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Every state flag ranked by vexillologists (2026)

The NAVA design principles, the 2001 rankings, every symbol explained, and the recent redesigns from Mississippi, Utah and Minnesota.

Vexillology is the study of flags. In 2001, the North American Vexillological Association (NAVA) asked 469 members to rank all 72 US state, provincial, and territorial flags on design quality. The results split the country into two camps: a small group of distinctive flags built on clean symbolism, and a large majority stuck with a state seal on a blue rectangle. This guide walks through the NAVA rankings, the five design rules the good flags follow, and the recent wave of redesigns.

The NAVA rankings, top 10 and bottom 10

NAVA scored each flag from 0 to 10. The top scorers share three things: a strong central symbol, no writing, and colors that read from a distance. The bottom scorers share one thing: a state seal on a blue field with the state's name spelled out beneath it.

RankFlagScoreDesign
1New Mexico8.61Red Zia sun on yellow field
2Texas8.03Lone Star, red/white/blue tricolor
3Alaska7.53Big Dipper and North Star, gold on blue
4Arizona7.42Copper star with 13 red and gold rays
5Maryland7.36Calvert and Crossland heraldic quadrants
6South Carolina7.32Palmetto tree and crescent on indigo
7Colorado7.14Red C wrapping a gold disc, blue and white stripes
8Rhode Island6.81Gold anchor with 13 stars and "Hope"
9Tennessee6.63Three white stars in a blue disc on red
10Hawaii6.56Eight stripes with Union Jack canton

The bottom of the list, in reverse order from worst to slightly less bad, was Georgia (2001 version, since replaced), Nebraska, Montana, South Dakota, Kansas, Wisconsin, Minnesota (1957 version, since replaced), Kentucky, Michigan and Idaho. Every flag in the bottom 10 used a state seal on a solid blue background. Georgia scored 2.36 because it also crammed five smaller historical flags around the seal, essentially a flag of flags.

The five NAVA design principles

NAVA's booklet "Good Flag, Bad Flag," written by Ted Kaye, lists five rules that guide a strong flag design. The best US state flags follow them; the worst violate them one at a time.

The 22 seal-on-a-bedsheet flags

Placed side by side, most US state flags look interchangeable. A dark blue rectangle, a full-color state seal centered, and the state's name in an arc beneath. Design critics call these SOBs (Seal On a Bedsheet). The reason so many look alike is historical: in 1861, the US Army required regiments to carry a flag identifying their state. The fastest solution was to sew the state seal onto a blue army standard, and most legislatures never revisited the choice.

The 22 seal-on-blue flags are Connecticut, Delaware, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Vermont, Virginia, and Wisconsin. Oregon is the only US state with a two-sided flag: the seal is on the front, and a beaver, the state animal, is on the back.

Recent state flag redesigns

After decades of NAVA campaigning, three states have redesigned in the 2020s.

Illinois, Michigan, and Maine have all held redesign commissions between 2023 and 2025. Maine floated a return to its 1901 pine tree and blue star flag, which routinely tops informal internet polls.

Symbolism explained: what the top flags actually mean

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