United States India Turkey Brazil United Kingdom South Korea France Canada Germany Italy Russia Israel Romania Netherlands Mexico Spain Trinidad and Tobago Poland Greece Argentina China Japan Egypt Serbia Australia Pakistan Indonesia Chile Colombia Albania Belgium Vietnam Philippines Honduras Peru Malaysia Ukraine Taiwan Portugal Hungary Singapore Bulgaria Dominican Republic Czech Republic Switzerland Iraq Bermuda Thailand Sweden Croatia Saudi Arabia Sri Lanka South Africa Tunisia Georgia Austria Slovakia Ecuador Venezuela Norway Kenya Bosnia and Herzegovina North Macedonia Ireland Denmark Nigeria Morocco Azerbaijan Lithuania Slovenia Ghana Iran Algeria United Arab Emirates Kuwait Puerto Rico Uganda Mongolia Bolivia Jamaica Costa Rica Jordan Paraguay Finland Benin Armenia Namibia Maldives Moldova Qatar Bangladesh Kazakhstan Hong Kong Kyrgyzstan Montenegro Uruguay New Zealand Latvia Lebanon El Salvador Cyprus Curacao Cote D'Ivoire Haiti Guatemala Malta Bahamas Nicaragua Aruba Cambodia Guyana Saint Lucia Belize Antigua and Barbuda Guam Netherlands Antilles Mauritius Senegal Tanzania Barbados Bahrain Botswana Nepal Madagascar Suriname Iceland Panama Tajikistan Estonia U.S. Virgin Islands Belarus Cayman Islands Saint Vincent and the Grenadines French Guiana Mauritania Oman Libya British Virgin Islands Democratic Republic of the Congo Kosovo Dominica Uzbekistan Malawi Mozambique Gambia Somalia New Caledonia Djibouti Gibraltar Zambia Afghanistan Cameroon Bhutan Grenada Yemen San Marino Ethiopia Palestinian Territory Guadeloupe Seychelles Togo Niger Faroe Islands Burkina Faso Laos Guinea American Samoa Reunion Sao Tome and Principe Northern Mariana Islands French Polynesia Syria Caribbean Netherlands Martinique Gabon Mali Zimbabwe Anguilla Greenland Sierra Leone Turks and Caicos Islands Isle of Man Myanmar Aland Islands Flag Meaning & Details NO VISITORS FROM HERE YET! Aland Islands Flag Flag Information The flag is the Swedish flag defaced by a red cross symbolising Finland. (Today, blue and white are considered the Finnish colours, but in the early days of Finnish nationalism, red and yellow from the Finnish coat of arms were also an option.)
Source: CIA - The World Factbook