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TSA reports that 6% of US travelers are not complying with ID requirements as a new $45 fee begins Feb 1

Senior Transportation Security Administration official said Wednesday that approximately?6% of U.S. airline passengers do not display IDs meeting stricter federal standards. The agency is preparing to charge $45 for passengers without enhanced identification to board flights starting February 1.

The TSA will begin enforcing "REAL ID" standards in May 2025. Passengers without this new identification are given warnings and subjected to enhanced screening. TSA announced a new fee for passengers who do not have REAL IDs in December. They urged them to obtain the documents or pay the fee before they arrive at the airport. The $45 charge will cover travel within a 10-day time period.

Ha Nguyen McNeil, TSA's Deputy Administrator, said that compliance had improved from 93% to 94% in the last year. She said that the Trump administration decided to 'raise the fee from $18 up to $45 following a re-evaluation of the costs associated with 'dealing with travellers without "REALID."

About 2.5 million people fly daily in the United States.

McNeil explained that the fee was set to cover the cost of processing passengers without valid ID, and to "ensure they don't pose a danger to our skies."

If you don't pay in advance, it could take up to 30 minutes for you to pass through security. Children under the age of 18 are not required to show an ID at airport checkpoints. Most travelers use state-government-issued driver's licenses that meet the requirements but ?passports issued by any government are also acceptable, as are other forms of ID, including permanent resident cards, Department of ?Defense IDs and DHS trusted traveler cards.

The Congress approved last year new federal standards that are?stricter for the issuing of identification cards, but enforcement has repeatedly been delayed. These IDs are also required to enter a federal building.

The 2005 law implemented the recommendation of the 9/11 commission that the U.S. Government set standards for the issue of sources of ID, such as drivers licenses. The law establishes minimum security standards in the issuance of licenses and their production.

(source: Reuters)