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The U.S. state of North Dakota first required its residents to register their motor vehicles and display license plates in 1911. As of 2024, plates are issued by the North Dakota Department of Transportation through its Motor Vehicle Division.
A temporary 30-day license plate on a motorcycle in North Carolina. When a person buys a vehicle from a dealer, the dealer is typically authorized to issue a temporary registration to allow the buyer to drive the vehicle until the government agency in charge of vehicle registration processes the registration forms.
First base to be revalidated with stickers. Monthly staggered registration introduced 1981. [10] Plates from AAA-101 through JAY-999 replaced 1982; all other plates replaced by 1992. North Dakota: Embossed green numbers on reflective white plate with border line; "N.DAKOTA" at top left and "74" at top right "PEACE GARDEN STATE" at bottom 123-456
North Carolina: 2007–2009 red on reflective white with blue and red graphics, "First in Flight" ABC-1234 Valid. North Dakota: 2015–2016 black on sunset sky graphic plate, "Legendary North Dakota" Screened serial, Reflective sheeting 123 ABC "North Dakota" font changed on current plates. Northern Marianas Islands: none: Ohio: 2001–2003
North Carolina: North Dakota: Northern Mariana Islands: Ohio: Oklahoma: Oregon: Pennsylvania: Puerto Rico: Rhode Island: South Carolina: South Dakota: Tennessee: Texas: Utah: Vermont: Virginia: Embossed dark blue serial on reflective white plate with border line; "Virginia" screened in blue centered at top. None ABC-123 Still currently ...
Pages in category "Vehicle registration plates of the United States by state or territory" The following 59 pages are in this category, out of 59 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
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Despite the small size of the Department, North Dakota has more registered vehicles than there are residents of the state. [2] The Director is Ronald J. Henke, [3] and the central office is located on the North Dakota State Capitol grounds in Bismarck, North Dakota. Until the 1990s, the agency was known as the North Dakota Highway Department.