Turkish vehicle registration plates are number plates found on Turkish vehicles. The plates use an indirect numbering system associated with the geographical info. In Turkey, number plates are made by authorized private workshops.
Appearance
Turkish number plate is rectangular in shape and made of aluminium. On the left, there is the country code "TR" in a 4×10 cm blue stripe like in EU countries (without the 12 golden stars). The text is in black characters on white background, and for official vehicles white on black. On all vehicles two plates have to be present, being one in front and the other in rear except motorcycles and tractors. The serial letters use the Turkish letters except Ç, Ş, İ, Ö, Ü and Ğ.
Dimensions
150×240 mm in rear only for motorbikes, motorcycles and tractors with rubber wheels,
110×520 mm in front and rear for cars, 210×320 mm rear available for off-road vehicles, vans, trucks and busses. The size is 150×300 mm for imported vehicles if the regular plate does not fit.
Blue stripe
The blue stripe was introduced after the entry of Turkey to the European Customs Union in 1996,[1] in accordance to compliance to EU laws. Since then, the blue stripe area is often modified by car owners (even by some parliament members like Devlet Bahçeli[1]). The predominant modification of this sorts is to replace the blue color with red crescent and the star of the Turkish flag. This type of modification is in the grey area of the law, for it does not clearly specify which color is to be used in the stripe.[2]
Additionally, vehicle inspection stickers were often stuck on this area.
Numbering system
The text format on the plates is one of the following:
"99 X 9999", "99 X 99999"
"99 XX 999", "99 XX 9999" or
"99 XXX 99", "99 XXX 999"
In some provinces, numbering is categorized in groups for tax collecting offices of different districts, for example dolmuş, a type of public transportation in Ankara have plates of the form "99 X 9999" and a vehicle from Polatlı, Ankara has plates of the form "99 XXX 99", "99 XX 9999" from Etimesgut district. On the other hand, a dolmuş in Eskişehir has a plate of the form "99 X 9999".
99 - two digits prefix denoting the location, shows the province code number of the main residence of car holder. There are 81 provinces as listed below:
X/XX/XXX – one, two or three letters.
9999/999/99 – four, three or two digits, depending on the number of letters before, not exceeding six letters and digits altogether.
Diplomatic and consular registration plates are issued with randomly generated numbers since 16 August 2004 for security concerns.[3]
Types
Type (Used by)
Appearance
Format and Explanation
General issue
Private vehicles and commercial vehicles owned by private entities.
The number plate of the president has no numbers, instead it uses the Presidential Seal of Turkey. Other convoy cars use the format CB 00X ("CB" for Cumhurbaşkanı (English: President)), with golden text on a red background.[citation needed]
Deputy Speaker and chairpeople of the parliamentary commissions
Province names until code 67 go alphabetically, with the exception of Mersin, Kahramanmaraş and Şanlıurfa provinces for their previous names taken in account were İçel, Maraş and Urfa, respectively. The ones after the original 67 provinces are newer additions, these province names go chronologically.
^"Protokol: Prensip Genelge Notalar: Araçlar". T.C. Disisleri Bakanligi. Yabancı misyonlara ait resmi ve özel araçlara, ilgili temsilcilik için ayrılmış harf ve numara grubu içinden tahsis yapılması uygulamasına, 16 Haziran 2005 tarihi itibarıyla son verilmiş ve sözkonusu araçlara rastgele (random) plaka tahsisi yöntemine geçilmiştir. Böylelikle, güvenlik endişelerine sebep olan, diplomatik ve konsüler plakalı araçların hangi temsilciliğe ait olduklarının istenmeyen şahıslar tarafından bilinmesi durumu, büyük ölçüde önlenmiş bulunmaktadır.