Nathalie Bevis: Acceptable Identification for Flying in the U.S

Nathalie Bevis loves to travel and enjoys visiting different states and countries in her free time. Until the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) begins fully enforcing REAL IDs at United States airports in 2020, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) will continue to accept numerous forms of identification for air travel within the United States, writes Nathalie Bevis.

Acceptable forms of identification include:

• State DMV-issued drivers’ licenses or other state photo ID cards
• U.S. passports
• U.S. passport cards
• DHS trusted traveller cards (e.g., Global Entry, NEXUS, SENTRI, FAST)
• U.S. military IDs (i.e., active duty or retired military and their dependents, and Department of Defense civilians)
• Permanent resident cards (green cards)
• Border crossing cards
• DHS-designated enhanced drivers’ licenses
• Airline or airport-issued ID (issued under a TSA-approved security plan)
• Federally recognized, tribal-issued photo IDs
• HSPD-12 PIV cards
• Foreign government-issued passports
• Canadian provincial drivers’ licenses
• Indian and Northern Affairs Canada cards
• Transportation worker credentials

Do minor children need a REAL ID to fly within the United States?

For travel within the United States, the TSA does not require children under the age of 18 to provide photo identification when traveling with an adult companion who has acceptable identification, reminds Nathalie Bevis.

Click here to know More: https://www.crunchbase.com/person/nathalie-bevis

Nathalie Bevis Shares Passport Rules for US Travellers

Nathalie Bevis is an experienced traveller who enjoys international travel. Nathalie Bevis visited more than twenty-five different countries. American citizens must have a passport to travel to most international destinations. Since 2009, a United States passport book or passport card is necessary to travel to and from Canada, Mexico, or the Caribbean.

Nathalie Bevis

However, the rules can be different for children or for families traveling on a cruise. For cruises that begin and end at the same United States port (but visit ports of call in Bermuda, Canada, Mexico, or the Caribbean), passengers can re-enter the United States with only a valid driver’s license and birth certificate. Even though a passport is not required, Nathalie Bevis recommends having a passport in the event of an emergency at a non-US port that would require returning to the United States by air.

Children age 16 and younger returning to the US by land or sea from these countries only need a birth certificate or other proof of citizenship.
Additionally, American citizens do not need a passport to travel to United States territories such as Puerto Rico, the US Virgin Islands, and Guam, reminds Nathalie Bevis.

Click here to know More : http://nathalie-bevis.strikingly.com/

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started