Vehicle owner must qualify for a permanent walking disability placard. Handicap - Motorcycle - Vanity. Must be issued to vehicles designed and employed as hearses, and owned and operated by a person licensed and registered pursuant to RSA A "Moped" shall mean a motor-driven cycle whose speed is attainable in one mile is 30 miles per hour or less; if an internal combustion engine is used, the piston displacement shall not exceed 50 cubic centimeters and the power-drive system shall not require the operator to shift gears.
Motorcycle 60 day. Handicap Motorcycle -Vanity. Ampersand not available for this plate type. Motorcycle - Vanity 60 day. Ampersand not availalble for this plate type. National Guard 60 day. National Guard - Vanity 60 days. Passenger 60 day. Passenger - Vanity 60 day. Pearl Harbor Survivor. Customer must provide paperwork showing that they are a Pearl Harbor Survivor. Transfers only processed at any Municipal Agent office. Purple Heart. Customer must provide paperwork indicating that they were honorably discharged and were awarded the Purple Heart.
Purple Heart - Vanity 60 day. First time issuance the customer must have their paperwork indicating that they were honorably discharged and were awarded the Purple Heart. Purple Heart Motorcycle 60 day.
For first time issuance the customer must have their paperwork indicating that they were honorably discharged and were awarded the purple heart. Purple Heart Motorcycle - Vanity 60 day. For first time issuance the customer must have their paperwork indicating that they were honorably discharged and were awarded the Purple Heart.
School Bus 60 day. For Vehicles employed solely in transporting school children to and from school or school activities. Special Commercial 60 day. Special commercial vehicles serve no other purpose than to transport a permanently mounted piece of equipment, which is an integral part of the unit.
State Park 60 day. Street Rod. Street Rod - Vanity. Trailer 60 day. Trailer - Vanity 60 day. Veteran 60 day. For first time issuance the customer must have their paperwork indicating that they qualify as a veteran. Veteran - Vanity 60 day. These plates allow for a 3" x 3" authorized decal to be placed on the plate.
The legislature approves which organizations are allowed to sell decals to be placed on these plates. Please see our Decal Plate page for more detailed information and for a list of authorized organizations. Vanity Plate: Vanity Plate means a personalized registration plate composed entirely of alpha characters, alpha numerical characters or a combination of symbols and alpha numerical characters, which can be obtained for an additional fee.
For more information on how to request a vanity plate, please visit our Vanity Plates webpage. Veteran Plate: Veteran plates shall be issued to a motor vehicle registered pursuant to RSA b. These plates were issued through the end of Well, after establishing in that the state didn't want their plates to resemble Massachusetts plates, New Hampshire had the initial batch of base plates produced in Massachusetts, using the same colors, dies and materials as Massachusetts' base, resulting in a plate that pretty much looked exactly like theirs.
Massachusetts produced plates in the and range, with others made in-state using standard New Hampshire dies. No county codes were used on these plates.
Starting with the advent of staggered registration in , New Hampshire registrations expire in the same month as the registrant's birthday. Therefore, plates such as this one, first issued in and also expiring in , show up quite often.
Same series as above, but with standard New Hampshire dies. This base was used from through Once plates from 1 through were exhausted, the state started issuing five numeric-one alpha plates. The series made it to the mid "G" series by the time this base was retired in This new issue debuted in It featured a screened background with the Old Man of the Mountains within the state name. The "Live Free or Die" slogan was lightly written at the bottom of the plate, causing controversy with those who felt it was not prominent enough.
Again, the courts spoke up and ruled in favor of a resident who had bolted the slogan from an old plate over the new one. Can't please everyone Continuation of the above plate. The first , or so of these plates were produced using an especially light shade of green for the state name and slogan, which was darkened up a bit on plates from the series forward.
You may note the darker shade on this plate compared to the one above it. My scanner isn't especially good at reproducing green to begin with, though, so this may be one you'll have to take my word for. When plate number was reached, the state changed to an ABC format.
At the same time, the baseplate was changed so that the slogan was more prominent - printed larger, bolder and in all caps. This change occurred in , with plate number AAA This plate series reached the "DEW" series before these plates were discontinued in January, Near the end of the "A" series of plates, a miniscule change was made to these plates.
The boltholes were changed from a round hole to this more elongated oval pattern, allowing the plates to be mounted more easily to vehicles where the mounting holes were a little "off". This particular plate demonstrates the rather lax standard that New Hampshire used at the time to weed out potentially offensive plate numbers. I was actually staying with relatives in Londonderry, NH at the time that the "BUM" series of plates was being issued.
I maintain to this day that there are few sights in this world more amusing than seeing someone driving a new BMW or Mercedes around with license plates that say "BUM" on them. Good times New Hampshire started issuing these new graphic baseplates to all passenger registrations in January, and they should replace all previous base plates by the end of March, This graphic features a more prominent likeness of the Old Man of the Mountains, with a blue sky fading to the left of the mountain, which extends to the right.
Reaction to this base has been mixed, with some complaints about readability. I like it a lot, myself. Passenger registration numbers from 1 through , as well as vanity plates, are issued on this modified baseplate which moves the Old Man graphic to the far right of the plate.
When the state switched over to these new graphic plates in , motorists with existing all-numeric plate numbers were given the option of keeping their old numbers at no charge. Plateholders with ABC format registrations, however, could only hold onto their old plate numbers by requesting them as vanity plates in this format.
This format with the entire serial squished together has not been especially popular, and few motorists opted to keep their old plate numbers in this manner. If anyone has a good explanation for why the state did this , please fill me in.
New Hampshire seemed to rush the changeover process to these plates and as a result didn't plan ahead very well.
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