At a state level, there have been traffic light coalitions in Brandenburg between 1990 and 1994 and in Bremen between 1991 and 1995. Negotiations to form such a coalition upon the 2001 Berlin state election were not successful, likewise, preliminary talks after the 2010 North Rhine-Westphalia state election led to no result. Recently, a traffic light coalition was formed upon the 2016 Rhineland-Palatinate state election. At a federal level, however, to date no government has been formed on this basis. Historically, there have been 'red-green' coalitions in the Bundestag between the SPD and the Greens, and social-liberal coalitions between the SPD and the FDP. However, whilst there may be common ground in terms of social progressivism between the three parties, the FDP's economic liberalism and long association at the federal level with the conservative Christian Democratic Union make such a coalition problematic at present and the former FDP chairman Guido Westerwelle had specifically ruled out this option for the 2009 federal election. The term became more widely used outside Germany when the inconclusive 2005 federal election led to its use in the internationalmedia. Other designations included "Africa" or "Senegal coalition". The term Jamaica coalition—sometimes called "black traffic light" —was formed in a similar way, describing a hypothetical coalition between the CDU, FDP and Greens. In Schleswig-Holstein a "Danish traffic light" was formed after the 2012 state election by the SPD, Greens and the South Schleswig Voter Federation, a regionalist minor party representing the Danish and Frisian minority in the state. Upon the 2016 Saxony-Anhalt state election, an "Afghanistan or Kenya coalition" between the CDU, SPD and Greens was formed.
In 1990s' Austria, the term Ampelkoalition has been borrowed from Germany to describe a theoretical coalition of the Social Democratic Party of Austria, the Liberal Forum and The Greens. However, as at this time the Liberal Forum's party colour was light blue, this is a reference to the political similarity between this coalition and a German traffic light coalition rather than to the party's actual symbolic colours. After the Liberal Forum lost its parliamentary representation in the 1999 Austrian elections such a coalition remained highly theoretical, though later its party colour was yellow. In 2014 it merged into NEOS – The New Austria, whose party colour is pink, however.
The Verhofstadt I Government of Belgium, headed by Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt from 1999 to 2003, comprised liberals, socialists, and greens. However, as the political colours of the liberal parties were blue instead of yellow, it was known as the "purple-green" coalition.
After the 2018 Swedish election the parliament was hung. After months of negotiations a traffic-light deal was set up. With the Social democrats and Greens in government and the two liberal parties giving the government confidence and supply. The left party also gave reluctant and passive support to the government despite it being outside the deal between the liberals, social democrats and greens.