Malaysian Vehicle Number Plates - INFORMATIONAL

sakuraguy

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Malaysian Vehicle Number Plates - INFORMATIONAL


Malaysian vehicle number plates are the licence plates displayed on all motorized road vehicles in Malaysia, as required by law. All vehicle licence plates in Malaysia, other than those issued to diplomats and taxis (see below), have white characters on a black background, regardless of the vehicle type. The issue of licence plates is regulated and administered by the Malaysian Road Transport Department. Malaysian licence plates typically begin with one or more letters (the first letter(s) serving as a vehicle or location prefix) followed by up to four numerical digits. Thus, the configuration of a common Malaysian number plate may be in the form of ABC1234 Example:N1 ~ N9999 then NA1 ~ NY9999 then NAA1 ~ NAY9999 then NBA1 excepted O,I,Z.

For the purposes of vehicle licensing each state in Malaysia has an identifying character; vehicles registered in a particular state will therefore bear licence plates beginning with that state's identifying character. Additionally, certain divisions of government, such as the military, have their own distinguishing characters.

http://img144.imageshack.us/img144/507/asmalaysiawb5.jpg

Location prefixes

Peninsular Malaysia

Vehicle licence plates used in Peninsular Malaysia start with a letter of the alphabet. They do not use a checksum digit, unlike number plates from Singapore. Vehicles registered in the various states begin with specific letters as follows:

A: Perak
B: Selangor, including plates registered in Kuala Lumpur before the city is a federal territory
C: Pahang
D: Kelantan
J: Johor
K: Kedah, including Langkawi (KV)
M: Malacca
N: Negri Sembilan
P: Penang
R: Perlis
T: Terengganu
Vehicles registered in the federal territories:
L: Labuan
PUTRAJAYA as starting text: Putrajaya
W: Kuala Lumpur (Up to 1957, W was the code for Province Wellesley).
Peninsular Malaysia Motor Dealer's (Trade) plates are white on a blue ground using the format L NNN L, where the first Letter is the state code and the final Letter is a serial, as are the Numbers.


East Malaysia
Vehicles registered in the states of Sarawak and Sabah are allocated vehicle number plates commencing with the letters Q (Sarawak) or S (Sabah). Then follows the regional code and a serial number - when 9999 is reached a serial letter is used, in alphabetical order, to augment. In Sabah this serial letter follows the serial number (SA 1234 A), and in Sarawak it follows the regional code (QKA 1234)

Q: Sarawak
QA and QK: Kuching
QB: Sri Aman
QC: Kota Samarahan
QL: Limbang
QM: Miri
QP: Kapit
QR: Sarikei
QS: Sibu
QT: Bintulu
QSG: Government
Sarawak Motor Dealers' (Trade) plates vary only in their colour, which is white on a red ground.

S: Sabah
SA: Kota Kinabalu and Kota Belud
SB: Beaufort
SD: Lahad Datu
SK: Kudat
SS: Sandakan
ST: Tawau
SU: Keningau
SG: Government
Sabah Motor Dealers' (Trade) plates are red on white in the format 1-3 numbers followed by a district letter, usually J, for Kota Kinabalu (formerly Jesselton).



Vanity plates
Vanity plates, i.e. plates using special, distinctive prefixes, are available at extra cost. These special prefixes may denote the brand of the car (such prefixes are often used, for example, on Proton and Perodua cars). Among the more commonly used special prefixes are:

WAJA: Issued for Proton Waja cars.
Satria: Issued for Proton Satria cars.
NAZA: Issued for Naza vehicles.
SUKOM: Issued only during the 1998 Commonwealth Games, which was held in Kuala Lumpur at that year.
XIII NAM: Issued only during the 2003 NAM Summit which was held in Kuala Lumpur at that year.
X OIC: Issued only during the 2003 OIC Summit which was held in Kuala Lumpur at that year.
XI ASEAN: Issued only during the 2005 ASEAN Summit which was held in Kuala Lumpur at that year.
BAMbee: Issued only during the 2000 Thomas and Uber Cup which was held in Kuala Lumpur at that year.

Diplomats' number plates also use white on a black background and Consular Corps personnel have white on red plates. Unlike other licence plates, which have the format of (typically) ABC1234, diplomatic licence plates are formatted (for example) 11-22-DC for Diplomatic corps and CC for Consular Corps for Commonwealth countries. United Nations used UN and members of the International Rubber Organisation are said to have had the code 'PA', but neither UN nor PA have been actually seen.


Royalty
The number plates on cars used by the royal families have prefixes ending in Z, unlike other cars where the prefixes end in the range A to Y. Otherwise, the prefixes used for cars belonging to the royal families are just the same as with any other vehicles. Additionally, the plates on vehicles used by the royal families' bodyguards normally bear just one, or sometimes two, numerical digits. Those on vehicles owned by the general public usually have three or four numerical digits, and two is a rarity.


Taxi
While older taxicab number plates had previously used normal number plate formats as standard vehicles, most newer Malaysian taxi assume a H prefix at the start of its plate, followed by its respective location prefix. Unlike standard vehicles, taxi number plates have black characters on a white background.

HA: Ipoh, Perak
HB: Klang Valley, Selangor
HC: Kuantan, Pahang
HJ: Johor Bahru, Johor
HM: Melaka
HN: Seremban, Negri Sembilan
HP: Penang
HQK: Kuching, Sarawak
HSA: Kota Kinabalu, Sabah
HW: Kuala Lumpur
LIMO xxx W/B: Kuala Lumpur International Airport limousines



Military
The Malaysian military uses Z as the starting prefix of a licence plate, followed by a second prefix letter to denote the branch of the military.

ZA to ZD: Army
ZL: Navy
ZU: Air Force




Additional Information:
http://www.jpj.gov.my
http://www.worldlicenseplates.com/world/AS_MALA.html
 
it didn't state the old number plate of sarawak ler.. last time we dun have Q in front one.. so every car before then is running on old plate like my car KH####, but about a decade ago every car with old plates is like need to change the plate number to add a Q at the back, become like KH####Q.

now i'm dying to find the Kedah plate counterpart of my KH#### without the Q





and... AE86 plate really on an AE86 or not?
 
hey guys did you all read the newspaper? soon we can buy car number plates with our own name!! but the range will be 60k to 100k...

For example we can buy JOHN 1, ALEX 1, JORDAN 21... if not mistaken the max of the alphabet you can go is 5.

oh but you cannot sell to anyone, once you buy it, its yours forever and can only be transfered to new cars own by you or kids.


it is still in a proposing stage, but hopefully it can work out :)
 
smart jpj. they can even earn more money. just look at current situation, some of the number eg. xxx 1 can go up to may rm50k or more. rm50k is few years back.. now should be more. every number is the money. wonder this money is the source of their salary or may be their year end bonus. mmhh..
 
sakuraguy said:
Royalty
The number plates on cars used by the royal families have prefixes ending in Z, unlike other cars where the prefixes end in the range A to Y. Otherwise, the prefixes used for cars belonging to the royal families are just the same as with any other vehicles. Additionally, the plates on vehicles used by the royal families' bodyguards normally bear just one, or sometimes two, numerical digits. Those on vehicles owned by the general public usually have three or four numerical digits, and two is a rarity.

my car plate also 2 numbers ler.....
am I a royalty in descend?!.....
muhahahahahahaa
:tongwink:
 
mu24, too bad, i don't have the money spend on those plate, even if i do have, i rather donate the money to charity. :biggrin:
 
I saw a wira in Subang bearing a plate nu,mber D5 ..
Fantastic.......nice numbeer...actually wanna snap a photo but too bad, i respect him..unless i grant a permission from him..else not nice to do so....hehe
 
okie okie...sorry..
it's supposed to be informative thread...
kekekeke...

anyway, my car plate is NAM; but negeri sembilan car plate...not a vanity plate...
kekeke
 
mmmm is it legal for us to use singapore plate in malaysia...i mean singapore style plate number (punch number on aluminium plate).....recently installed at my car and look nice...but seems like not standard..dunno if JPJ approved it or not.. any info?
 
EGNINE .. the style ure mentioning is embossing style .. its is considered legal if u still use the B&W colouring style and not yellowish or negative colouring styles.

Malaysian uses, Black background and White foreground colourings, also make sure the width and size or character n digits does follow JPJ rules.

Thnx
 

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