The Surprising Story Of Japan’s Glowing Licence Plates

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License plates are pretty similar wherever you go, either in the US or abroad. The vast majority are manufactured out of stamped steel with raised letters painted in a contrasting color. Travel to Japan, however, walk around at night, and you might spot something altogether more special. Over there, you can run backlit, illuminated plates on your vehicle that are totally legal.

These are referred to as jikō-shiki plates, which translates to “character-glowing type.” These plates are available from Japanese municipal authorities, with characters and numbers designed to be illuminated from behind.

At night, the effect is striking. Instead of seeing numbers and letters dimly lit by a weak exterior bulb, the characters glows green, bright, and sharply defined. These plates are assembled using translucent green plastic for the lettering and numbers.

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An illuminated plate lit by an LED frame from Asahi Kasei. The brand touts its illuminated frames as brighter and more evenly lit than the competition.

 

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via Asahi Kasei

Illuminated plates are also available for Kei vehicles, but they work a little differently. Privately owned Kei cars typically have black characters on a yellow background. The opaque black letters can’t be illuminated, so instead, a gap between the black lettering and the yellow surround is left transparent for light to shine through, giving the black letters a glowing outline  at night.

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via Asahi Kasei

 

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A set of black-on-yellow illuminated plates, via eBay.

 

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Note the gap between the black plastic and the metal plate backer. This allows light to leak out around the letters. via eBay

To use the jikō-shiki properly, an illuminated frame must be installed to shine light through the plate from behind. While the plates are issued by the usual authorities, the illuminated frame has to be purchased separately by the vehicle owner. Today, these frames are manufactured using white LEDs and can be wired into a vehicle’s 12-volt or 24-volt electrical system.

This wasn’t always the case. We can infer this from the fact that backlit plates were first released in November of 1970. White LEDs didn’t exist back then, and the LEDs that did were far too dim to be used for any sort of vehicle illumination. Instead, incandescent bulbs were used – and that’s actually a hint as to why these plates were developed in the first place.

You see, Japan didn’t invent backlit plates just because they’re awesome. The light-up plates were developed because regular license plates would often become obscured in Japan’s snowy regions during winter. Thus, a company called Hokuyo Musen developed a plate with an incandescent bulb that illuminated the letters from behind. The visibility-enhancing trick wasn’t so much that the light made the letters glow. It was the warm bulb’s ability to melt the character-obscuring snow.

Modern LED-lit versions don’t achieve this same feat, as LEDs operate with far less heat than glowing filaments in glass bulbs. But what they lack in snow-melting heat, they make up for in brightness and still improve visibility over regular painted plates.

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LED plate frames, like this model from TOM’S, are used to illuminate the plates from behind.

 

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The glow is enchanting and ethereal and I really feel like we’re all missing out by not having these in our lives. via TOM’S

 

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via Amazon

 

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The plate frames are designed to run off the vehicle’s 12-volt system. Often, the existing license plate light fitting is a perfect place to connect the device. via Amazon

Outside of Japan, the plates are little-known. However, they are prized by some JDM fans as a way to dress up their vehicle in a way that is authentic to its country of origin. In some US states without front plate requirements, an illuminated plate, either real or a replica, can be installed for what this writer thinks is a pretty sick look.

It’s not the first time I’ve found out about a weird light-up automotive accessory, but I’ll level with you. I crave this one more than most. The only thing holding me back is that Australia is absolutely Draconian when it comes to plate laws and I’d never get away with running one on the street. I might just have to settle for the official JDM knockoff plates that are endorsed by the state. I guess I’ll make do, because they’re pretty cool as well.

Image credits: TOM’S, Amazon, eBay, balbowskie187443 via YouTube screenshot, Asahi Kasei

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33 thoughts on “The Surprising Story Of Japan’s Glowing Licence Plates

  1. This would be interesting, they could keep the reflective effect they have and add this, or just add this by itself. I think it would be epic and would increase their “legibility”, unless it burns out. Then maybe have the reflective effect of US plates so you can still make it out, just not as well.

  2. There is at least one R32 Skyline running around the Raleigh area with a green-glowing plate on the front. I thought it was cool, but didn’t know until now that it was something that was actually issued in Japan.

    1. Get one for the front, if you live in a state that only uses one. Just make sure to get the one that’s correct for your vehicle! Don’t need to be the guy or girl with the kei van plate on a Celsior!

      1. We have to have front plates so :-(. It’s a HiAce and we know a guy so it will be correct, apart from our son wanting to install old Ford Explorer wheels

  3. I had never heard of this, that’s really cool.

    However, I do want to make one correction: “The vast majority are manufactured out of stamped steel with raised letters painted in a contrasting color.”

    Is that how they do it in AU? Most of the US uses aluminum license plates with painted(not stamped) letters, and has for quite some time now.

    1. Huh. I had to go look at my plates to confirm this, but even my old ones are just painted characters. I never noticed that they stopped raising the letters and numbers.

      1. Yeah they’ve been doing it this way for at least 20 years in most of the states out west here. I don’t think the old stamped plates were retro reflective like they are now.

        1. Here in missouri they still have raised letters on the basic standard issue ones, but any optional designs are flat. I believe they’re all made out of aluminum though.

    2. And in Europe they’ve been some sort plastic with a sticker on the back for as long as I can remember. I used to make them for people when I worked Sundays in Halfords in the 90s, only took 5 mins.

    1. Yep pretty much. The green letters and numbers might look a little bit translucent if the light hits it just right but they look 99% identical to a normal plate in the daytime.

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