United States Singapore France Italy United Kingdom Romania Ireland Canada Germany Spain Sweden Netherlands Brazil Japan Australia Hungary Denmark Russia Poland Argentina Belgium Mexico Norway Portugal South Africa Greece Chile Philippines Switzerland China Austria Finland Israel Serbia Ukraine Bulgaria India New Zealand Czech Republic Croatia Slovakia Peru Indonesia Thailand Slovenia Turkey North Macedonia Georgia Colombia Uruguay Lithuania Armenia Puerto Rico Estonia South Korea Malaysia Venezuela Latvia Reunion Hong Kong Bosnia and Herzegovina Morocco Iceland Vietnam Guadeloupe Tunisia Taiwan Belarus Luxembourg Senegal Costa Rica Cuba Dominican Republic Bolivia Panama Azerbaijan Botswana Cyprus United Arab Emirates New Caledonia Ecuador Martinique Kazakhstan Zambia Nigeria Suriname Montenegro Moldova Mauritius Malta Lebanon Cameroon Honduras Ghana El Salvador French Guiana French Polynesia Madagascar Pakistan Algeria Bangladesh Egypt Cote D'Ivoire Trinidad and Tobago Nepal Namibia Kyrgyzstan Guatemala Cabo Verde Paraguay Guyana Lesotho Democratic Republic of the Congo Barbados Kenya Isle of Man Guernsey Uzbekistan Ethiopia Sri Lanka Jersey Aruba Iran Kosovo Jamaica Mozambique Monaco Faroe Islands Albania Syria Saint Lucia Eswatini Mongolia Cambodia Papua New Guinea Nicaragua Malawi Fiji Jordan Andorra Haiti Burkina Faso Cayman Islands Curacao Saudi Arabia Bahamas Tanzania Togo Qatar Burundi Maldives Saint Pierre and Miquelon Bahrain Greenland Guam U.S. Virgin Islands Belize Angola Laos Libya Dominica Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Mauritania Bermuda Caribbean Netherlands Benin Kuwait Gibraltar Niger Grenada Rwanda Palestinian Territory Republic of the Congo Brunei Darussalam Vanuatu Iraq Sint Maarten Zimbabwe Gabon Mayotte Seychelles Mali Liberia Macao Aland Islands Flag Meaning & Details NO VISITORS FROM HERE YET! Aland Islands Flag Flag Information The flag is the Swedish flag defaced by a red cross symbolising Finland. (Today, blue and white are considered the Finnish colours, but in the early days of Finnish nationalism, red and yellow from the Finnish coat of arms were also an option.)
Source: CIA - The World Factbook