Show your Peruvian pride with the official Peru Flag — a bold symbol of heritage, resilience, and national identity. Whether you’re cheering on La Blanquirroja at a FIFA World Cup watch party or displaying it at home, this flag makes a statement.
The Peru Flag was officially adopted on February 25th, 1825. Its vertical red and white stripes carry deep meaning: white represents peace and progress, while red symbolizes the blood shed in the fight for independence. The central coat of arms features three emblems — a vicuña (animal kingdom), a cinchona tree (plant kingdom), and a cornucopia (mineral kingdom) — crowned by a civic wreath representing the republic.

Peru Flag vs. Canada Flag — Separated at Birth?
At first glance, the Peru Flag and the Canada Flag look strikingly similar — both feature bold vertical red stripes flanking a white center panel. The resemblance is no coincidence of design trends; both flags draw from a shared visual language of triband simplicity. However, the similarities end there. Canada’s flag, officially adopted on February 15, 1965, is defined by its iconic red maple leaf — a universally recognized symbol of Canadian national identity. Peru’s flag, adopted nearly 140 years earlier on February 25, 1825, carries its national coat of arms in the center rather than a leaf, representing the country’s natural wealth and republican values. Strip away both emblems and you’re left with nearly identical flags — red, white, red — which has fueled plenty of playful debate over the years.
So who copied whom? Nobody, technically. Peru’s flag predates Canada’s by 140 years, so if anyone has a claim, it’s Peru — though Canada’s designers in 1964 were almost certainly not looking to Lima for inspiration. The vertical triband design was a common flag format across many nations, and the color combination of red and white has deep roots in both countries’ histories. Consider it a happy coincidence that two nations separated by thousands of miles landed on the same bold palette.




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