Vehicle registration plates of Austria explained

Austrian car number plates are mandatory vehicle registration plates displaying the registration mark (German: Kennzeichen) of motor vehicles in Austria. They are used to verify street legality, proof of a valid liability insurance and to identify and recognise the vehicle.

Appearance

The licence plates are made of metal; the imprinted text is in black letters and digits on a white background. Since November 1, 2002 the common design comprises a blue section on the left with the EU circle of stars and the country code ('A') like other vehicle registration plates of the European Union. On the top and bottom, there are red-white-red tribands, the national colours of Austria. Two plates have to be present on each car (front and rear). Dealer plates show white letters on a green background, temporary plates show white letters on a cyan background, and foreign trailers show white letters on a red background.For motorbikes and cars with smaller areas for plates, smaller licence plates are available with two lines of text. Moped plates are in different appearance and shape, they show white letters on a red background.

Lettering system

The alphanumeric format for registration plates is "XX ∇=provincial emblem number+letter(s)" or "XX ∇=provincial emblem personalised letters+number";

There are several lettering schemes:

Personalised plates

In Austria, it is possible to obtain a customized registration plate by payment of €228.30 for registration and €21.00 for the plates themselves.[1] An example of a customized plate is XX ∇ ABC 1. In general, the alphanumeric combination that goes after the coat of arms must consist of at least three characters and begin with a letter and end with a number. The letters and numbers must each be grouped together in a block. This makes such plates easily distinguishable from standard ones.

Electric plates

Since 2017, electric plates have been introduced in Austria,[2] these special plates are given only to electric vehicles and are exempt from parking charges in Vienna, Innsbruck, Klagenfurt, Wels, Linz, Graz, Mödling, Zell am See, Klosterneuburg and Krems.

Other plates

Export transit plates

Export transit plates are vehicle plates that are issued to vehicles that are being exported, the plate is used for vehicles that need to get to their desired export destination, but are not allowed to use regular licence plates because they have been deregistered abroad. For motor vehicles the cost of an export transit plate is €197.3.[3] The export transit plates are valid for 3 to 21 days.

Provisional plates

Prefixes

Code City, District and official vehicles Notes
A Federal officials Federal president's plate
AM
B Bregenz, Burgenland official
BA Bad Aussee sub-district Suspended on July 1, 2013; replaced with LI.
BB Bundesbahnen (Federal Railways) Obsolete, ÖBB vehicles now use W ∇ XXX BB plates
BD Kraftfahrlinien Bundesbus (Bus Service) Since 2008 for Postbus coaches only, until 1997 also for ÖBB coaches
BG Bundesgendarmerie (Federal gendarmerie) Obsolete since July 2005, when Gendarmerie and police merged
BH Bundesheer (Federal Army)
BL
BM Since 2013, Bruck an der Mur until 2012.
BN
BP Bundespolizei (Federal police) Since July 2005 for all new registered police cars
BR
BZ
DL
DO
E Also for the city of Rust, Burgenland.
EF
EU Eisenstadt surrounding area
FB Suspended on July 1, 2013; replaced with SO.
FE
FF Suspended on July 1, 2013; replaced with HF.
FK
FR
FV Finanzverwaltung (Financial Administration) since 2005
FW Feuerwehr (Fire brigade) since February 2020
G
GB Gröbming sub-district
GD
GF
GK
GM
GR
GS
GU Graz surrounding area.
HA
HB Suspended on July 1, 2013; replaced with HF.
HE
HF Since July 1, 2013.
HL
HO
I
IL Innsbruck countryside area.
IM
JE
JO
JU Suspended on July 1, 2012; replaced with MT.
JW Justizwache (Justice police)
K
KB
KG
KI
KF Suspended on July 1, 2012; replaced with MT.
KK
KL
KO
KR Krems countryside area.
KS Krems City
KU
L
LA
LB
LE Leoben City
LF
LI
LL Linz countryside area.
LN Leoben countryside area.
LZ
MA
MD
ME
MI
MT Since July 1, 2012.
MU
MZ Suspended on July 1, 2012; replaced with BM.
N Lower Austria official
ND
NK
O Upper Austria official
OP
OW
P
PE
PL St. Pölten countryside area.
PT Post & Telekom Austria (national mail and phone company) Actually for postal cars only.
RA Suspended on July 1, 2013; replaced with SO
RE
RI
RO
S Salzburg City and official
SB
SD
SE Steyr countryside area.
SK
SL Salzburg countryside area.
SP
SO Since July 1, 2013.
SR Steyr City
ST Styria official
SV
SW Schwechat City
SZ
T Tirol official
TA
TD
TK
TU
UU
V Vorarlberg official
VB
VD
VI Villach City
VK
VL Villach countryside area.
VO
W Vienna (Wien)
WB Wiener Neustadt countryside area
WD
WK
WE Wels City
WL Wels countryside area
WN Wiener Neustadt City
WO
WT
WU Vienna surrounding area; suspended on January 1, 2017; replaced with BL, KO, PL, TU
WY
WZ
ZE
ZT
ZW Zollwache (Customs officials) Obsolete since 2005 when Zollwache merged with federal police

History

From 1906 until 1919, the plates always composed one letter followed by Roman numerals and three numbers (e.g. "BXV 639"). Temporary admission plates always followed by prefix. The prefixes are G= Bosnia and Herzegovina, U= Hungary, Z= All other countries.

From 1919 until 1930, the plates format is the same as before but became authority supplied.

From 1930 until 1939, the plates comprised one letter followed by five digits. (e.g. B 12345) The thousands of digits encoded the districts.

From 1939 until 1945, the plates comprised two letters followed by a hyphen and seven digits. (e.g. W-1234567) This followed the Nazi German system.

From 1945 until 1946, the plates comprised by a state coat of arms followed by maximum six numbers. They were only issued in the USSR-occupied zone.

From 1947 until 1989, the plates comprised one or two letters to indicate the state or federal code followed by up to six digits (e.g. W 123.456), the first number block was reserved for vehicles, the second one was the serial, when they run out of serials they began to issue XX 999.A99. The background is black with white characters for private vehicles (unknown for all other vehicles). One or two letters are the prefixes set by state and federals, they are:

Diplomatic codes[4]

Code Country
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
21 (formerly ?)
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39 Sovereign Military Order of Malta
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
51
52
53
54
55
56
57 (formerly ?)
58
59
61
62 (formerly)
63 (formerly ?)
64
65
66
67
68 Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization (formerly)
69
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
81 International Atomic Energy Agency
82 United Nations Industrial Development Organization
83 United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
84 United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
85 United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East
86
87 International Atomic Energy Agency
88
89 United Nations Industrial Development Organization
91 Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
92 International Organization for Migration
93
94
95
96 OPEC Fund for International Development
97 Arab League
98
99 ?
247 Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe
515
532 Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe
551
622
623 / / ???
624
677
678
681 ?
712
714
718
719
723
726
728
846
848 ?
853
854
858
859
872 ?
891
982
995

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Wunschkennzeichen. oesterreich.gv.at . Bundesministerium für Verkehr, Innovation und Technologie.
  2. Web site: Green license plates now also available for e-trucks in Austria. oevz.com. 10 August 2017. Österreichische Verkehrszeitung.
  3. Web site: Überstellungskennzeichen. www.oesterreich.gv.at.
  4. Web site: Codes, Austria, diplomatic codes . . Dutch Numberplate Archives . Herman Hallo . 4 May 2016 .