Vehicle registration plates of the Vizhutuan Federation

In Vizhutua, vehicle registration plates started to be issued in 1917. All motorized road vehicles must display vehicle registration plates. The Vizhutuan Ministry of Transport holds the responsibility of issuing vehicle registration plates. The plates vary in colors according to the type of vehicle, but usually display a registration number and the vehicle's province (formerly district) of registration.

1917-1964
License plates began to be issued in Vizhutua in 1917. Those early plates were specified at 48 by 9 centimeters, with white text on a black background. The district name was displayed, followed by a sequentially issued number.

In 1947, the district name was replaced with a two-letter district code after the districts were reorganzied in the 1946 Constitution. By the end of 1964, Visaha was approaching 999999 and a new format was needed.

1965-present
The new format, effective 1 January 1965 (B.E. 2508), changed the specifications to 36 by 18 centimeters, and it changed the format to a system similar to Japan's. The first line consisted of the name of the province. The second line consisted of a two-digit vehicle class number, a Vizhutuan character, and a serial number from 0000-9999. The colors were changed to black-on-white for private vehicles, black-on-yellow for commercial vehicles, and white-on-blue for government-owned vehicles. Military and diplomatic vehicles retained the same colors as before. Vehicles owned by the government, the military, and diplomatic personnel were now issued license plates, with government plates beginning with "Bhi" followed by up to 6 numbers, military plates began with "Sai" followed by up to 6 numbers, and diplomatic plates were issued the diplomatic country code, "Dū", followed by the serial number.
 * 00: Passenger vehicle with a curb weight of under 899 kg
 * 01: Passenger vehicle with a curb weight of 900-1099 kg
 * 02: Passenger vehicle with a curb weight of 1100-1299 kg
 * 03: Passenger vehicle with a curb weight of 1300-1499 kg
 * 04: Passenger vehicle with a curb weight of 1500-1699 kg
 * 05: Passenger vehicle with a curb weight of 1700-1899 kg
 * 06: Passenger vehicle with a curb weight of over 1899 kg
 * 07: Truck with a curb weight of 3000-4999 kg
 * 08: Truck with a curb weight of 5000-6999 kg
 * 09: Truck with a curb weight of 7000-8999 kg
 * 10: Truck with a curb weight of 9000-10999 kg
 * 11: Truck with a curb weight of 11000-12999 kg
 * 12: Truck with a curb weight of 13000-14999 kg
 * 13: Truck with a curb weight of over 14999 kg
 * 14: Van
 * 15: Bus
 * 16: Taxi
 * 17: Other four-wheeled commercial vehicles
 * 18: Two- and three- wheeled vehicle
 * 19: Station wagons
 * 20-69: Passenger vehicle (overflow series)
 * 70-79: Two-wheeled vehicle (overflow series)
 * 80-99: Commercial vehicles (overflow series)

The format ended in September 1987 after Visaha began to run out of combinations, with the passenger vehicles reaching 69-Au-0000 by the time the series ended.

1987-present
On 1 September 1987 (B.E. 2530), the format was revised in order to alleviate the problem of registrations running out. The vehicle class codes were changed, adding consonnats with vowel diactrics. In order to avoid conflicting with the 1965-1987 plates which remained valid, the format ws changed to 999X999, with 9 being a digit and X being a Vizhutuan character. License plates for the government, military, and diplomatic personnel were also changed. The license plate codes for government, military, and diplomatic vehicles were: In 2000, the license plates in Nesiondalsa were standarized. The flag of the Federation of Nesiondalsan States plus the text "V BHA- VIZHUTU MAHĀSAṂGH" was added at the top, with the year of issuance added to the left of the name of the province and the date of issuance added to the right. All plates needed to be replaced but they could still keep the old serial number. Visaha exhausted the format in August 2005, so the format was changed to 9999-X-99 for the province.
 * A: Passenger vehicle with a curb weight of under 1000 kg
 * I: Passenger vehicle with a curb weight of 1000-1499 kg
 * U: Passenger vehicle with a curb weight of 1500-1899 kg
 * Ṛ: Passenger vehicle with a curb weight of over 1899 kg
 * Ā: Truck with a curb weight of under 5000 kg
 * Ī: Truck with a curb weight of 5000-9999 kg
 * Ū: Truck with a curb weight of 10000-14999 kg
 * Ṝ: Truck with a curb weight of over 14999 kg
 * Ḷ, Ḹ: Van
 * E: Bus
 * Ai: Taxi
 * O: Other four-wheeled commercial vehicles
 * Aw: Two- and three- wheeled vehicle
 * Bhi: Vizhutu State
 * Le: Lenying State
 * Ta: Tambal State
 * Ra: Rangit State
 * Ba: Bur State
 * Ńi: Nyidush State
 * Phu: Fusoncha State
 * Po: Pondunya State
 * Code + Se Nā (stacked): Military forces
 * Code + Kā Wa (stacked): Police
 * Code + Kā a (stacked): Prison guard
 * Code + Teṃ Ti (stacked): Coast guard
 * Code + Sī Ma (stacked): Customs service member
 * Code + Pa Ba (stacked): Immigration service member
 * Code + Jā Sa (stacked): Criminal investigator
 * Three-character country code + Rā Na (stacked): Diplomatic corps
 * Three-character country code + Vā Dū (stacked): Consular corps
 * Two-character code + UN symbol: United Nations