan Batu, North Labuhan Batu, South Labuhan Batu
BL Aceh
BM Riau
BN Bangka Belitung
BP Riau Islands
D West Java, ex western Preanger Regencies Residency: Bandung Regency, City, Cimahi, West Bandung
DA South Kalimantan
DB Mainland of North Sulawesi
DC West Sulawesi
DD South Sulawesi, South region: Makassar, Gowa, Maros, Pangkajene Islands, Takalar, Jeneponto, Bulukumba, Bantaeng, Selayar
DE Maluku
DG North Maluku
DH East Nusa Tenggara: Timor
DK Bali
DL North Sulawesi: Sangihe Islands, Talaud Islands, Sitaro Islands
DM Gorontalo
DN Central Sulawesi
DP South Sulawesi, North region: Barru, Parepare, Pinrang, Sidenreng Rappang, Enrekang, Tana Toraja, North Toraja, Luwu, Palopo, North Luwu, East Luwu
DR West Nusa Tenggara: Lombok Island
DT Southeast Sulawesi
DW South Sulawesi, Central region: Bone, Soppeng, Wajo, Sinjai
E West Java, ex Cirebon residency: Cirebon Regency, City, Indramayu, Majalengka, Kuningan
EA West Nusa Tenggara: Sumbawa island
EB East Nusa Tenggara: Flores Island, Alor, Lembata
ED East Nusa Tenggara: Sumba Island
F West Java, ex Bogor residency: Regency, City, Cianjur, Sukabumi Regency, City
G Central Java, ex Pekalongan residency: Regency, City, Tegal Regency, City, Brebes, Batang, Pemalang
H Central Java, ex Semarang residency: Semarang Regency, City, Salatiga, Kendal, Demak
K Central Java, ex Pati residency: Pati, Kudus, Jepara, Rembang, Blora, Grobogan
KB West Kalimantan
KH Central Kalimantan
KT East Kalimantan
KU North Kalimantan
L East Java: Surabaya
M East Java: Madura Island
N East Java, ex Malang residency: Malang Regency, City, Regency, City, Pasuruan Regency, City, Lumajang, Batu
P East Java, ex Besuki residency: Bondowoso, Situbondo, Jember, Banyuwangi
PA Papua, Central Papua, Highland Papua[6]
PB West Papua
PS South Papua[7]
PY Southwest Papua[8]
R Central Java, ex Banyumas residency: Banyumas, Cilacap, Purbalingga, Banjarnegara
S East Java, ex Bojonegoro residency: Bojonegoro, Mojokerto Regency, City, Tuban, Lamongan, Jombang
SB Surabaya: Rickshaws
T West Java, ex Karawang residency: Purwakarta, Karawang, Subang
W East Java, ex Surabaya residency outside Surabaya City: Sidoarjo, Gresik
Z West Java, ex eastern Preanger Regencies Residency: Garut, Tasikmalaya Regency, City, Sumedang, Ciamis, Pangandaran, Banjar

Several areas provide license plates for non-motorized transport vehicles. In Yogyakarta, YB is used for rickshaws. A white-on-blue license plate with area code SB is issued for rickshaws operating in the city of Surabaya. In Banjarmasin, rickshaws operating in the city are issued with plate using a unique format, XXXX BS.[citation needed]

There were some area codes that are no longer in use anymore. These include:

History

Colonial era

Two children standing next to a Plymouth with "AA 20" plate. The car belonged to the family of J.W. Bijleveld. c. 1936.

Vehicle registration plates were first introduced in the Dutch East Indies in 1900. The early format included regional codes such as CH for Cirebon, SB for Surabaya, and SOK for the eastern coast of Sumatra; and registration numbers with no official standards. Plates were not always installed at the front and the rear of the vehicle; some owners affixed the plates on the side of the vehicle. For international purposes, the Government of the Dutch East Indies introduced the code IN for government vehicles. IN plates were elliptical and the registration numbers were placed below on a rectangular plate.[10]

A more-structured system was introduced in 1917 with the implementation of regulations regarding the content of applications for number and driving licenses, the specification of numbers and letters, the models of number and driving licenses, the establishment of registers of holders of the licenses and the publication of the contents of the registers. The regulation obliged vehicle owners to register their vehicles. The Karesidenan-based system was first implemented on Java and afterwards elsewhere in the colony.[11] The alphabetical codes were:

Until the 1920s, regional codes were added along with the Karesidenan regional expansion. For example, Bogor used the code F, Bojonegoro used the code S, and Western Papua used the code DS.[10][12]

Post-colonial era

1980s

The license plate design during the New Order, with the expiry date above the registration numbers

The early format of registration plates remained in use after Indonesia proclaimed its independence in 1945. At the beginning of the 1980s, plates with four-digit numbers separated by a dot at the bottom that denote the month and year of expiry (e.g. 06•87) was introduced. Vehicle owners must pay a tax to renew the plate every five years. The typefaces are embossed. There were two variations of design during the New Order; the expiry date would be placed above or below the registration numbers.[12][13]

21st century

Design of Indonesian registration plate for private vehicles from 2000s[14] to April 2011.[1]

Along with the increase of motorized vehicles in Indonesia, the technical design and specification of vehicle registration plates began to be regulated by the Direktorat Lalu Lintas Kepolisian Negara Republik Indonesia/Ditlantas Polri (Traffic Directorate) of the Indonesian National Police. The size of the license plates during the 2000s was 395 mm × 135 mm (15.6 in × 5.3 in) (four wheel vehicles or more) or 250 mm × 105 mm (9.8 in × 4.1 in) (two or three wheel vehicles) with wide alphabets and a stripe that separates the registration numbers and expiry date.[15] In the lower left and upper right corners is the Traffic Police symbol, and at the lower-right and upper-left corners is a "DIRLANTAS POLRI" sign as a security feature and proof of the originality of the license plate.

The design of Indonesian registration plate for private vehicles (especially cars, trucks, and buses) from April 2011 to June 2022[2]

In April 2011, the design of the license plate was redesigned. The new plates are 5 cm (2.0 in) longer to accommodate more characters and the typeface is slimmer. The Traffic Corps of the Indonesian National Police (Korps Lalu Lintas Kepolisian Negara Republik Indonesia/Korlantas Polri) introduced their more-complete coat of arms, with shield and ribbon with the letter "Dharmakerta Marga Raksyaka". The phrase "DITLANTAS" became "KORLANTAS". The license plates are made from 1 mm (0.039 in)-thick aluminium with edge lines with the same color as the numbers. The size of the plate for two-or-three-wheeled vehicles now is 275 mm × 115 mm (10.8 in × 4.5 in), while for four-or-more-wheeled vehicles they are 430 mm × 135 mm (16.9 in × 5.3 in).[1][16]

The new color scheme of the personal vehicle plates since 2022

Since June 2022, The Traffic Corps of the Indonesian National Police changed the color scheme for personal and rental vehicles from black plates with white letters to white plates with black letters. The new color scheme was implemented to ease the detection of motoring offenses with traffic enforcement cameras.[2]

To increase the effectivity of the new color scheme, FE-Schrift typeface was first implemented for regular personal four-wheel plates only since November 2022. Besides that, commercial/public transport (black on yellow) and government-owned (white on red) vehicle plates began to use FE-Schrift at the same time.

Registration plate design convention

Size and formating

Indonesian vehicle registration plates for four-wheel vehicles are approximately 460 mm × 135 mm (18.1 in × 5.3 in) and plates for two-or-three-wheel vehicles are approximately 275 mm × 115 mm. All plates are constructed from stamped sheet metal. With some exceptions, plates use the following format: LL NNNN LL where "L" are letters of the Latin alphabet, and "N" numbers from "0" to "9" (the first number is never a "0"). The first single-or-double-letter prefixes denote the area of registration. This is followed by number between 1 and 9999 without leading zeroes. This is then followed by one or two letters although they may be optional. For example: B 1897 RKT is a vehicle registered in East Jakarta city; it begins with B. A smaller, four-digit number separated by dot is located at the top (old format, with horizontal line as divider) or bottom (newer format, commonly without divider) of the plate with following format: NN•NN denoting the month and year of the plate's expiry (e.g. 01•28 means until January 2028). The owner must pay a tax to renew it every five years.[citation needed]

Color scheme

Vehicles in Indonesia are coded based on their classes and uses. These are:[17]

The design of Indonesian registration plates for private vehicles that uses regular and customized registration numbers since November 2022. Plates with customized numbers have already used this design since June 2022.
The design of Indonesian registration plates for private vehicles with regular registration numbers from June to November 2022. It is still used in some jurisdictions.[2]
Format scheme for commercial vehicle or public transportation (prior to November 2022)
Format scheme for Government-owned vehicle (prior to November 2022)
  • Black on White: For privately owned vehicles. Trucks that are registered for private use were issued with this plate, so are the ambulances. This new color scheme has been used since June 2022 to detect motoring offenses with traffic enforcement cameras.[2]
    • White on black: The old color scheme for privately owned vehicles. Trucks that are registered for private use were issued with this plate, so are ambulances. Superseded by the black on white color scheme but still valid during 5-year transition period.
  • Black on yellow: Commercial vehicle or public transportation such as buses, taxis, angkot, auto rickshaws and commercial trucks.
  • White on red: Used by fire departments, government ambulances, government officials and other governmental vehicles administered under their respective local governments.
  • Black on Red: Vehicles belonging to foreign countries. Commonly used by foreign embassies or vehicles belonging to International organizations.
  • Black on White with Black Trim: Vehicles belonging to diplomatic corps of foreign countries. Commonly used by foreign embassies or vehicles belonging to international organizations.
  • Black on green: Free Zone vehicles i.e. Batam (see Indonesia–Malaysia–Singapore Growth Triangle).
  • Blue on white: Vehicles belonging to foreign countries, mainly used before the vehicle has been registered.

Electric vehicles

Example of a personalized electric vehicle numberplate in latest white-black color. Note the blue trim is on the side rather than horizontal on the bottom.
Example of privately owned electric vehicle numberplate in usage.

The Indonesian National Police has set a special license plate for electric vehicles with additional blue trim at the expiry date row in accordance with the regulations in the Decree of the Head of the Traffic Corps of the Indonesian National Police in 2020.[18][19][20]

However, when personal fossil-fueled vehicle plates have changed the color scheme, personal EV plates are still using the old one (white on black) with blue trim, added with the implementation of FE-Schrift since November 2022.

  • White on Black with Blue Trim: for privately owned electric vehicles and rental electric vehicles
  • Black on Yellow with Blue Trim: for commercial electric vehicle or public transportation.
  • White on Red with Blue Trim: for governmental electric vehicles administered under their respective local governments.
  • Black on White with Blue Trim: for foreign embassies or electric vehicles belonging to International organizations.
  • Black on Green with Blue Trim: for electric vehicles at the Free Trade Zone.

Temporary registration plates

South Sulawesi dealership plate for new vehicles

Temporary registration plates currently have two formats, namely:

  • Red on white: Vehicles that have not been registered yet, or for new cars that have no owners yet or no legal identification. This format is widely used nationally.
  • Black on white with special suffix: This format is exclusively used within the Greater Jakarta Metropolitan Regional Police jurisdiction (which uses the registration code B)[clarification needed] and commonly used for new car owners that haven't got the permanent registration yet. It looks similar with the permanent personal vehicle plates, but added with the SS suffix, which is an abbreviation of Sifat Sementara (temporary use). In January 2024, newer suffixes were introduced, such as LK, AK, PC, PD, AZ and BC. Temporary plates with this format are only valid for 30 days. For example: B 2814 SSP, B 2309 LKV, and B 1491 PDQ.

Special code examples

Vehicle category (Jakarta only)

In Jakarta, these codes are applied based on vehicle categories. These include:[citation needed]

  • B – Code for Double Cabin Pickups
  • A/B/D/W/E/R – Code for sedans
  • A/C/U/Z – Code for pickups
  • D – Code for trucks
  • F/K/O/Z/R/Y/I – Code for minibuses
  • *HX/*IX – Code for ambulances
  • J/L/C – Code for SUVs
  • Q/U – Code for government staff
  • T/U – Code for taxis
  • V/P/M/G/Y/W/U – Code for Minibuses

For example, B 9031 BAY indicates that the vehicle is a pickup, while B 1032 DFA indicates that the vehicle is a minibus.

State officials

A Toyota Innova with special RF suffix plates for government, military, police, and civil officials

A separate format exists for private vehicles belonging to government, military or police officials. Because most of these agencies are based in Jakarta, vehicles belonging to state officials use the B suffix, along with the four numbers that are assigned to the vehicle. The sub-area suffix is replaced with RF suffix code, indicating the vehicle belongs to a state official, followed by another letter that indicates the corresponding agency or institution of the state official.[21]

For example, B 1703 RFS indicates that the vehicle belongs to a civilian official, whilst B 1148 RFP indicates that the vehicle belongs to a police official.

On 27 January 2023, the Traffic Corps of the Indonesian National Police announced that special RF plates would be discontinued in October 2023, due to often being misused by numbers of people.[22] By July 2023, the special RF plates has been replaced by ZZ plates.

Special plate designs

Military and police vehicles

The Indonesian National Armed Forces Headquarter Detachment Plate.
The Indonesian Air Force Plate. The "-10" suffix code indicates the Air Force's Quick Reaction Forces Command
A motorcycle with the Indonesian Army plate. The "-02" suffix code indicates the Army's Special Forces Command
A Toyota Vios with the Indonesian Ministry of Defense plate. The "-05" suffix indicates the Ministry of Defense's Directorate General of Materials, Facilities and Services.

Military and police vehicles have their own colors and alpha-numeric conventions, including their insignia and/or the rank of the officer owning the vehicle, especially for high-ranking officers.

Army-personnel vehicles are yellow on green background, plus a yellow star on the top. Navy-personnel plate is yellow on light blue, plus a yellow anchor. Air Force-personnel plate is yellow on dark blue, plus a red and white air force roundel. Police plate is yellow on black. Personnel in Armed Forces Headquarters uses yellow numbers on red background plates. Slightly similar, Ministry of Defense vehicles also uses yellow on red plates, only replacing Armed Forces' insignia with the Ministry's insignia. This is also being implemented on other military vehicles, such as motorcycles, jeeps, trucks, and tanks.[23]

Military and Ministry of Defense vehicles use the numerical convention NNNNN-SS where "N" is for numbers from "0" to "9" for registration and "S" denotes a special suffix number/letter which denotes the type of office or unit in which the person who owns the vehicle belongs to.[24]

The suffix codes are:[25]

Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=Vehicle_registration_plates_of_Indonesia
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Armed Forces

Army

Navy

Air Force

Ministry of Defense

National Police
Suffix Department Suffix Department Suffix Department Suffix Department Suffix Department Suffix Department
00 Armed Forces Headquarters 00 Army Headquarters 00 Navy Headquarters 00 Air Force Headquarters 00 Ministry of Defense 00 National Police Headquarters
01 Staff and Command School 01 Army Strategic Reserve Command (KOSTRAD) 01 1st Fleet

Command

01 1st Air Operations Command 02 National Defense Institute I Aceh Police Region
02 Military Academy 02 Army Special Forces Command (KOPASSUS) 02 2nd Fleet Command 02 2nd Air Operations Command 05 Directorate General of Materials, Facilities and Services II