Vehicle registration plates of Lithuania

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A current-style Lithuanian registration plate
A plate of the type issued before 2004

Standard vehicle registration plates in Lithuania bear three letters and three numbers (e.g. ABC 123) in black lettering on a white background. The plates are usually of the standard EU dimensions, but can also be manufactured in the American dimensions for special import vehicles. All plates issued since 2004 also bear a blue EU identification stripe on their left-hand edge. Those issued between the restoration of Lithuanian independence in 1990 and the country's accession to the European Union in 2004 bore a similar stripe with a small Lithuanian flag in place of the flag of Europe.

Area designations[]

Until 2004 the second of the three letters in each registration mark indicated the geographical administrative area in which the vehicle had been registered, as follows:

Code County Example
A Alytus County AAA 123
J Tauragė County (but code from first letter of Jurbarkas) AJA 123
K Kaunas County AKA 123
L Klaipėda County ALA 123
M Marijampolė County AMA 123
P Panevėžys County APA 123
S Šiauliai County ASA 123
T Telšiai County ATA 123
U Utena County AUA 123
V Vilnius County AVA 123

Special types[]

Temporary[]

Vehicles issued temporary registration in Lithuania are noted by red alphanumeric characters on white background.

Types[]

Dealer plate
  • Vehicles imported to Lithuania or vehicles exported from Lithuania (For up to 90 days):
EU-section-with-LT.svg 24214AA 
  • Vehicles sold by vehicle selling companies or organizations (professional or trade number plates):
EU-section-with-LT.svg A2873 78 

Diplomatic Corps[]

Diplomatic plate

Reserved and used by diplomatic corps. Have green background and white letters. The letters are grouped 01 3 123 and do not have blue sidebar on the left side of the plates. First two numbers denote embassy codes:

Code Country or Organization
01  Sweden
02  Germany
03  France
04  Latvia
05  Denmark
06  Canada
07  United Kingdom
08  Italy
09  Norway
10  Finland
11   Holy See
12  Turkey
13  Czech Republic
14  United States
15  China
16  Poland
17  Poland
18  Estonia
19  Russia
20  Russia
21  Romania
22  Ukraine
23  Belarus
24  Kazakhstan
25  Georgia
26  Japan
27  Austria
28  Belgium
29  Netherlands
30  Hungary
31  Spain
32  Sovereign Military Order of Malta
33  Democratic Republic of Congo
34  Ireland
35  Portugal
36  Moldova
37  Azerbaijan
38  Bulgaria
39  Armenia
40  Croatia
41  Israel
80 Nordic Council of Ministers
81 International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
82 European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
83 World Health Organization
84 United Nations United Nations Development Program
85 International Organization for Migration
86 European Union European Commission
87  United Nations
88 European Institute for Gender Equality
89

Taxicabs[]

Taxi registration plate of Lithuania

Taxicabs have special plates, with yellow background and black text. The first letter is "T" (corresponds to the first letter of the word "taksi" in Lithuanian) and is followed by five numbers.

These plates have been revised on the 3rd of April, 2018 to have a white background instead of a yellow one. Plates with yellow backgrounds will still be valid and the registration centres will issue plates with a yellow background while stocks last.

Military transport[]

Military transportation has black background and white text registration plates. They do not have the side-field, only the flag.

Flag of Lithuania.svg LK321A

Technical check sticker[]

The registration plate has a special spot, usually between the letters and numbers but occasionally to the left of the letters, to attach a sticker certifying the compulsory periodic technical inspection to check for compliance with safety/emissions standards. The sticker is no longer compulsory from 2015.

Confusion with Swedish plates[]

Swedish standard plate

Lithuanian standard plates are almost identical to Swedish standard plates. The Stockholm congestion tax system uses automatic number plate recognition to identify plates, and this system can not distinguish between Swedish and Lithuanian plates. Initially, non-Swedish cars did not have to pay this tax, but a Swedish owner will be charged if there is one with same number, which is likely. Even after the application of this tax to foreign cars, the problem persists; the Swedish owner of a number, not the actual Lithuanian owner, will be charged. The false tax will be cancelled after a manual check if the owner complains. Swedish taxes must be paid on time anyway and will be refunded if there is an error.

External links[]

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