Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 14, 2026

Mandatory (typeface)

Mandatory, also known as Charles Wright 2001, is a typeface developed from the Charles Wright typeface, introduced for use on vehicle registration plates of the United Kingdom. Its block letters and numbers are designed to prevent easy modification and to improve legibility, with stroke separation on the M and W which are pointed at the centre, and the tail of the Q which is thinner and clearer. It was developed in the United Kingdom and is also used by Brazil, Commonwealth countries, Jordan, and Yemen for numerals since 2018.

Last revised
Jun 14, 2026
Read time
≈ 1 min
Length
229 w
Citations
3
Source
Mandatory
CategorySans-serif
Also known asCharles Wright 2001


Sample

Mandatory, also known as Charles Wright 2001,1 is a typeface developed from the Charles Wright typeface,2 introduced for use on vehicle registration plates of the United Kingdom. Its block letters and numbers are designed to prevent easy modification and to improve legibility, with stroke separation on the M and W which are pointed at the centre, and the tail of the Q which is thinner and clearer. It was developed in the United Kingdom and is also used by Brazil (where it was mandatory from 2008 to 2018—prior to the adoption of Mercosur plates), Commonwealth countries, Jordan, and Yemen (Taiz Governorate) for numerals since 2018.

In the United Kingdom, characters on vehicle registration plates purchased from 1 September 2001 must use Mandatory typeface and conform to set specifications as to width, height, stroke, spacing and margins. The physical characteristics of the number plates are set out in British Standard BS AU 145e (or BS AU 145d for plates fitted before 1 September 2021), which specifies visibility, strength, and reflectivity.3

See also

See also

References

References

  1. Buchan, Sophie; Garrett, Lee (7 February 2026). "Drivers risk £1,000 fine and MOT failure over little-known rule". Derbyshire Live. Retrieved 6 April 2026.
  2. "Mandatory Font | dafont.com". www.dafont.com. Retrieved 31 March 2018.
  3. "Find out about vehicle registration numbers and number plates (INF104)". GOV.UK. 12 April 2022. Retrieved 21 April 2024.