Number Plates Search
Most expensive numbers sold
- '5' - £3.5million (Dubai - 2007)
- 'M 1' - £331,500 (2006)
- 'VIP 1' - £285,000 (2006)
- '51 NGH' - £254,000 (2006)
- 'GS 1' - £258,775 (2005)
- 'K1 NGS' - £231,000 (1993)
Private number plates museum
Our exclusive museum contains a wealth of historical information on number plates and general motoring.
There's even a comprehensive archive of DVLA number plate auction catalogues complete with some of the highest prices fetched at each auction.
World Number Plates

Number Plates of Armenia
Continent: Asia
Capital: Yerevan
Population: 3 million
Country ISO code: AM
Country OVAL code: ARM

Driving Side: Right
First license issued in 1991
Number of vehicles:
cars 230,110 (1990)
Road information:
total: 8,431 km; paved: 8,161 km (includes 7,567 km of expressways); unpaved: 270 km (2002)
Images of Number Plates from Armenia
The first number plate is believed to be from the 1958 series, and has the sequence letter, two sets of two numbers, and two letters. The second plate, from the 1991 series, displays 'AM' for Armenia, and is made up of three numbers, two letters, and two numbers.
A little about Armenia
Armenia is a former republic of the USSR. It is bound by Georgia to the north, Azerbaijan to the east, Turkey to the west and southwest as well as Iran to the southeast. Topographically, the country can be divided into four regions. (1.) The northeastern area of folded back mountains which are the central ranges of the Lesser Caucasus. (2.) The central volcanic area which stretches to the Gukasian and Dzharakhetskii Ranges in the southwest and to the Karabakh Highlands in the southeast. This area also consists of lava plateaux, highlands and massifs with little surface drainage. (3.) The southern area which consists of a broken network of valleys and deep gorges and (4.) the northwestern area which comprises the Ararat Plain that is marked by a flat aggregated relief. The principal rivers are Arak and its tributaries while the largest lake is Lake Sevan. Major Cities (pop. est.); Yerevan 1,250,000, Gyumri 163,000, Kirovakan 76,000 (1989). Land Use; forested 14%, pastures 23%, agricultural-cultivated 19%, other 44% (1993)

