United States Canada Philippines United Kingdom China Russia Brazil India Japan South Africa Australia France Germany South Korea Singapore Malaysia Italy Hong Kong Czech Republic Nigeria United Arab Emirates Indonesia Ireland New Zealand Bahamas Netherlands Kenya Trinidad and Tobago Norway Ghana Pakistan Saudi Arabia Jamaica Mexico Thailand Spain Sweden Portugal Belgium Taiwan Egypt Turkey Argentina Poland Ukraine Zimbabwe Romania Qatar Israel Finland Greece Puerto Rico Uganda Barbados Botswana Colombia Denmark Iceland Lebanon Chile Peru British Virgin Islands Switzerland Namibia Austria Sri Lanka Bangladesh Papua New Guinea Ecuador Ethiopia Jordan Kuwait Iran Serbia Mauritius Algeria Hungary Zambia Costa Rica Malta Bahrain Netherlands Antilles Croatia Albania Cameroon Honduras Slovakia Morocco Georgia Venezuela Lithuania Vietnam Belize Dominican Republic Panama Rwanda Tunisia Azerbaijan Bolivia Fiji Oman Antigua and Barbuda Guam Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Saint Lucia Guyana Samoa Slovenia Malawi Estonia Cambodia Guatemala Bulgaria Tanzania Kazakhstan Belarus Bosnia and Herzegovina Cote D'Ivoire U.S. Virgin Islands Syria American Samoa Turks and Caicos Islands Curacao Latvia Liberia Madagascar Cayman Islands Suriname Moldova Uruguay El Salvador Angola Iraq Cyprus Eswatini North Macedonia Paraguay Gambia Saint Kitts and Nevis Togo Seychelles Guernsey Mozambique Dominica South Sudan Grenada Reunion French Guiana Burundi Brunei Darussalam Aruba Sierra Leone Myanmar Kyrgyzstan Maldives Nepal Northern Mariana Islands Tonga Solomon Islands Uzbekistan Saint Barthelemy Laos Lesotho Bermuda Benin Micronesia Armenia Martinique Jersey Gibraltar Luxembourg Vanuatu Palestinian Territory Nicaragua Macao Anguilla Mongolia Sudan Senegal Montenegro Bhutan French Polynesia Flag Meaning & Details NO VISITORS FROM HERE YET! French Polynesia Flag Flag Information two red horizontal bands encase a wide white band in a 1:2:1 ratio centered on the white band is a disk with a blue and white wave pattern depicting the sea on the lower half and a gold and white ray pattern depicting the sun on the upper half a Polynesian canoe rides on the wave pattern the canoe has a crew of five represented by five stars that symbolize the five island groups red and white are traditional Polynesian colors note: identical to the red-white-red flag of Tahiti, the largest and most populous of the islands in French Polynesia, but which has no emblem in the white band the flag of France is used for official occasions
Source: CIA - The World Factbook