United States Singapore Canada China India United Kingdom Germany Australia Ireland Philippines South Africa Russia Brazil Nigeria France South Korea Indonesia Netherlands Mexico New Zealand Sweden Norway Hong Kong Malaysia Italy Thailand Finland Spain Poland Ghana Japan Denmark Kenya Egypt Pakistan Belgium Taiwan Switzerland Israel United Arab Emirates Vietnam Turkey Romania Jamaica Czech Republic Sri Lanka Trinidad and Tobago Austria Iran Argentina Portugal Peru Colombia Hungary Puerto Rico Saudi Arabia Bangladesh Ukraine Greece Bulgaria Slovakia Uganda Costa Rica Ethiopia Tanzania Bahamas Ecuador Zambia Guatemala Cambodia Zimbabwe Lebanon Dominican Republic Myanmar Lithuania Croatia Qatar Venezuela Eswatini Serbia Chile Kuwait Morocco Georgia Malawi Panama Nepal Slovenia Fiji Namibia Cameroon Papua New Guinea Oman Honduras Malta Botswana Armenia Cayman Islands Mauritius Iceland Jordan Luxembourg Antigua and Barbuda Estonia Paraguay Bolivia Kazakhstan Togo Cote D'Ivoire Belize Latvia North Macedonia Barbados Faroe Islands Iraq Guyana Sierra Leone Macao Algeria Reunion Nicaragua Madagascar Bosnia and Herzegovina Saint Kitts and Nevis Suriname Liberia Cyprus Gibraltar Democratic Republic of the Congo Albania Azerbaijan Belarus Samoa El Salvador Bahrain Aruba Palau Rwanda Uruguay Eritrea Kosovo Isle of Man Moldova Senegal Tunisia Bermuda British Virgin Islands Martinique Guadeloupe Maldives Yemen Greenland Tajikistan Seychelles Guam Saint Lucia Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Djibouti Angola U.S. Virgin Islands Lesotho Saint Barthelemy Benin Burkina Faso Chad Uzbekistan Afghanistan American Samoa Curacao Northern Mariana Islands Sint Maarten Syria Grenada Republic of the Congo Libya Mongolia Somalia Gabon Sudan Gambia Kyrgyzstan Jersey Flag Meaning & Details NO VISITORS FROM HERE YET! Jersey Flag Flag Information white with a diagonal red cross extending to the corners of the flag in the upper quadrant, surmounted by a yellow crown, a red shield with three lions in yellow according to tradition, the ships of Jersey - in an attempt to differentiate themselves from English ships flying the horizontal cross of St. George - rotated the cross to the "X" (saltire) configuration because this arrangement still resembled the Irish cross of St. Patrick, the yellow Plantagenet crown and Jersey coat of arms were added
Source: CIA - The World Factbook