Why Cape Town’s License Plates Look Like a Rental‑Car Fleet
The First Impression
When Xizo‑Nyama, a Johannesburg‑based content creator, first drove through Cape Town she noticed something odd:
“I thought people in Cape Town had rental cars or something,” she says. “Their license plates are weird.”
The plates she saw – CA, CY, CJ, CF, CEY, CFM – looked like the temporary tags you’d see at an airport rental counter. Yet they belonged to everyday locals just trying to get to work or school.
What Most South Africans Expect
In the rest of the country the system is simple:
- GP = Gauteng
- EC = Eastern Cape
- KZN = KwaZulu‑Natal
Seeing those two‑letter codes tells you instantly which province a vehicle comes from. No guessing, no stress.
How the Western Cape Does It Differently
Regional Prefixes Instead of a Single Province Code
The Western Cape broke away from the provincial‑only format. Instead of using one code for the whole province, it assigns prefixes based on the city or town where the vehicle was first registered:
| Prefix | Area |
|---|---|
| CA | Cape Town (city) |
| CY | Bellville |
| CJ | Paarl |
| CK | Malmesbury |
| CEY | Strand |
| CFM | Somerset West |
Why the Codes Vary in Length
The system harks back to an older municipal approach:
- Larger urban areas got shorter codes (CA for Cape Town).
- Smaller towns received longer combinations (CEY for Strand, CFM for Somerset West).
When the original “CA” series ran out, the authority didn’t switch to a provincial label like “WC”. It simply extended the series to “CAA”, “CAB”, and so on, keeping the same regional logic.
What You’ll See on the Road
Because the prefix reflects the *original* registration place, a car with a “CJ” plate (originally from Paarl) might now be parked next to a “CY” car (originally from Bellville) in a Cape Town mall. The plate tells you where the vehicle started, not where it lives today.
Clearing Up the Rental‑Car Myth
The confusion is understandable. The plates look temporary, almost like something you’d pick up at a car‑hire desk. In reality:
- They are permanent registrations issued by the Western Cape’s licensing authority.
- Each combination is a geographic tag, not a fleet identifier.
- All the cars you see are privately owned, company‑owned, or government‑owned vehicles going about their daily routines.
Key Takeaway
Cape Town’s license‑plate system is a legacy of local municipal coding that survived while the rest of South Africa moved to a uniform provincial style. Once you know the pattern, the “alphabet soup” becomes a quick guide to where each vehicle first hit the road.
Conclusion
Next time you spot a CA, CY, or CJ plate cruising through the Mother City, remember: it’s not a rental‑car convoy. It’s just a piece of the Western Cape’s registration history, telling a longer story about where each car began its journey.


