United States Singapore United Kingdom Italy Brazil Germany Canada France Mexico Russia Spain Australia Greece Argentina Poland Netherlands Turkey Belgium Philippines Japan South Africa Switzerland Serbia Venezuela Taiwan Hong Kong India Ireland Colombia Jordan Israel Lebanon Hungary Portugal Czech Republic Indonesia Thailand Chile Croatia South Korea Puerto Rico New Zealand Peru Austria Egypt Malaysia Sweden Saudi Arabia Mongolia Romania Slovakia China Norway United Arab Emirates Morocco Vietnam Bosnia and Herzegovina Algeria Bulgaria Pakistan Finland Slovenia Ukraine Costa Rica Tunisia Denmark El Salvador North Macedonia Trinidad and Tobago Ecuador Dominican Republic Reunion Cyprus Guatemala Panama Honduras Syria Malta Kuwait Palestinian Territory Uruguay Qatar Iraq Armenia Sri Lanka Georgia Latvia Lithuania Mauritius Luxembourg Paraguay Belarus Jamaica Nicaragua Montenegro Bahrain Kazakhstan Libya Bahamas Albania Estonia Azerbaijan Bolivia Cuba U.S. Virgin Islands Iceland Bangladesh Saint Lucia Guadeloupe Nigeria Barbados Macao New Caledonia Monaco Kenya Cameroon Moldova Yemen Uganda Namibia Curacao Bermuda Iran Nepal Fiji Vatican City Guyana Botswana Martinique Myanmar Ghana Senegal Sudan Uzbekistan Madagascar Burundi Guam Cambodia Brunei Darussalam Aruba Belize Antigua and Barbuda Haiti Turks and Caicos Islands Oman Maldives Mozambique Cote D'Ivoire Suriname Laos Grenada Isle of Man Cabo Verde French Polynesia Ethiopia Zimbabwe American Samoa Angola Saint Kitts and Nevis Tanzania Guernsey Jersey Afghanistan Zambia Tonga Timor-Leste Dominica Kosovo Cayman Islands Gibraltar Andorra Somalia French Guiana Togo Rwanda Seychelles Kyrgyzstan Micronesia Netherlands Antilles Samoa Northern Mariana Islands Papua New Guinea Lesotho Eswatini Mayotte Burkina Faso Kiribati San Marino Republic of the Congo Mauritania Liechtenstein Anguilla Aruba Flag Meaning & Details 10 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