United States Philippines Canada Singapore Australia China Indonesia United Kingdom Brazil Japan Malaysia India Israel Hong Kong Sri Lanka Germany Vietnam United Arab Emirates Ireland Myanmar New Zealand Thailand Russia Ethiopia Italy Bangladesh Netherlands France Czech Republic Saudi Arabia Cambodia Kenya South Africa Finland Spain Sweden Uganda Portugal Taiwan Qatar Mexico South Korea Macao Romania Mauritius Turkey Pakistan Kuwait Bahrain Oman Belgium Norway Chile Switzerland Zambia Argentina Colombia Austria Guam Poland Laos Papua New Guinea Cyprus Seychelles Greece Ecuador El Salvador Ukraine Namibia Fiji Jordan Peru Denmark Egypt Malta Kazakhstan Tanzania Trinidad and Tobago Slovakia Guyana Hungary Morocco Yemen American Samoa Nigeria Botswana Iceland Lebanon Luxembourg Nepal Venezuela Slovenia Cameroon Algeria Serbia Dominican Republic Costa Rica Brunei Darussalam British Virgin Islands Iran Tunisia Bulgaria Croatia Moldova Belarus Barbados Bahamas Lithuania Estonia Kiribati Panama Honduras Faroe Islands Albania Azerbaijan Guatemala Afghanistan Bolivia Reunion U.S. Virgin Islands Mozambique Belize Ghana Jamaica Iraq Sudan Latvia Puerto Rico Bermuda Kyrgyzstan Eswatini Senegal Nicaragua Georgia Mongolia Samoa Cote D'Ivoire Jersey Marshall Islands Uruguay Madagascar Saint Lucia Armenia Rwanda Democratic Republic of the Congo Gambia Solomon Islands Eritrea Cayman Islands Timor-Leste Saint Kitts and Nevis Curacao Angola Paraguay Liberia Bosnia and Herzegovina Micronesia North Macedonia Zimbabwe Uzbekistan Greenland Turkmenistan Guadeloupe Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Palestinian Territory Syria Liechtenstein Suriname Palau Bhutan Tajikistan Sierra Leone Tonga Antigua and Barbuda Northern Mariana Islands Vanuatu Andorra Cabo Verde Haiti Libya Maldives Cuba Malawi Netherlands Flag Meaning & Details 162 VISITORS FROM HERE! Netherlands Flag Flag Information three equal horizontal bands of red (bright vermilion top), white, and blue (cobalt) similar to the flag of Luxembourg, which uses a lighter blue and is longer the colors were derived from those of WILLIAM I, Prince of Orange, who led the Dutch Revolt against Spanish sovereignty in the latter half of the 16th century originally the upper band was orange, but because its dye tended to turn red over time, the red shade was eventually made the permanent color the banner is perhaps the oldest tricolor in continuous use
Learn more about Netherlands »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook