Airbus A318 displaying registration F-GUGJ on the
wing undersurface and the last two letters of the registration, GJ, on the
nose wheel doors While the Chicago convention sets out the country-specific prefixes used in registration marks, and makes provision for the ways they are used in international civil aviation and displayed on aircraft, individual countries also make further provision for their formats and the use of registration marks for intranational flight. When painted on the aircraft's fuselage, the prefix and suffix are usually separated by a dash (for example, YR-BMA). When entered in a
flight plan, the dash is omitted (for example, YRBMA). In some countries that use a number suffix rather than letters, like the United States (N), South Korea (HL), and Japan (JA), the prefix and suffix are connected without a dash. Aircraft flying privately usually use their registration as their radio
callsign, but many aircraft flying in commercial operations (especially charter, cargo, and airlines) use the
ICAO airline designator or a company callsign. Some countries will permit an aircraft that will not be flown into the airspace of another country to display the registration with the country prefix omitted - for example,
gliders registered in
Australia commonly display only the three-letter unique mark, without the "VH-" national prefix. Some countries also operate a separate registry system, or use a separate group of unique marks, for gliders, ultralights, and/or other less-common types of aircraft. For example, Germany and Switzerland both use lettered suffixes (in the form D-xxxx and HB-xxx respectively) for most forms of flight-craft but numbers (D-nnnn and HB-nnn) for unpowered gliders. Many other nations register gliders in subgroups beginning with the letter G, such as Norway with LN-Gxx and New Zealand with ZK-Gxx.
United States Airbus A321-231 displaying American registration N102NN on the rear
fuselage In the
United States, the registration number is commonly referred to as an "N" number, because all aircraft registered there have a number starting with the letter N. An alphanumeric system is used because of the large numbers of aircraft registered in the United States. An
N-number begins with a run of one or more numeric digits, may end with one or two alphabetic letters, may only consist of one to five characters in total, and must start with a digit other than zero. In addition,
N-numbers may not contain the letters
I or
O, due to their similarities with the numerals
1 and
0. Each alphabetic letter in the suffix can have one of 24 discrete values, while each numeric digit can be one of 10, except the first, which can take on only one of nine values. This yields a total of 915,399 possible registration numbers in the
namespace, though certain combinations are reserved either for government use or for other special purposes. • S = state • X = experimental For example, N-X-211, the Ryan NYP aircraft flown by
Charles Lindbergh as the
Spirit of St. Louis was registered in the experimental category. There is a unique overlap in the United States with aircraft having a single number followed by two letters and
radio call signs issued by the Federal Communications Commission to Amateur Radio operators holding the Amateur Extra class license. For example, N4YZ is, on the one hand, a Cessna 206 registered to a private individual in
Melba, Idaho, while, on the other hand, is also issued to an Amateur Radio operator in North Carolina. Since an aircraft registration number is also used as its call sign, this means that two unrelated radio stations can have the same call sign. == Decolonisation and independence==