United States Canada United Kingdom Singapore Philippines Brazil France Germany Australia Japan Mexico Netherlands Italy Sweden India Poland Spain Belgium Indonesia Russia Turkey Switzerland Norway Serbia Hungary Denmark Puerto Rico Finland Croatia New Zealand Czech Republic Taiwan Greece Venezuela Bulgaria Romania Argentina Ireland Portugal Thailand Colombia Ukraine Slovakia Malaysia South Africa Austria North Macedonia Chile Bosnia and Herzegovina Israel South Korea Hong Kong United Arab Emirates Saudi Arabia Pakistan Mongolia Lithuania Egypt Slovenia Dominican Republic Georgia Algeria Vietnam Latvia Peru Costa Rica Morocco Tunisia Iceland Albania China Montenegro Guatemala Estonia Lebanon Kuwait Panama Bahamas Qatar British Virgin Islands Iraq Ecuador Bangladesh Sri Lanka Azerbaijan Jamaica Nicaragua Luxembourg Jordan Iran Guam El Salvador Armenia Cyprus Bolivia Belarus Moldova Uruguay Palestinian Territory Bahrain Trinidad and Tobago Madagascar Nigeria Ghana Syria Kazakhstan Malta Reunion New Caledonia Brunei Darussalam Uganda Honduras French Polynesia Netherlands Antilles Kenya Senegal Cambodia American Samoa Cameroon Mauritius Guernsey Libya Nepal Tajikistan Cayman Islands Fiji Namibia Bhutan Paraguay Angola Cote D'Ivoire Haiti Aruba Oman Kyrgyzstan Antigua and Barbuda Botswana Northern Mariana Islands Uzbekistan Afghanistan Tanzania Ethiopia Bermuda Togo Zambia Greenland Marshall Islands Isle of Man Guyana Laos Cuba Dominica Belize U.S. Virgin Islands Mali Yemen Sudan Seychelles Liechtenstein Saint Kitts and Nevis Martinique Guadeloupe Democratic Republic of the Congo Gambia Monaco Zimbabwe Saint Lucia Jersey French Guiana Mozambique Anguilla Maldives Turkmenistan Micronesia Turks and Caicos Islands French Polynesia Flag Meaning & Details 5 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