Belize Flag Emoji 🇧🇿

Belize Flag
Flag of Belize

How To

How To

Time needed: 1 minute

How to copy and paste the Flag of Belize Emoji to any device.

  1. Copy the Belizian Flag Emoji

    Go to flagemoji.com and press the copy button (above). This works on any device.

  2. Paste the Emoji

    Go to your email/iMessage/SMS texting service/document and paste the emoji.
    For mobile devices
    — double-tap or tap-hold, then paste should appear. Tap it.
    For desktop and laptops on Apple devices
    — command-P / ⌘-P
    For desktop and laptops on Windows devices
    — control-p

Codes

Emoji Codes

Flag emojis are unicode symbols, like any other letter or number on your keyboard. This means you can copy and paste the emoji itself into your code, whatever the language (click the button above).

They actually count as two characters: the two-letter country code (the ISO international standard). The unicode and shortcode both represent country data which devices can interpret and display the emoji.

Country CodeUnicodeShortcode
BZU+1F1E7
U+1F1FF
:flag_BZ:
:BZ:

Emoji shortcodes are used on some platforms as a way for users to type in emojis from the keyboard. If you type the emoji shortcode on Github or Slack, the emoji will appear.

*The official name of the emoji is only the country name, not ‘Belize Flag’, for example.

Description

Description

The flag of Belize consists of royal blue with a narrow red stripe along the top and the bottom edges. Centered on the flag is a large white disk bearing a coat of arms. The coat of arms features a shield flanked by two workers in front of a mahogany tree with the related motto SUB UMBRA FLOREO (I Flourish in the Shade) on a scroll at the bottom. The coat of arms is encircled by a green garland of 50 mahogany leaves. The colors are those of the two main political parties: blue (PUP) and red (UDP). Various elements of the coat of arms—the figures, the tools, the mahogany tree, and the garland of leaves—recall the logging industry that led to British settlement of Belize.

Map

Map

Check out the map of Yemen!

Weather

Weather

In the Capital

BELMOPAN WEATHER

Curious about the weather in Grenada?

Anthem

National Anthem

TitleLand of the Free
ComposerSamuel Alfred Haynes / Selwyn Walford Young

FAQ

FAQs

What date did Belize gain their independence?

Belize declared independence on September 21, 1981.

What do the colors of the Belize flag stand for?

The colors on the flag of Belize are those of the two main political parties: blue for the PUP (People’s United Party) and red for the UDP (United Democratic Party).

When was the flag of Belize officially adopted?

The flag of Belize was officially adopted on September 21, 1981.

What type of government does Belize have?

Belize is governed by Parliamentary Democracy.

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Printable

Printable Belizian Flag

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Flag of Belize 🇧🇿 in 3d glossy render style

3D Glossy Render — Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag of Belize as a photorealistic 3D render. Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag fabric hangs or drapes naturally but preserves exact proportions, colors, and all symbols perfectly — completely faithful to the real Belize flag. Dramatic studio lighting, glossy silk material, soft shadows, subsurface scattering, perfect specular highlights. No text, no letters, no words, no writing of any kind.

Flag of Belize 🇧🇿 in chalk on blackboard style

Chalk on Blackboard — Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag of Belize drawn in chalk on a real blackboard. Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. Authentic blackboard — dark slate green surface with chalk dust and smudge marks. Soft, dusty white and colored chalk lines, imperfect edges, hand-drawn quality. Chalk dust particles visible in the air. The flag is immediately recognizable. No text, no letters, no words, no writing of any kind.

Flag of Belize 🇧🇿 in embroidered textile style

Embroidered Textile — Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag of Belize as intricate embroidery on linen fabric. Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. Dense satin stitches, French knots, chain stitch detail. The flag design is completely faithful — exact colors, geometry, and all symbols faithfully stitched, immediately recognizable as the Belize flag. Visible thread texture, dimensional quality, warm handcrafted feel. No text, no letters, no words, no writing of any kind.

Flag of Belize 🇧🇿 in flagpole in capital style

Flagpole in Capital — Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. Photorealistic photograph of the Belize flag flying on a tall flagpole in front of an iconic government building in the capital city. Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag ripples naturally in the wind, colors vivid and exact. Documentary photography style, sharp and realistic. Grand architecture in the background. Blue sky, dramatic clouds. No text, no letters, no words, no writing of any kind.

Flag of Belize 🇧🇿 in golden hour reflection style

Golden Hour Reflection — Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. Photorealistic photograph of the Belize flag reflected in still water at golden hour. Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag flies on a pole at the water’s edge, its reflection shimmering on the surface below. Warm amber and orange sunset light. The flag colors and design are faithful and vivid. Serene, cinematic landscape photography. No text, no letters, no words, no writing of any kind.

Flag of Belize 🇧🇿 in street art / graffiti style

Street Art / Graffiti — Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag of Belize as vibrant street art spray-painted on a brick wall. Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. Bold spray paint, dripping edges, stencil layers, overspray halos. The flag design is faithful and immediately recognizable — exact colors and symbols, just rendered in spray paint on urban concrete. No text, no letters, no words, no writing of any kind. No tags, no graffiti lettering.

Flag of Belize 🇧🇿 in sci-fi hologram style

Sci-Fi Hologram — Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag of Belize projected as a futuristic holographic display. Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. Translucent blue-white projection with scan lines, floating in dark space. Glitching edges, particle effects, data streams. The flag design is completely faithful and recognizable. Cyberpunk HUD elements framing the projection. No text, no letters, no words, no writing of any kind.

Flag of Belize 🇧🇿 in hyperrealistic wind style

Hyperrealistic Wind — Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. Ultra-hyperrealistic photograph of the Belize flag caught in a dramatic gust of wind. Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. Macro-level fabric detail — individual threads visible, fabric folds and tension lines crisp. Colors and design completely faithful to the real Belize flag. High-speed shutter, razor-sharp focus, studio lighting. No text, no letters, no words, no writing of any kind.

Flag of Belize 🇧🇿 in impressionist oil style

Impressionist Oil — Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag of Belize painted in French Impressionist oil on canvas. Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. Thick impasto brushstrokes, dappled light, vibrant broken color technique in the style of Monet. The flag is instantly recognizable — colors and design faithful to the real Belize flag, interpreted with impressionist light and texture. No text, no letters, no words, no writing of any kind.

Flag of Belize 🇧🇿 in lego bricks style

Lego Bricks — Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag of Belize built from Lego bricks, photographed as a real physical construction. Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. Visible studs and brick seams, slight plastic sheen. Standard Lego colors approximate the flag’s palette. Built on a gray Lego baseplate. Dramatic angle showing the three-dimensional brick texture. No text, no letters, no words, no writing of any kind.

Flag of Belize 🇧🇿 in low-poly geometric style

Low-Poly Geometric — Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag of Belize constructed from low-polygon geometric triangles. Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. Aggressively faceted — each region broken into many visible triangular faces with subtle color variation across each polygon, creating real depth and dimensionality even in flat-color areas of the flag. Crystal-like, contemporary computational design. The flag is completely faithful and immediately recognizable. No text, no letters, no words, no writing of any kind.

Flag of Belize 🇧🇿 in mosaic tiles style

Mosaic Tiles — Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag of Belize assembled as a Roman-style mosaic. Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag is completely faithful to the real Belize flag — exact proportions, colors, and all symbols, rendered in thousands of small stone and glass tesserae. Visible grout lines, rich earthy tones mixed with brilliant glass, slight historical weathering. No text, no letters, no words, no writing of any kind.

Flag of Belize 🇧🇿 in native landscape style

Native Landscape — Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. Photorealistic photograph of the Belize flag flying in an iconic natural landscape native to Belize — the terrain, flora, and environment characteristic of that country. Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag is prominent and its colors are faithful and vivid. Remote, uninhabited wilderness. National Geographic photography style. No text, no letters, no words, no writing of any kind.

Flag of Belize 🇧🇿 in neon sign style

Neon Sign — Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag of Belize recreated as a real neon sign mounted on a dark wall. Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. Glowing glass neon tubes bent into the flag’s shapes — the colors of the flag rendered in actual neon light. Visible glass tube bends, metal mounting brackets on the wall. Warm neon glow and light bloom. Real neon, not digital. Photographed in a dark room. No text, no letters, no words, no writing of any kind.

Flag of Belize 🇧🇿 in pencil sketch style

Pencil Sketch — Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag of Belize as a bold, confident pencil sketch. Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. Strong graphite lines on cream paper — not delicate but bold and decisive. Heavy pressure on key outlines, dramatic cross-hatching for deep shadows and shading. Immediately recognizable as the Belize flag. Artist’s confident hand, not tentative. No text, no letters, no words, no writing of any kind.

Flag of Belize 🇧🇿 in pixel art style

Pixel Art — Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag of Belize as detailed 16-bit pixel art. Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. Crisp pixel grid, limited palette with careful dithering, nostalgic retro game aesthetic. Clean grid-aligned design with subtle shading. Every element of the flag faithfully reproduced in pixels. No text, no letters, no words, no writing of any kind.

Flag of Belize 🇧🇿 in stained glass style

Stained Glass — Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag of Belize rendered as an ornate stained glass window. Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The design is completely faithful to the real Belize flag — exact colors, geometry, and all symbols preserved. Brilliant jewel-toned glass pieces separated by dark lead came lines. Warm sunlight streaming through, casting colored light. Gothic cathedral craftsmanship. No text, no letters, no words, no writing of any kind.

Flag of Belize 🇧🇿 in ukiyo-e woodblock style

Ukiyo-e Woodblock — Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag of Belize as a traditional Japanese ukiyo-e woodblock print. Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. Bold outlines, flat areas of rich color, flowing organic forms. Wind and waves incorporated into the composition. Printed on washi paper with visible wood grain texture. The flag is the central focus and instantly recognizable. No text, no letters, no words, no writing of any kind.

Flag of Belize 🇧🇿 in vintage postage stamp style

Vintage Postage Stamp — Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag of Belize as a vintage 1950s postage stamp. Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag fills most of the stamp — it is the primary subject, faithfully rendered in fine engraved intaglio style. Perforated edges, aged paper with slight foxing. The stamp may show a denomination numeral only — absolutely no other text or country names.

Flag of Belize 🇧🇿 in watercolor style

Watercolor — Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. The flag of Belize painted in loose, expressive watercolor. Blue field with red stripes at top and bottom and the coat of arms centered in a white circle. Wet-on-wet technique with soft color bleeds, visible brushstrokes, natural paper texture. Delicate splashes and drips at the edges. Luminous, translucent layers of pigment. No text, no letters, no words, no writing of any kind.


Belize’s flag represents a unique fusion of indigenous Central American heritage and European colonial history, distinguished by its uncommon design featuring the national coat of arms as a central focal point rather than peripheral decoration. Adopted in 1981 upon the nation’s independence from British colonial rule, the flag departed significantly from Commonwealth traditions to create a symbol deeply rooted in Belizean identity, particularly honoring the Mayan and Creole populations that form the cultural foundation of the nation. The flag’s bold composition—a bright blue field with red horizontal stripes at the top and bottom and a detailed coat of arms centered within a white circle—makes Belize’s flag one of the most distinctive and emblematically complex national banners in the Caribbean and Central America, reflecting the country’s commitment to celebrating its diverse heritage and asserting its unique post-colonial identity in the broader context of Latin American nationalism and self-determination.

The symbolism embedded within Belize’s flag carries profound layers of meaning that speak to the nation’s foundational identity and historical journey. The predominant bright blue field represents the Caribbean Sea and ocean resources that have historically sustained Belizean life and commerce, acknowledging the nation’s maritime heritage and economic dependence on fishing, coastal trade, and tourism industries centered around the famous Belize Barrier Reef and cayes. The red horizontal stripes framing the top and bottom of the flag honor the Maya peoples who inhabited and ruled the region for millennia before European contact, with red specifically symbolizing the blood shed by ancient Maya warriors and the revolutionary struggle of the contemporary Belizean population in their quest for independence and self-governance. The intricate coat of arms occupying the center of the flag further enriches this symbolic tapestry by incorporating multiple historical and cultural references: it features a shield supported by a mahogany tree on the left and a fig tree on the right, representing Belize’s crucial timber and agricultural resources that drove early colonial economic development and international trade relationships. Within the shield itself, the crossed saw and axe represent the logging industry that historically dominated Belize’s economy and shaped its colonial development, while three wavy blue lines represent the three main water systems—the Caribbean Sea and major river systems—that form the geographic foundation of Belizean territory and identity.

The banner above the shield bearing the Latin motto “Sub Umbra Floreo,” meaning “Under the Shade I Flourish,” encapsulates the nation’s philosophical stance and historical self-understanding, suggesting that Belize’s prosperity and development have emerged through protection of its natural resources and sustainable relationship with its environment. This environmental consciousness reflected in the national symbol has become increasingly relevant in contemporary Belize, where conservation of rainforests, coral reefs, and biodiversity has become central to national identity and international conservation partnerships. The coat of arms itself represents the evolution of Belizean identity from a colonial outpost defined by resource extraction to an independent nation conscious of its historical heritage, environmental stewardship, and multicultural composition comprising Maya, Creole, Garífuna, East Indian, and Mestizo populations, each with distinct historical narratives and contemporary cultural contributions to Belizean society.

Belize’s path to its distinctive flag began during the colonial period when the territory was known as British Honduras, existing as a British colony from the eighteenth century until the late twentieth century. The colonial period saw the development of a Creole-dominant society built on the foundations of the mahogany trade, sugar production, and enslaved African labor, experiences that shaped Belizean culture, language, music, and social structures in profound ways. Throughout the nineteenth and much of the twentieth century, British Honduras maintained close ties to British sovereignty and cultural traditions, though indigenous Maya populations and later-arriving immigrant groups continuously maintained distinct identities, languages, and cultural practices. The push toward independence gained significant momentum during the latter half of the twentieth century, as nationalist movements across the Caribbean and Central America challenged colonial dominance and asserted the rights of colonized peoples to self-determination and independent statehood. Belizean nationalist leaders and activists worked throughout the 1960s and 1970s to build political institutions, develop civil society, and mobilize popular support for independence, ultimately securing recognition from the British government and the international community.

When Belize achieved independence on September 21, 1981, the nation simultaneously introduced its distinctive new flag, a calculated and symbolic break from colonial tradition that asserted Belizean sovereignty and identity in tangible, visible form. Unlike many newly independent nations that retained modified versions of colonial flags or adopted flags reflecting neighboring regional powers, Belize’s leadership consciously designed a flag that would speak directly to the nation’s historical experience, multicultural composition, and future aspirations. The coat of arms that dominates the flag—occupying unprecedented prominence compared to most national flags globally—was selected as the centerpiece precisely because it encapsulates the complexity of Belizean identity and history, refusing any reduction to simple geometric patterns or minimal symbolism. This design choice reflected democratic deliberation about what the nation’s visual identity should communicate to both internal and external audiences, and the resulting flag has achieved iconic status within Belize and recognition internationally as a unique and distinctive emblem of a small but culturally significant Central American nation.

The adoption of Belize’s independence flag in 1981 represented more than aesthetic choice; it constituted a deliberate assertion of post-colonial identity and rejection of ongoing territorial disputes with neighboring Guatemala, which had historically claimed parts of Belizean territory and continued to question the legitimacy of Belize’s international boundaries. The flag’s prominence of Belizean symbols and historical references served as a visual argument for Belizean legitimacy and international standing, asserting the nation’s right to exist as a sovereign state with recognized borders and full participation in the international community. Throughout the subsequent decades, the Belizean flag has maintained its design specifications while becoming increasingly integral to national pride, public celebrations, and international representation. The flag appears prominently at government buildings, educational institutions, and public events throughout Belize, and Belizeans carry the flag with particular pride during independence day celebrations on September 21, when parades, cultural performances, and civic ceremonies throughout the nation’s cities and villages affirm national unity and commemorate the independence achievement.

In comparative context, Belize’s flag stands apart from most Caribbean and Central American national flags due to its deliberate incorporation of the coat of arms as a dominant central element and its unusual color scheme of blue with red horizontal stripes. Most national flags employ simpler geometric designs, limited color palettes, and minimal or peripheral heraldic elements, making Belize’s flag visually complex and semantically rich in ways that distinguish it regionally and globally. The bright blue field creates visual contrast with the deeper red stripes, while the intricate details of the centered coat of arms demand viewer attention and engagement with Belize’s historical narrative and cultural identity. This visual complexity has made Belize’s flag instantly recognizable among those familiar with national flags and has contributed to its adoption as a symbol of Belizean pride and identity across diaspora communities, international sporting events, and diplomatic contexts where national representation becomes necessary and meaningful.

Sources: Wikipedia – Flag of Belize; Britannica – Belize: History and Government; World Population Review – Belize Flag and Symbols; Flags of All Nations – Belize National Flag

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