DISPLAY I-6. The flag of the United States represents the living country and is considered a living thing. Rules and customs for displaying the U.S. flag, adopted by an act of Congress in 1942 and amended in 1976, are found in Title 36 of the U.S. Code.
Note: No other flag or pennant should be placed above or, if on the same level, to the right of the flag of the United States of America, except during church services conducted by naval chaplains at sea, when the church pennant may be flown above the flag and except as required by multinational agreements to which the United States is a signatory.
I-7. The union, the field of blue with the grouping of stars representing the individual states, is the honor point and is the flag’s right. When the flag is displayed, the union is always to the top and to the flag’s own right (the left of the observer). When carried, the flag is always free, never stretched flat or carried horizontally. In the company of other flags, the U.S. flag is always on the marching right (the flag’s own right) (see figure I-3), or, if there is a line of other flags, in front of the center of that line. When flags of states or localities, or pennants of societies, are grouped and displayed from staffs, the U.S. flag is in the center and at the highest point of the group (see figure I-3). If all flags are displayed from staffs of the same height, the flag of the United States is placed in the honor position, to the right of the other flags (to the left of the observer). When flags of two or more nations are displayed, they are flown from separate staffs of the same height, they are of approximately equal size, and the U.S. flag is to the right of the others.
Note: When the U.S. flag is flown in conjunction with other national flags, care must be taken to ensure that the foreign national flag is correct and properly displayed.
I-8. The flag of the United States is never used as drapery. It is displayed hung flat against a wall or flown free from a staff as seen in figure I-4. It is not festooned over doorways or arches, tied in a bow, or fashioned into a rosette. It is not used to cover a speaker’s desk or draped over the front of a platform. For those purposes, bunting may be used, giving the blue of the bunting the place of honor at the top of the arrangement or in the center of the rosette. Traditionally, there is one permissible departure from the rules for display of the flag of the United States: in a dire emergency, the flag may be flown upside down as a distress signal.
Note: For a detailed explanation of the regulations concerning the flag of the United States and other flags and Colors, see AR 840-10 and AR 600-25.