Vietnam Russia United States Singapore United Kingdom Mexico India Brazil Thailand Argentina Indonesia France Turkey Germany Taiwan Philippines Spain Japan Italy Saudi Arabia Egypt Australia South Korea Colombia Iraq Venezuela Malaysia Peru Bangladesh Poland United Arab Emirates Canada Ecuador Chile South Africa Nigeria Serbia Paraguay Jordan Dominican Republic Belarus Bulgaria Guatemala Bosnia and Herzegovina Qatar Sweden Finland Hong Kong Kuwait Romania Hungary Israel Sri Lanka Portugal Laos Ireland Ghana Cambodia Belgium China Netherlands Nicaragua Norway Greece Ukraine Myanmar Pakistan Czech Republic Lithuania Kenya Kosovo Panama Bahrain Algeria Latvia Mongolia Tunisia Austria Denmark New Zealand Albania Lebanon Georgia Switzerland Palestinian Territory Morocco Azerbaijan Angola North Macedonia Nepal Cyprus Sudan El Salvador Bolivia Moldova Cote D'Ivoire Cameroon Zimbabwe Croatia Slovakia Uganda Syria Puerto Rico Honduras Libya Costa Rica Iran Kazakhstan New Caledonia Zambia Oman Uzbekistan Kyrgyzstan Luxembourg British Virgin Islands Ethiopia Mozambique Madagascar Uruguay Yemen Tanzania Iceland Macao Reunion Guyana Cuba Senegal Rwanda Antigua and Barbuda Slovenia Mali Mauritius Gabon Cabo Verde Trinidad and Tobago Democratic Republic of the Congo Brunei Darussalam Armenia Liberia Martinique Afghanistan Jamaica Botswana Belize Republic of the Congo Somalia Montenegro Haiti Seychelles Benin Sierra Leone Vanuatu Burkina Faso Guadeloupe Togo Timor-Leste French Guiana Bermuda Aruba Mauritania Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Saint Kitts and Nevis Maldives French Polynesia Estonia Isle of Man Barbados Fiji Sao Tome and Principe Eswatini South Sudan Samoa Malawi Papua New Guinea Saint Pierre and Miquelon Saint Lucia Saint Martin Namibia Curacao Cayman Islands Monaco Lesotho Netherlands Antilles Malta Marshall Islands French Polynesia Flag Meaning & Details 2 VISITORS FROM HERE! 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
Learn more about French Polynesia »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook