New Zealand passport specimens at the Department of Internal Affairs. Photo / File
New Zealanders with a passport will be familiar with its look.
With the cover featuring the country's coat of arms, the English and Te Reo Maori translations stating the booklet's purpose, and a silver fern down the side, it's instantly identifiable to Kiwis.
But did you ever stop to wonder why it's black?
Or why Australia's is blue?
Or why the British passport is red — at least, for now?
Or why, in the whole wide world of passports, there aren't many other options?
No-nonsense black is not overly common. It's the colour adopted for passports in a handful of countries including the Palestinian Territories and New Zealand, where black is a colour of national significance.
And that's largely what passport colours come down to.
"Governments around the world have the freedom to choose the colour and design. Unfortunately, only few have understood the importance of this document on their country's brand identity," says Hrant Boghossian, the vice president of marketing at financial advisory firm Arton Capital, which runs the Passport Index website.
Black is also commonly used for diplomatic passports and some older generation Australian passports appeared black.
Our black passport has the added benefit of being one of the few passports that doesn't get easily marked or dirty. It's smart and stylish.
There are no official rules governing the choice of passport colour, but every passport in the world is either blue, red, green or black.
It also doesn't matter what shade of those colours are used, but darker shades — navy blue, burgundy, forest green — seem to be the most popular options.
There are strong geographical, political and even religious reasons why countries choose the passport colour they do.
And it's mainly because passports reflect national identity, says Hrant Boghossian, the vice president of marketing at financial advisory firm Arton Capital, which runs the Passport Index website.
BLUE
Australia has a blue passport and so does the United States, Canada, Hong Kong, and a whole host of countries across Africa, Central and South America, and island nations in the Pacific.
Boghossian said the blue colour may be symbolic of New World countries in those regions, according to the UK's Telegraph.
He also noted there was huge variations of the colour, based on national preference.
Most "blue passport" countries, like Australia, have adopted a dark shade but others, like Fiji, have run with a lighter, brighter sky blue.
The US switched the colour of its passport in 1976 from green to a shade of blue similar to the blue on the national flag.
RED
Again, shades of red vary across the countries that have adopted this passport colour, from the orange-red of Singapore to the rosier red of Cyprus, with deep burgundy a popular choice across Europe.
"Some could argue that the burgundy red is due to a past communist history," Boghossian said.
Burgundy is now linked with the European Union, with all member countries having adopted the colour with the exception of Croatia, where the passport is a very dark, almost black, blue.
The UK announced in December it would change its burgundy passport back to the blue one it used to have as it symbolically exits the European Union.
Green is believed to have been a favourite colour of the Prophet Mohammed and is associated with paradise in the Koran. It also features prominently on the national flags of many Islamic countries, such as Afghanistan and Iran.
WHITE
There are also few white passports out there, but they aren't ordinary passports. India issues special white passports to government officials and the US has a white passport that allows citizens to re-enter the country after they've been living abroad for more than a year.
While countries can opt for the colour of their choosing, there are some specifications set by the United Nations' International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) that all passports must adhere to.
And one of them is size: passport booklets must be 125mm by 88mm.
The ICAO also sets standards for machine-readable passports — which most of the world's passports are — and countries that have adopted biometric passports, or ePassports.