Vehicle registration plates of Egypt

A light blue private vehicle's plate. (Cairo)

Egyptian vehicle registration number plates are license plates used for official identification purposes for motor vehicles in Egypt.

Appearance

A red truck's plate. (Giza)

The new vehicle registration plates, which have been used since August 2008, are rectangular in shape and made of aluminum. The top part has the word "Egypt" in English and Arabic in black font on backgrounds of different colors depending on the type of license the vehicle is given. Motorbikes have similar but much smaller plates with light blue (private motorbikes) and dark blue (police motorbikes) the only colors available.

The vehicle registration number consists of two parts:

000-xxx Cairo vehicle registration number
0000-xx Giza vehicle registration number
0000-xxx Other vehicle registration numbers

Use of Latin letters and Western Arabic numerals to correspond to the Arabic letters and Eastern Arabic numerals is optional.

To reduce the risk of confusion on account of the visual similarity between Arabic letters, only a limited number of letters are used. They and the Latin letters the Egyptian government uses to correspond to them are:

A gray bus plate.
A beige tourist bus plate without Latin letters
Arabic letter Latin letter
أ A
ب B
ج G
د D
ر R
س S
ص C
ط T
ع E
ف F
ق K
ل L
م M
ن N
هـ H
و W
ی Y

Size

Standard license plates are of 17x35 cm.

Design and format

Customs plate from Sinai (2004).

The top rectangle in the license plate is color-coded according to the type of vehicle being licensed.

Older versions

Before the introduction of the new alphanumeric plate system in August 2008, Egyptian vehicle registration numbers were purely numeric, and registered by governorate and registration type. Privately owned vehicles were generally given white plates with black lettering; other vehicles' plates were color-coded, with the entire plate being in the applicable color, as follows:

Early 2000s 1990s 1980s 1970s

Some of these older plates are still in use, but it is the government's intention to replace all the plates with the new color-coded plates within 1 to 2 years.