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Next time you鈥檙e waiting in a queue at the airport where everyone has their passports out, take a look around and count the colours you can see. Here鈥檚 a weird secret of travel: you鈥檒l only find four of them; black, blue, green and red.

Passport colours
Although shades vary, passports can only be found in four colours 漏 Sergey Shik / Shutterstock

Sure, there are different shades within each colour, from the light sea-blue of the island nations of Fiji and Tuvalu to the almost black of Croatia鈥檚 dark blue, but every passport you spot will be one of the four primary colours.

Counting country by country, blue is the most popular colour, perhaps because it seems the most official. Red is next, then green, then black. And, in case you were wondering, there鈥檚 no European Union regulation that says members have to have the same colour passports.

Hang on, the UK could have had blue passports all along?

You might remember that one of the reasons some people were in support of Brexit was that they wanted blue passports instead of 鈥渞ed, European Union鈥 ones. (The old UK passports, the pre-computerised cardboard ones with names written in that some were harkening back to, were in some cases actually black, with the UK government asking people renewing passports whether their old one was blue, black or red.)

And there鈥檚 no EU rule dictating the colour of members鈥 passports, although for ease of use all the way back in 1981 when it was the European Community, the member governments resolved to include some common elements including the burgundy colour and the words 鈥淓uropean Community鈥, as it was then, for ease of freer movement.

Close-up of Schengen visa and EU coins.
Regulations around passports are surprisingly relaxed in certain regards 漏 maybefalse/Getty Images

Wait, no rules about what passports look like either?

There are surprisingly few rules about the form and shape that passports have to take. In fact, the rules on passports are weirdly non-specific.

Primary guidelines come from the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO), a body of the United Nations. The standards are really aimed at making the passports able to be read by computers, whether that鈥檚 the old-school swiping style or the newer scanning method. (ICAO also makes the standards for those biometric, chip-enabled passports.)

The rules are contained in the 86-page Doc 9303, 鈥淢achine Readable Travel Documents鈥, and interestingly, it only specifies six things about the physical document itself: deformation, toxicity, resistance to chemicals, temperature stability, humidity, and light.

In general, it shouldn鈥檛 deform in a passport reader that requires it to be flat, shouldn鈥檛 be toxic, should be resistant to chemicals, should work at -10掳C to +50掳C (that鈥檚 14掳F to 122掳F), should work in humidity from 5% to 95%, and should resist deteriorating from light with normal use.

It also 鈥渟hould not lose its reliability after being stored at, or exposed to, a relative air humidity ranging from 0% to 100%鈥, but don鈥檛 get any funny ideas about dropping yours in the hotel swimming pool. That鈥檚 a pretty bad idea.

Immigration and passport control at the airport. Female border control officer puts a stamp in the US passport of an American citizen.
Most of the laws are there to ensure the passport can be scanned 漏 FTiare/Getty Images

So, no rules on the text or anything else?

Not as many as you might think! There are some suggestions about the photo page (officially the Visual Inspection Zone), which basically says that it should be the Latin alphabet (A-Z) and Arabic numbers (0-9), with some additions like the Icelandic th and German double-S, and a whole lot of suggestions on how to transliterate other alphabets like Cyrillic and Arabic.

One set of recommendations is around the letters on type size, with 15 characters per 25.4mm (that鈥檚 one inch) the recommended minimum 鈥渁s the smallest in which information is clear and legible to a person with normal eyesight.鈥

Upper-case capitals are recommended, although not required, and special carveouts are mentioned for prefixes (like de or da, le or la, von, and so on).

Each of the pieces of information is supposed to be captioned, and if it鈥檚 not in French, English or Spanish that information is supposed to be translated into one of those three languages, in italics.

Even names are complicated: in some cultures and countries, like in Indonesia for example, some people have only one name. That鈥檚 called the 鈥減rimary identifier鈥 here, alongside what we might think of as 鈥渇amily names鈥.

Then there鈥檚 the swipeable or scannable section at the bottom, and it鈥檚 all-caps letters and numbers only: so someone named D鈥橝rtagnan becomes DARTAGNAN.

There鈥檚 then the 鈥渟econdary identifier鈥, which you might call the 鈥済iven name鈥, although I should note that some of these naming concepts are different across cultures.

But if you have a family name and a given name (or names), you鈥檒l note a double 鈮 between them. So, our musketeer friend would be DARTAGNAN鈮狢HARLES.

How do I know if my passport is damaged, or if my personal information is wrong?

Whenever you get a new passport back from the passport office, it鈥檚 always a good idea to make sure that everything has gone well. Check both the captioned bit with your name and personal information laid out more legibly, and also that it matches the machine-readable bit at the bottom.

Keep your passport safe, of course, but also treat it with care. If you somehow manage to break the chip inside then the fast-track machines may not work, and even worse if there鈥檚 anything that could be a sign of tampering then airlines are allowed (indeed required in many cases) to refuse you travel.

Check the photo page every so often in particular: this is the one that gets scanned and, if you travel a lot, is the page most prone to fraying at the edge. Talk to your local passport office in that case, because you don鈥檛 want to turn up at the airport unable to fly!

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