United States Singapore United Kingdom India Canada Australia China Germany South Africa Philippines France New Zealand Romania Ireland Russia Italy Netherlands Sweden Brazil Spain Pakistan South Korea Portugal Trinidad and Tobago Japan Hong Kong Mexico Greece Finland Thailand Indonesia Malaysia Hungary Denmark United Arab Emirates Israel Bangladesh Vietnam Belgium Norway Switzerland Turkey Nigeria Croatia Egypt Kenya Poland Taiwan Czech Republic Argentina Ukraine Austria Iran Serbia Saudi Arabia Puerto Rico Lithuania Ghana Bulgaria Sri Lanka Jamaica Colombia Uganda Chile Tanzania Mauritius Iraq Ecuador Slovakia Nepal Zimbabwe Qatar Cyprus Georgia Panama Peru Morocco Costa Rica North Macedonia Slovenia Latvia Kuwait Malta Lebanon Monaco Cambodia Tunisia Jordan Bosnia and Herzegovina U.S. Virgin Islands Estonia Moldova Venezuela Algeria Bahamas Albania Guernsey Belarus Kazakhstan Guam Myanmar Botswana Armenia Iceland Mozambique Fiji Cameroon Madagascar Zambia Mongolia Paraguay Dominican Republic Luxembourg Oman Brunei Darussalam French Guiana Bahrain Guyana Namibia Barbados Afghanistan Azerbaijan Palestinian Territory Jersey Ethiopia Saint Kitts and Nevis Cayman Islands Guatemala Malawi Laos Maldives Bermuda Yemen Papua New Guinea Antigua and Barbuda Northern Mariana Islands Aruba El Salvador Seychelles Nicaragua Martinique Bolivia Angola Burkina Faso Honduras Uzbekistan Rwanda Mali British Virgin Islands Dominica Bhutan Benin Macao French Polynesia Isle of Man Turkmenistan Belize Montenegro Curacao Syria Saint Lucia Kyrgyzstan Vatican City Anguilla Mauritania Cote D'Ivoire Libya Eswatini Democratic Republic of the Congo Grenada Haiti Cabo Verde Togo Suriname Saint Martin Guadeloupe Liberia Sudan Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Vanuatu Sierra Leone Gibraltar Faroe Islands Republic of the Congo 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