United States Canada United Kingdom Mexico Australia Germany Singapore Brazil New Zealand Ireland Argentina China Philippines Italy France India Belgium Spain Czech Republic Netherlands Lithuania Colombia Poland Malaysia Japan Hong Kong Indonesia Puerto Rico South Africa Venezuela Malta Peru Slovenia Russia Austria Kenya Chile Switzerland Croatia Portugal Ecuador Sweden Gibraltar Guatemala Uganda Costa Rica Thailand United Arab Emirates Norway Nigeria Turkey Uruguay Vietnam Taiwan El Salvador Sri Lanka South Korea Pakistan Slovakia Hungary Paraguay Dominican Republic Romania Honduras Denmark Trinidad and Tobago Ukraine Finland Jamaica Ghana Lebanon Cambodia Latvia Belize Israel Cote D'Ivoire Bolivia Nicaragua Kuwait Qatar Tanzania Panama Bangladesh Fiji Cyprus Guam Morocco Haiti Egypt Greece Bermuda Mauritius Cameroon Saudi Arabia Bahrain Kazakhstan Ethiopia Bulgaria Brunei Darussalam Saint Lucia Bosnia and Herzegovina Oman Grenada Zambia Nepal Macao Iran Albania U.S. Virgin Islands Seychelles Reunion Rwanda Barbados Palestinian Territory Martinique Luxembourg Belarus Curacao Algeria Iceland Togo Benin Jersey Zimbabwe Botswana Liberia French Polynesia Bahamas French Guiana Guadeloupe Afghanistan Moldova Syria Tunisia Namibia Myanmar Lesotho Jordan Cook Islands Marshall Islands Antigua and Barbuda Democratic Republic of the Congo Cayman Islands Papua New Guinea Mozambique Angola Senegal Serbia Gabon Dominica Azerbaijan Cabo Verde Gambia Turks and Caicos Islands Cuba Monaco Madagascar Sierra Leone Guyana Libya Guinea-Bissau Mongolia Burkina Faso Guernsey Georgia Iraq Malawi Maldives Liechtenstein Central African Republic Solomon Islands South Sudan Sao Tome and Principe Caribbean Netherlands Eritrea Mali Mayotte North Macedonia Suriname Tonga Faroe Islands Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Samoa Anguilla Vatican City Netherlands Antilles Sudan Eswatini Aruba Flag Meaning & Details NO VISITORS FROM HERE YET! 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
Source: CIA - The World Factbook