Panama requires its residents to register their motor vehicles and display vehicle registration plates.[1] Current plates are North American standard 12 × 6 inches (300 × 152 mm).[2]
All vehicles are required to display plates on the back of the vehicle. Front license plates are not required. Additionally, taxis in Panama are also required to display plates on the sides. This is done not with actual metal plates, but by a large decal of the license plate.
1925-1956
editImage | First issued | Design | Slogan | Serial format | Serials issued | Notes |
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1942 |
1957 to 2012
editImage | First issued | Design | Slogan | Serial format | Serials issued | Notes |
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1968 | ||||||
1977 | ||||||
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1989 | ||||||
1990 | ||||||
1992 | ||||||
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1999 | ||||||
2003 | ||||||
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2008 | ||||||
2009 - 2012 |
2013 to present
editIn 2013 a new numbering scheme was started. It has usually two letters followed by four digits. The single letter "M" is used for motorcycles and "T" for taxis, "B" for bus. "MB" for Metro Bus. Government vehicles use "G", and "D" is used for demo cars.
In 2018 a variant of FE-Schrift became mandatory.
References
editFurther reading
edit- Gobierno genera ahorro y transparencia en alquiler de autos para el Estado (in Spanish)
- La Carrera Panamericana (in Spanish)
External links
edit- Media related to License plates of Panama at Wikimedia Commons
- Panama license plates pictures at Francoplaque Archived 2019-12-31 at the Wayback Machine