Hungary United States United Kingdom Canada Australia Ireland New Zealand India Russia Brazil Germany Vietnam China Mexico Netherlands Romania Turkey Saudi Arabia Philippines Spain Indonesia Italy Ukraine Austria France Thailand Colombia Serbia Japan Peru Algeria Egypt Poland Slovakia Venezuela Belarus Argentina South Korea Uzbekistan Sweden Ecuador Greece Dominican Republic Malaysia South Africa Czech Republic Israel Chile Portugal Bulgaria Pakistan Hong Kong Kazakhstan Switzerland Morocco Taiwan Nepal Myanmar Kenya United Arab Emirates Bangladesh Bolivia Guatemala Costa Rica Belgium Cambodia Denmark Singapore Croatia Ethiopia Honduras Senegal Mongolia Jamaica Finland Azerbaijan Cote D'Ivoire Moldova Trinidad and Tobago Oman Jordan Paraguay Norway Kuwait Palestinian Territory Georgia Lithuania Kyrgyzstan Slovenia Tunisia Latvia Sri Lanka Armenia Kosovo Qatar Laos North Macedonia Puerto Rico Albania Ghana Bosnia and Herzegovina Zambia Nigeria Panama Republic of the Congo Gabon Cyprus Burkina Faso Uruguay Libya Angola Madagascar Belize Tajikistan Bahrain Uganda Mauritius Nicaragua Togo Bahamas Maldives Rwanda Botswana Cameroon Fiji Tanzania Guyana Montenegro Suriname Yemen Malta Somalia Barbados Saint Lucia El Salvador Benin Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Malawi Reunion Antigua and Barbuda Brunei Darussalam U.S. Virgin Islands Luxembourg Cuba Mozambique Seychelles New Caledonia French Guiana Mali Djibouti Burundi Saint Kitts and Nevis Afghanistan Iceland Cabo Verde Aruba Haiti Mayotte Democratic Republic of the Congo Liberia Equatorial Guinea Mauritania Namibia Northern Mariana Islands Niger Gambia Sao Tome and Principe Turks and Caicos Islands Sint Maarten Estonia American Samoa Anguilla Comoros Guinea Zimbabwe Guadeloupe French Polynesia San Marino Iran Curacao 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