Country | East Timor |
---|---|
Country code | None |
Current series | |
Size | 372 mm × 134 mm 14.6 in × 5.3 in |
Serial format | Not standard |
Colour (front) | Black on white |
Colour (rear) | Black on white |
Vehicle registration plates of East Timor are Australian standard 372 mm × 134 mm, and use Australian stamping dies. East Timor requires its residents to register their motor vehicles and display vehicle registration plates.[1] Vehicle registration numbers consist of five digits, and display the letters TL or TLS, short for Timor Lorosae, the name for East Timor in Tetum (or Timor-Leste, the name of the country in Portuguese). The current format started in 2002.
Vehicle types[2] | ||||
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Type | Example | Meaning | ||
Private | ||||
Official |
|
Government vehicles have a similar format, but with four digits and the letter 'G'.
When the country was a Portuguese colony, known as Portuguese Timor, vehicle registrations followed the same format to those used in Portugal, and other colonies, using the prefix T (for Timor) or alternatively TP for Timor Português or Portuguese Timor in Portuguese in white letters on a black background.
Following its invasion and occupation by Indonesia in 1975, East Timor (known as Timor Timur in Indonesian) was declared the country's 27th province. As a result, the letters DF were used for registrations in East Timor. This format was used until 1999, following the disintegration of East Timor from Indonesia.