The 20th-century German Nazi Party made extensive use of graphic symbols, especially the swastika, notably in the form of the swastika flag, which became the co-national flag of Nazi Germany in 1933, and the sole national flag in 1935. A very similar flag had represented the Party beginning in 1920.
Nazi symbols and additional symbols have subsequently been used by neo-Nazis.
The Nazis' principal symbol was the swastika, which the newly established Nazi Party formally adopted in 1920. The formal symbol of the party was the , an eagle atop a swastika.
The blackâÂÂwhiteâÂÂred motif is based on the colours of the flags of the German Empire. This colour scheme was commonly associated with anti-Weimar German nationalists, following the fall of the German Empire. The Nazis denounced the blackâÂÂredâÂÂgold flag of the Weimar Republic (the flag of Germany at the time).
Under the Nazi regime, government bodies were encouraged to remove religious symbolism from their heraldry. Few German councils actually changed their often ancient symbols. Some, however, did, including Coburg, which replaced the Moor's head representing Saint Maurice on their arms with a sword and swastika, and Thuringia, which added a swastika to the paws of their lion.
Letters of the Armanen runes invented by Guido von List were used by the Schutzstaffel (SS), particularly the Doppel Siegrune, based on the historical sowilo rune reinterpreted by List to signify victory instead of the sun. Other Armanen runes used by the Nazis and subsequently by neo-Nazis include forms derived from Eihwaz, Tiwaz, Algiz and Othala.
The death's head appears on the SS-Ehrenring presented by Heinrich Himmler to favoured members of the SS, and was used as an insignia by the Death's Head Units of the SS that administered the concentration camps.
Units of the Wehrmacht used insignia including the .
The Ahnenerbe research unit of the SS also used Wilhelm Teudt's neo-heathen Irminsul symbol.
Strasserism, a strand of Nazism with a Third Positionist ideology, used a crossed hammer and sword as its emblem.
The public display of Nazi symbols and gestures are today banned by law in many countries, including Australia (since 2024), Austria, Brazil, China, France, Germany (see section 86a), Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Russia and Ukraine.
On 9 August 2018, Germany lifted the ban on the usage of swastikas and other Nazi symbols in video games, allowing "games that critically look at current affairs" to be given an age rating instead by the manufacturer, such as USK. The move was made to bring the legislation in line with films and other arts.
Many symbols used by the Nazis have further been appropriated by neo-Nazi groups, including a number of runes: the so-called Black Sun, derived from a mosaic floor in Himmler's remodel of Wewelsburg, and the Celtic cross, originally a symbol used to represent pre-Christian and Christian European groups such as the Irish.
Neo-Nazis also employ various number symbols:
In 1997, Wolfgang Fröhlich, a Holocaust denier and former district council member for the Freedom Party of Austria, alleged that Adolf Hitler's favourite food was egg dumplings (Eiernockerl). Some restaurants in Austria started advertising the dish as a "daily special" for 20 April, which is Hitler's date of birth, and although the allegation about the dish has never been historically confirmed, some neo-fascists began eating it as a symbolic food to celebrate Hitler's birthday.