UN Locodes For 6288 Cities Around The World...
Map Showing Members of The United Nations:
Find UN Locodes:
Select a country from the list below to get the UN Locodes for cities and towns.
Africa:
Algeria,
Angola,
Benin,
Botswana,
Burkina Faso,
Burundi,
Cameroon,
Cape Verde,
Central African Republic,
Chad,
Comoros,
Congo,
Congo – Democratic Republic,
Côte d’Ivoire,
Djibouti,
Egypt,
Equatorial Guinea,
Eritrea,
Ethiopia,
Gabon,
Gambia,
Ghana,
Guinea,
Guinea–Bissau,
Kenya,
Lesotho,
Liberia,
Libya,
Madagascar,
Malawi,
Mali,
Mauritania,
Mayotte,
Morocco,
Mozambique,
Namibia,
Niger,
Nigeria,
Rwanda,
Senegal,
Sierra Leone,
Somalia,
Somaliland,
South Africa,
Sudan,
Swaziland,
Tanzania,
Togo,
Tunisia,
Uganda,
Western Sahara,
Zambia,
Zimbabwe,
Antarctica:
Antarctica,
Asia:
Afghanistan,
Bangladesh,
Bhutan,
Brunei Darussalam,
Cambodia,
China,
East Timor,
Hong Kong,
India,
Indonesia,
Japan,
Korea – North,
Korea – South,
Laos,
Macao,
Malaysia,
Maldives,
Mongolia,
Myanmar,
Nepal,
Pakistan,
Philippines,
Principality of New Pacific,
Singapore,
South China Sea Islands,
Sri Lanka,
Taiwan – Chinese Taipei,
Thailand,
Vietnam,
Atlantic Ocean:
Bouvet Island,
Saint Helena,
São Tomé and Príncipe,
South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands,
Caribbean:
Anguilla,
Antigua and Barbuda,
Aruba,
Bahamas,
Barbados,
Cayman Islands,
Cuba,
Dominica,
Dominican Republic,
Grenada,
Guadeloupe,
Haiti,
Jamaica,
Martinique,
Montserrat,
Navassa Island,
Netherlands Antilles,
Puerto Rico,
Saint Barthélemy,
Saint Kitts and Nevis,
Saint Lucia,
Saint Martin (France),
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines,
Trinidad and Tobago,
Turks and Caicos Islands,
Virgin Islands, British,
Virgin Islands, U.S.,
Central America:
Belize,
Costa Rica,
El Salvador,
Guatemala,
Honduras,
Nicaragua,
Panama,
Eurasia:
Armenia,
Azerbaijan,
Belarus,
Georgia,
Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan,
Moldova,
Nagorno–Karabakh,
Russia,
Tajikistan,
Turkey,
Turkmenistan,
Ukraine,
Uzbekistan,
Europe:
Åland Islands,
Albania,
Andorra,
Austria,
Belgium,
Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Bulgaria,
Croatia,
Czech Republic,
Denmark,
Estonia,
Faroe Islands,
Finland,
France,
Germany,
Gibraltar,
Greece,
Guernsey,
Hungary,
Iceland,
Ireland,
Isle of Man,
Italy,
Jersey,
Latvia,
Liechtenstein,
Lithuania,
Luxembourg,
Macedonia,
Malta,
Monaco,
Montenegro,
Netherlands,
Norway,
Poland,
Portugal,
Principality of Sealand,
Rockall,
Romania,
San Marino,
Serbia,
Slovakia,
Slovenia,
Spain,
Svalbard and Jan Mayen,
Sweden,
Switzerland,
United Kingdom,
Vatican City,
Indian Ocean:
Ashmore and Cartier Islands,
Bassas da India,
British Indian Ocean Territory,
Christmas Island,
Cocos (Keeling) Islands,
Europa Island,
French Southern and Antarctic Territories,
Glorioso Islands,
Heard Island and McDonald Islands,
Juan de Nova Island,
Mauritius,
Réunion,
Seychelles,
Tromelin Island,
Middle East:
Akrotiri,
Bahrain,
Cyprus,
Dhekelia,
Iran,
Iraq,
Israel,
Jordan,
Kuwait,
Lebanon,
Oman,
Palestinian Territory,
Qatar,
Saudi Arabia,
Syria,
United Arab Emirates,
Yemen,
North America:
Bermuda,
Canada,
Greenland,
Mexico,
Saint Pierre and Miquelon,
United States,
North Pacific:
Clipperton Island,
Federated States of Micronesia,
Guam,
Marshall Islands,
Midway Islands,
Northern Mariana Islands,
Palau,
United States Minor Outlying Islands,
South America:
Argentina,
Bolivia,
Brazil,
Chile,
Colombia,
Ecuador,
Falkland Islands,
French Guiana,
Guyana,
Paraguay,
Peru,
Suriname,
Uruguay,
Venezuela,
South Pacific:
American Samoa,
Australia,
Cook Islands,
Coral Sea Islands Territory,
Fiji,
French Polynesia,
Kiribati,
Nauru,
New Caledonia,
New Zealand,
Niue,
Norfolk Island,
Papua New Guinea,
Pitcairn,
Republic of Minerva,
Samoa,
Solomon Islands,
Tokelau,
Tonga,
Tuvalu,
Vanuatu,
Wallis and Futuna,
— Back To Top —
What Are Un Locodes?
UN LOCODE, the United Nations Code for Trade and Transport Locations, is a geographic coding scheme developed and maintained by United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE), a unit of the United Nations. UN LOCODE assigns codes to locations used in trade and transport with functions such as seaports, rail and road terminals, airports, post offices and border crossing points. The first issue in 1981 contained codes for 8,000 locations. Twenty–seven years later, Issue 2007, released in 2008, contained 58,875 locations.
UN LOCODES have five characters. The first two are letters, and come from the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country codes. Normally three letters will follow, but if there are not enough combinations, numbers from 2 to 9 can also be used. For the US the 17,575 possible permutations of 3–character codes have been almost exhausted in 2006. Hence, the secretariat for the first time introduced 646 entries to the 2006-2 issue of UN LOCODE where the third position of 3–character codes is represented by a numerical digit 2 to 9. The 2007 issue of UN LOCODE contains 689 such US entries.
For each country there can be a maximum of 35*35*35 = 42,875 entries.
For airports, the three letters following the country code are not always identical to the IATA airport code. According to the secretariat note for Issue 2006-2, there are 720 locations showing a different IATA code.
Beside the abbreviation, UN LOCODE also defines a spelling for each location that can be written without special characters. This is achieved by stripping off the diacritics from the (romanized) local name.
— Back To Top —
Reference Links:
— Back To Top —
Current World Time...
You can change these times by setting your preferences. Additionally, Your Clock allows you to compare the time for up to 14 different cities around the world.
— Back To Top —
|