United States France Canada United Kingdom Germany Italy Netherlands Belgium Australia Spain Turkey India Switzerland Hong Kong Austria Sweden Poland Iran Israel China Norway South Africa Japan Taiwan Finland Denmark Russia Ireland New Zealand South Korea Brazil Hungary Chile Czech Republic Indonesia Singapore Egypt Mexico United Arab Emirates Malaysia Portugal Greece Pakistan Romania Luxembourg Slovakia Thailand Bulgaria Kuwait Oman Slovenia Argentina Ukraine Reunion Philippines Saudi Arabia Latvia Tunisia Yemen Palestinian Territory Lithuania Qatar Colombia North Macedonia Algeria Jordan Bahrain Cyprus Vietnam Croatia Syria Morocco Iceland Lebanon Serbia Iraq Georgia Bangladesh Paraguay Peru Ecuador Estonia Sri Lanka Nigeria Belize Sudan Vanuatu Liechtenstein Puerto Rico Macao Namibia Martinique Kenya French Polynesia Guernsey Costa Rica Ghana Uganda Venezuela Nepal Bermuda Maldives Belarus Uruguay Barbados Malta Ethiopia Afghanistan Guadeloupe Trinidad and Tobago Guatemala Myanmar Cote D'Ivoire Senegal Albania Libya Jamaica Bosnia and Herzegovina Kazakhstan Moldova New Caledonia Dominican Republic Cayman Islands Mauritius Netherlands Antilles Panama Isle of Man Djibouti Angola Honduras British Virgin Islands Kyrgyzstan Antigua and Barbuda Fiji Faroe Islands Nicaragua Bahamas Bolivia Zimbabwe Saint Lucia Togo Guam Cameroon Botswana Montenegro Sint Maarten Cambodia Anguilla Malawi El Salvador Curacao Armenia Grenada Papua New Guinea Zambia Azerbaijan Bhutan Niger Seychelles Mayotte Gibraltar Rwanda Gambia Haiti Eswatini Lesotho Mongolia Guyana Tanzania Monaco Greenland Gabon Suriname Brunei Darussalam Benin Mauritania Dominica Burkina Faso New Caledonia Flag Meaning & Details 7 VISITORS FROM HERE! New Caledonia Flag Flag Information New Caledonia has two official flags alongside the flag of France, the Kanak (indigenous Melanesian) flag has equal status the latter consists of three equal horizontal bands of blue (top), red, and green a large yellow disk - diameter two-thirds the height of the flag - shifted slightly to the hoist side is edged in black and displays a black fleche faitiere symbol, a native rooftop adornment
Learn more about New Caledonia »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook