No United Nations–recognized country uses pink and black together on its national flag. (See Flags of the World, official UN member flag lists, and national government flag pages.)
National flags follow long traditions. Countries pick colors that carry history, heraldry, and clear contrast at sea and in print. Pink is a tint rather than a traditional heraldic color. Historically it is rare, hard to standardize, and can look like faded red on natural cloth. Those facts make pink an unlikely choice for a sovereign state’s official flag, so the search for “countries with pink and black flags” returns no results among UN member states.
Pink and black do appear in other flag types. Political and social banners use pink-and-black designs—examples include anarcho-punk and anarcha-feminist flags. Many pride flags use pink tones (for example, older and variant lesbian and bisexual designs), though they pair those pinks with other colors, not black. Sports clubs and local groups sometimes fly pink-and-black flags too; Palermo FC in Italy is a well-known pink-and-black example at the club level.
If you want flags that come closest, look beyond national flags. Check subnational and municipal flags, historical banners, political movement flags, pride flags, and sports-team flags. Below, explore a “Closest Matches” gallery, a short history of why pink is rare in vexillology, and verified visual examples with sources.


