

| 5 NGH | £130,000 |
| 57 NGH | £125,000 |
| MR52 NGH | £55,000 |
| S111 NGH | £30,000 |
| 51NGH | £253,923 (April 2006) |
| S1NGH | £108,644 (Nov 1998) |
| MR51NGH | £101,064 (April 2006) |
| 151 NGH | £75,798 (Feb 2006) |
| OO51NGH | £27,793 (Dec 2006) |
| XX51NGH | £21,476 (Sep 2007) |
| SS51NGH | £20,339 (June 2006) |
| 1GNH | £11,622 (Oct 2010) |
| 1HNG | £6,569 (Sep 2008) |
Quite simply there is a huge and growing number of potential buyers for SINGH plates ...
Rich and famous UK Singhs
Apr 2010 ... NEW Look founder Tom Singh saw his fortune rocket 63% to £515million in the past year, according to the 2010 Sunday Times Rich List.
Feb 2010: Ranjit and Baljinder Boparan Singh worth £125m, of 2 Sisters Food Group. The West Bromwich-based company – best known for its Buxted brand of whole chickens and chicken dishes – continues to expand, and has raised its turnover to almost £650 million. Birmingham Post richlist
July 2010: Jasminder Singh is the founder, chairman and chief executive of Radisson Edwardian Hotels, one of London’s largest privately-owned hotel groups. Singh is regarded as one of the richest Punjabis outside India, and his £350m fortune assures him regular appearances in the Sunday Times Rich List and the Asian Rich List. Reference
2009: Euro Car Parts founder Sukhpal Singh Ahluwalia fortune has remained the same at £100m. The motor-trade rich-list
2009 Sunday Times Asian Richlist: Ranbar Singh worth £32m, industry: jewellery Sunday Times Asian Richlist
2008 Sunday Times Richlist Ranking: 1736= Worth: £42m Source of wealth: Petrol and aviation. Harjinder Singh Sidhu, 58, a Sikh businessman, amassed a fortune in London’s East End. He arrived as a teenager from the Punjab, and began as a cashier in a petrol station in Ilford. Within nine months, he had started to buy out his bosses, selling stations on to Burmah and Shell. In 2006 he bought Air Slovakia, a company with a turnover of $30m.
Sukhraj 'Raj' Singh (born 17 October 1964) is an Indian businessman based in the Tees Valley and chairman of Darlington Football Club.
Vivek Singh: Executive Chef, The Cinnamon Club, London and author
The British Sikh Association celebrated Vaisakhi (13 April 2010) by honouring Judge Sir Mota Singh QC with the Pride of the Sikh Community Award
Dr Simon Lehna Singh, MBE (born 1 January 1964) is a British author who has specialised in writing about mathematical and scientific topics in an accessible manner. He is the maiden winner of the Lilavati Award. He is the youngest of three brothers, his eldest brother being Tom Singh, the founder of the UK New Look chain of stores. His written works include Fermat's Last Theorem
Arnie Gullov-Singh, a British entrepreneur, has worked out a new way to make money out of Twitter. Arnie Gullov-Singh’s business, Ad.ly, works as a broker between tweeting celebrities and brands, signing them up for product placements in their tweets. Rappers such as 50 Cent and Snoop Dogg are said to have earned more than £3,000 each for sending out a single message on Twitter endorsing a product. Arnie Gullov-Singh now counts over 5,000 names to promote products such as Coke, Toyota and Microsoft in the US; and plans on launching the service in Britain
Owning a personalised car number plate is popular amongst British Asians and has become an ultimate accessory. Those selling personalised number plates find that their business is very lucrative among Asians. Damian Lawson, DVLA's auction manager, said that 'personalised plates are one of the biggest selling items in the UK Indian community: our auctions are proving that'. The Sun newspaper on 24 Oct 2008 headlined... "CAR-loving British Asians have topped a list of drivers paying fortunes for personalised number plates." [http://www.thesun.co.uk]

Video of live auction where the registration 51 NGH sold for £201,000+taxes and fees (total £254,000)..
Singh is from the Sanskrit word meaning "lion". It is a common title, middle name, or surname in Northern India used initially by the Kshatriyas (warriors). In 1699 the name was adopted in Punjab by adherents of the Sikh faith, according to the wishes of Guru Gobind Singh. While others have a choice of using Singh as a name, for all male Sikhs the second name Singh is mandatory - regardless of their geographical or cultural binding. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singh] The Telegraph reported in March 2009 on the SINGH name: "People named Singh were found to be at a record high, with 95,203 of them currently living in Britain" [http://www.telegraph.co.uk]
| 20 | 3 S £94,000 |
Sold to venture capitalist Spencer Day, at auction in Whittlebury Hall, Northamptonshire in January 2009. Confident of a good return Mr. Day bought this cherished plate as an investment. |
| 19 | MN 1 £100,000 |
Originally issued to George Drinkwater of Braddan for his steam powered car, this, the first registration number issued in the Isle of Man in 1906, was sold at auction to an undisclosed bidder in February 2009. |
| 18 | MR 51 NGH £101,050 |
Sold to Mr Singh! Given the sale price of older brother S1 NGH and the popularity of these plates in the Asian community, MR51 NGH secured a lot less than expected for the Treasury. |
| 17 | 1HRH £113,815 |
Fit for the Queen and the subject of media attention, this royal mark was secured by a Berkshire-based businessman, at auction. He said he was "determined to keep it in British hands". |
| 16 | 6 B £130,000 |
In addition to the rarity, the huge appeal for this cherished plate may come from the fact it resembles ‘GB’, short for Great Britain. It was just one of the prestigious vehicle registrations snapped up at a DVLA auction in Wansford, Cambridgeshire, September 2008. |
| 15 | 2 O £142,249 |
The second of the DVLA’s single digit O-series was auctioned at Ardencote Manor, Warwickshire, in March 2009. The rest are set to follow at subsequent auctions. |
| 14 | 1 F £144,500 |
Once owned by the Essex County Council, this registration mark was sold at Bonhams auction in 2005, clearly breaking its anticipated sale price of £30,000 to £40,000. The winning bidder was an unnamed telephone buyer. |
| 13 | CEO 1 £154,100 |
The private plate with a very desirable combination set the record for the highest price paid for a private plate on eBay, in 2007. The increasingly used term Chief Executive Officer, no doubt fuelled the appeal, which would have had many business and corporate executives fight for the right to the ultimate status numberplate for the city. |
| 12 | 1 A £160,000 |
The younger mirror image of the legendary A 1 numberplate went under the hammer at an early DVLA auction in 1989. Apparently, nearly ten years later, both reg numbers were sold to the controversial Prince Jeffry of Brunei, brother of The Sultan of Brunei. Both numberplates were registered to identical white Bentley’s ready to collect the Prince and co from his private jet. |
| 11 | I 00 £197,000 |
With this great plate, perhaps the DVLA were commemorating the 100th anniversary of their personalised registrations auctions in April 2006. Whether your nickname is “Loo” or not, ‘I OO’ would add a nice touch to any prestige car. |
| 10 | 1 0 £210,242 |
Just a line and a circle, this rarest of dateless number plates demonstrates that less is more. The minimalist private reg, never released before, was sold at a DVLA auction in Whittlebury Hall hotel in Northamptonshire to a private buyer. It was the first release of the 'O' series. |
| 9 | K1 NGS £231,000 |
Surely the "royal with ease" of all registration plates, this was sold in 1993. It is alleged that this sale marked the beginning of an explosion in the market for personalised number plates. An anonymous bidder, possibly an Arab Sultan, secured the regal crown. |
| 8 | 1 RH £247,652 |
This cherished plate went under the hammer for 30 times its reserve at a DVLA auction in South Yorkshire, November 2008. Exceeding his planned budget, winning bidder businessman Robert Harverson said after, “in the end, I was just determined to buy 1 RH and nothing was going to stop me”. |
| 7 | 51 NGH £254,000 |
Despite being technically less of a match to the popular Asian name Singh, this dateless mark fetched over two and a half times the price of S1 NGH, its younger brother. It’s hard evidence and hard to believe that the year of issue can make such a difference. Sold in 2006 to a Sikh, this cherished plate had previously generated a lot of interest since Singh is a popular name in the Sikh community. 51 NGH is the most expensive Asian number plate sold in the UK. |
| 6 | GS 1 £258,775 |
The estimated auction price for this registration plate was about one third of the hammer price. It was auctioned off in July 2005 in Perth, Scotland and was originally registered in January 1928 by Perth County Council. |
| 5 | VIP 1 £285,000 |
This plate was once placed on the Pope John Paul II's car for his papal visit to Ireland. Bought in 2006 by the Chelsea boss Roman Abramovich, this "very important" cherished number plate was bought with the billionaire tycoon’s pocket change for £285,000. |
| 4 | M 1 £331,500 |
This private plate was sold at auction in Chichester, in 2006. It was the first registration number to be issued in Cheshire at the beginning of the last century. Bought by Mike McCoomb, who had previously sold his mobile phones business to BT for around £40 million. Apparently Mike bought this number plate for his son, who at the time was under ten! |
| 3 | 1 D £352,411 |
This registration was sold in March 2009 at a DVLA auction in Warwickshire to Nabil Bishara, a Lebanese property developer. The record auction reserve price of £20,000 echoed its desirability. Nabil bought this highly sought after private plate for his wife’s birthday - lucky lady! |
| 2 | S 1 £404,063 |
S1 may have been Scotland's first ever number plate. It was certainly Edinburgh's first vehicle registration. It was bought by anonymous bidder at Bonhams in Chichester, in September 2008. The winning bidder claimed the cherished plate would be displayed on an old red Skoda! |
| 1 | F 1 £440,000 |
Number ONE! The highest price for a British vehicle registration number happened at a DVLA auction in Jan 2008 when businessman Afzal Khan paid £440,625 for the Formula One initials. He bought it for his Mercedes-Benz McLaren, which cost £200,000 less than the number plate. |
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