Canada United States Singapore Australia United Kingdom Sri Lanka China Nepal Germany India New Zealand France Russia Netherlands Argentina Ireland Italy Switzerland Spain Belgium Brazil Thailand Bolivia Japan Chile Poland South Korea Myanmar Czech Republic Bhutan Hong Kong Taiwan Tanzania Sweden Vietnam Austria Finland Philippines Mexico Israel Norway Malaysia Denmark Peru South Africa Indonesia Romania Slovenia Portugal Greece Hungary Kenya United Arab Emirates Turkey Slovakia Colombia Bangladesh Ecuador Ukraine Pakistan Costa Rica Saudi Arabia Bulgaria Serbia Estonia Croatia Egypt Nigeria Cambodia Puerto Rico Latvia Georgia Uruguay Qatar Lithuania Bahamas Montenegro Kuwait Laos Cyprus Dominican Republic Uganda Morocco Guatemala Panama Luxembourg Iceland Belarus Maldives Oman Lebanon Rwanda Bosnia and Herzegovina Senegal Iran Ethiopia Kazakhstan Uzbekistan Paraguay Jersey Cuba Ghana Bermuda Mauritius Malta Reunion Trinidad and Tobago Iraq Martinique New Caledonia Greenland Guyana Jordan Moldova Mongolia Saint Lucia Tunisia Namibia Zambia North Macedonia Algeria French Polynesia Turks and Caicos Islands Azerbaijan Guernsey Venezuela Bahrain Barbados Nicaragua El Salvador Yemen Aruba Sint Maarten Isle of Man Antigua and Barbuda Libya Jamaica Andorra Monaco Macao Liechtenstein Anguilla Albania Cote D'Ivoire Guadeloupe Malawi Mozambique U.S. Virgin Islands Papua New Guinea Brunei Darussalam Republic of the Congo Cameroon Niger Saint Vincent and the Grenadines French Guiana Burundi Cayman Islands Honduras Saint Kitts and Nevis Zimbabwe Haiti Madagascar Curacao Somalia Fiji Turkmenistan Equatorial Guinea Burkina Faso Afghanistan Botswana American Samoa Caribbean Netherlands Mali Mauritania Seychelles Democratic Republic of the Congo Eswatini Armenia Aland Islands Belize Gibraltar Micronesia Faroe Islands Aruba Flag Meaning & Details 4 VISITORS FROM HERE! Aruba Flag Flag Information blue, with two narrow, horizontal, yellow stripes across the lower portion and a red, four-pointed star outlined in white in the upper hoist-side corner the star represents Aruba and its red soil and white beaches, its four points the four major languages (Papiamento, Dutch, Spanish, English) as well as the four points of a compass, to indicate that its inhabitants come from all over the world the blue symbolizes Caribbean waters and skies the stripes represent the island's two main "industries": the flow of tourists to the sun-drenched beaches and the flow of minerals from the earth
Learn more about Aruba »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook