Vehicle registration plates of Hungary

Standard Hungarian license plate as seen in 2007

Number plates in Hungary have a white background with black letters. Usually a three-letter combination is followed by a three-number combination.

History

Pre-1990 plate
Plate between 1990 and 2004

Plates issued 1958 to 1990 were in the format AA▪12▪34. Plates issued between 1990 and May 1, 2004, when Hungary joined the European Union had the Hungarian flag above the letter 'H' for Hungary. Since Hungary joined the European Union, the left side has a blue stripe with 12 yellow stars and the letter 'H'. However, these new plates are only visible on vehicles purchased or registered after May 1, 2004, and the former plates are still valid. The current system of registration plates started with AAA-001 in 1990, with the old format plates being replaced with new ones upon their first technical inspection in the 1990s. As of 2005, the sequential system has reached the letter K for the first letter. The current first letter on registration plates is the letter L, which is being issued since (2008), and as of October 2010, this letter is quickly running out. It can be expected that letter M plates will be issued as early as 2011. Plates starting with JDA-001 have the EU flag on them. Motorcycles have 'U' as first letters, Trucks have 'F', and Trailers formerly also had 'F' and now have 'X'. Unlike in many other countries within the European Union, mopeds in Hungary are not required to be registered and thus have no license plates, either. Owners, therefore, only need to possess a document proving their ownership.

Special formats

Diplomatic plates have a blue background and white writing with the letters 'DT' followed by a four digit numerical combination. (e.g. DT 12–34). Police (Rendőrség) vehicles have 'RB' as the first letters followed by a four-digit numerical combination. (e.g. RB 12–34) Specialty plates are issued for certain organizations as well. Magyar Televízió (the Hungarian television agency) uses the combination 'MTV' for the first three digits of the plates on its vehicles.

As of 2006, the National Ambulance Service is permitted to use their old format MA 12–34 registrations, but on the new EU-style plates. The Budapest Transport Limited (BKV Rt.) uses plates beginning with BPO-123, or BPI-123, and the transport company identifies the buses internally by the numbers 01-23 and 11–23 respectively. This system is only used on Ikarus buses (because in the former license plate system, two letters were followed by four numbers, thus and old plate BP 0123 have been changed to BPO-123), whilst Volvo buses use a yellow 'F' plate***.

Future

In 2012 the Hungarian government wanted to replace the old "three-letter-three-number" license plates with a new system that would indicate the geographical area where the car was registered. The new license plates, however, have not yet been introduced.

Plate codes

Personalised plate
Diplomatic plate
Commercial truck plate
Old-timer plate
Rent-a-car plate

A short summary of some special plates, indicating the format as well:

*EXX and FXX plates are "commercial plates", thus they are yellow.

**Series EEA to EZZ and FAA to FHZ are given out as normal.

Temporary plates (no EU plate version):

Note: in Hungary, an "automobile", or a "person-carrier" is defined in the Highway Code as a "vehicle licensed to carry no more than 9 persons, including the driver, provided that the car is not restricted to carrying fewer persons." Usually it is restricted to 5 persons. The issue of Vehicle Registration Plates is regulated by the "Order No. 35 of 2000 of the Minister of Interior Affairs".

There is no system in use giving the exact date and place of the issue of the plate. Naturally, it is included in the car registration documents, but there is no simple way, like in the UK, to tell the age of the car, or a simple way, like in Germany (as well as in most countries in C/E Europe), to tell where the car is from. However, as plates are issued by the Documents Office of each municipality with issuing rights, and as they get plates in boxes of 50 pairs, there are some ways to tell where the plate is from. Also, one is able to tell approximately when a plate was issued, by looking at the sequence of letters. However, as plates come in boxes of 50, it isn't uncommon, that a plate beginning with 'KD' is issued before a 'KC' plate, and so forth. This means that you could be between three and six months off when guessing the age of a plate.

The old-style (non-EU) licence plates are based on the Hungarian Standard "MSZ 140/1990".

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