Germany taxi in Germany In
Germany, taxis are
beige, a look that was officially stipulated by law as
Elfenbein ("ivory") a light ivory-color in 1971. Before 1971 black was mandatory. Since 2005 change of section 43 enables German states to diverge. By 2016 six states (
Baden-Württemberg,
Lower Saxony,
Rhineland-Palatinate,
Saarland,
Saxony-Anhalt and
Schleswig-Holstein) lifted the mandate, but most taxi drivers' associations and companies still prefer the unified look and visibility of beige. Most taxis in Germany are
Mercedes-Benz limousines, predominantly of the
E-Class series.
Greece In
Greece, taxis have variable colors, according to the city they are registered. For example, in
Athens they are yellow (see: [2 2). In all rural areas, they are usually silver-colored. In other cities except Athens they have particular color, such as blue with white-coloured roofs (
Thessaloniki), dark red (
Patras) or dark green (
Ioannina). Cars used as taxis are mostly 4-door
sedans with great luggage space. The cars used most as taxis are
Mercedes-Benz C- and
E-Classes,
VW Passat,
Škoda Octavia and
Toyota Avensis. Most of them in urban areas are equipped with
GPS navigation systems.
Ireland In
Ireland, taxis do not have a specific colour regulation and can be any colour, as long as they have a roof sign with the word "TAXI" or "TACSAÍ" (Irish for "taxi"), the license number, and the county code (D=Dublin, SO=Sligo, G=Galway, W=Waterford). The vehicle also needs to have a green and blue "TAXI" or "TACSAÍ" sign on both front doors in a specific design.
Italy In
Italy, taxis used to be green and black since the time of World War II, but were eventually changed to a bright yellow color. More recently, the color was changed to white.
Netherlands Although not all taxis in the
Netherlands carry the usual taxi signs, all vehicles that are in use as regular taxis are required by law to carry light blue licence plates with black lettering.
Portugal In
Portugal, taxis were traditionally black with the upper half painted light green. This was changed to a uniform beige color in the 1990s, but in the 2000s (decade) many new taxis have gone back to the traditional livery. Since 2018, the black and green color scheme came to be again the only allowed livery in
continental Portugal. In
Madeira, during the 1980s, the black and green livery of the taxis was replaced by a yellow scheme with a stripe of light-blue in the middle. In
Azores, taxis used to have the same color schemes as in continental Portugal. Nowadays, taxis are white with two diagonal blue lines on the rear doors.
Mercedes C- and
E-class are popular taxi models.
Russia taxi based on the
Porsche Cayenne In
Russia some companies are offering a 'luxury' taxi service where taxis are
Maybachs and
TechArt Magnums (tuned
Porsche Cayennes) – but most cabs are operated by more 'conventional' brands, such as
Ford Focus or
Renault Kangoo in larger cities and Russian makes elsewhere.
Slovenia In
Slovenia taxis are operated by small private companies. They can be of any color with mandatory taxi sign on the roof. Only in Koper and Sežana the taxis must be white.
Serbia ,
Serbia In
Serbia taxis are operated by numerous small private companies. They can be of any color, but they must prominently display the company name and phone number. Since 8th of May 2024, all taxis in Belgrade are mandated to be colored white without any stickers.
Spain In
Spain, each town and city designates the color of their taxis, but in the overwhelming majority, it is white, usually with some kind of color detail and/or local symbol on the doors. For example, in
Madrid (and also in
Almería), taxis are white with a red diagonal stripe going through the front doors; in
Seville, they are white with a diagonal yellow stripe down the rear doors; in
Bilbao, white with a horizontal red stripe on the front doors, etc. A notable exception is
Barcelona, where taxis are fully black, except the doors and the boot lid, which are painted yellow.
United Kingdom in London. London taxis are traditionally black, with the term "black cab" meaning a licensed taxi with a meter. Only approved vehicle models that meet
certain conditions for passenger headroom and turning circle radius can be used as taxis, such as the
LEVC TX and Mercedes Vito. There is no actual livery requirement for London taxis although most are painted black. Outside London, taxi licensing is the responsibility of the local authority. Most major cities predominantly use London taxis, again traditionally black but this is not always mandatory. Smaller towns and rural areas allow more varieties of passenger cars, which may require taxis to be painted in a particular livery as a licence condition. Many towns use two-colour schemes, such as white vehicles with another specific colour on the bonnet and boot. This colour may have significance to the town, such as taxis in
Brighton which use white with an aquamarine colour in keeping with the scheme used on the seafront railings and more widely in the city.
Windsor, home to the Queen's residence at
Windsor Castle, uses white with royal purple on the bonnet and boot.
Basildon taxis display white with orange bonnet and boot,
Leeds white with black,
Cardiff black with white, and
West Suffolk and
Middlesbrough black with yellow.
Bradford are all white with a green diagonal stripe on the front side doors.
St Albans are all white with a yellow stripe running the full length of the side, and in
Bournemouth they are pale yellow with a white stripe. Single colour schemes include blue in
Bristol, teal in
Guildford, and silver in
Portsmouth, whilst white is used widely including in
Southampton,
Sunderland and
Scarborough. In
Hartlepool and
Derby taxis are yellow, but both local authorities considered changing the livery in 2019 to reduce costs whilst still allowing taxis to be easily identified. Hartlepool proposed a two-colour scheme with a standard manufacturer colour such as white, silver or black as a base, and retain yellow only on the bonnet and boot, but abandoned plans after a consultation. Derby plans to change to black with a yellow diagonal strip on each side. In another sense of
livery, the
Worshipful Company of Hackney Carriage Drivers became a
City of London livery company in 2004. ==North America==