Vehicle registration plates of Daidieu

Vehicle registration plates of Daidieu generally take the form NNX-#### for vehicles, with NN being the numeric location codes, X being a Bopomofo character, and #### being a random 4-digit number. Standard license plates have black characters on white background. Front plates measure 190 x 110 mm.



Pre-1984
Prior to the independence of Daidieu in 1954, plates followed the French Indochina format. Plates were white-on-black with the XXX#### format. XXX was the location code. while #### was the serial number. After 1954, the location code was changed to the Vietnamese name. During the Vietnamese occupation of Daidieu, the format remained unchanged due to its resemblance to the Vietnamese format at the time.

1984–present
In 1984, the plates were changed black-on-white. The format was also revamped, with the new format changing to NNNX-####. NNN represents the province/municipality, X was a Bopomofo character, and #### were digits. The three-digit codes refer to the various provinces of Daidieu. In 1987, the codes were replaced, with each province having 4 codes. In 2010, Ńwien King and Kim Kụ́ began issuing plates with the NNXX-#### format. In 2012, as part of the new ASEAN license agreement, a blue stripe with the flag of Daidieu and the text "大趙" was added to the left

Other plates

 * Cars owned by the government, governmental organizations, or diplomatic plates (excluding military) - White on blue with ##X-#### format (e.g. 3080517政府 or 99062699政府)
 * Private vehicles - Black on white with NN####-X format (e.g. 074858-ㄜ)
 * Construction vehicles - Black on yellow with ####-NNX format (e.g. 2510-42ㄥ)
 * Military cars - White on red with X-####NN format (e.g. ㄖ-517822)
 * Foreigner-owned cars - Black on white with NNX-#### format (X could be a letter) (e.g. 42H-8162 or 26J-28502)
 * Diplomatic plates - Black on white with 外交-XXX#### format, with XXX being the country code (e.g. 14 for Vietnam). International organizations also have the same format as diplomatic plates, with 300-315 being assigned to UN organizations and 400-405 being assigned to regional organizations, with the sole exception of ASEAN (00).