![]() ![]() ![]() The client could get a credit card from his/her wallet and imagine the business card layout on it and feel the size in their hands.īut some may have personal biases towards the (non-standard) national size, so I would offer it as an alternative. And it is more widely used than the A8, I think.Īctually, even for one-country use I'd first suggest the ID-1 to my clients (tell them it is the credit card size), since the size is easier to get a grip on (for them). ![]() Argentina, Brazil, Czech Republic, Finland, Hungary, Israel, Kazakhstan, Poland, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Ukraine, Bulgaria, Latvia, Mexico and South Africaįor international, common use, I'd suggest the ID-1 size as the size is familiar to many, it is highly pocketable and isn't as culture-oriented.Australia, Denmark, New Zealand, Norway, Taiwan, Sweden.ISO/IEC 7810, ID-1 (credit card size), Australia.Ireland, Italy, United Kingdom, France, Germany, Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland, Belgium.The Wikipedia article on business card dimensions has a good table for reference: For example here in Finland 90 x 50 mm (3.543 × 1.968 in) is common, but ID-1 size is also quite common and 90 x 55 mm isn't totally oddball. Though, personally, I haven't seen many of these. This is also the standard business card size in many situations as it is highly pocketable.Īnother size which could be considered somewhat international, is the ISO 216-sized ( Wikipedia) A8 = 74 x 52 mm (2.913 × 2.047 in) with an aspect ratio of 1.423. The common aspect ratios range from 1.423 to 1.8.įor most ID cards and credit cards, ID-1 from the ISO/IEC 7810 ( Wikipedia) standard gives the dimensions, which are 85.60 × 53.98 mm (3.370 × 2.125 in) with an aspect ratio of 1.586. ![]()
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