Travelers hoping to get a passport will have to wait for an indefinite amount of time, as the U.S. State Department has stopped issuing new passports except for travelers who need a passport because of a qualified life or death emergency.
Last updated on April 3, the State Department’s website says, “Because of public health measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19, effective March 20, 2020, we are only able to offer in-person service at passport agencies or centers for customers with a qualified life-or-death emergency and who need a passport for immediate international travel within 72 hours.”
According to the State Department, “Life-or-death emergencies are serious illnesses, injuries, or deaths in your immediate family (e.g., parent, child, spouse, sibling, aunt, uncle, etc.) that require you to travel outside the United States within 72 hours (3 days).” The State Department requires ravelers needing to apply for a passport for this situation to provide:
Expedited passport service was suspended on March 19.
Travelers can still renew passports through the mail, but will likely be met with significant delays.
Starting this fall, the U.S. State Department is hosting special passport fairs to make it easier for travelers to get a passport. The events are for all child applicants and for adults who are first-time applicants (meaning they have never had a passport before), so keep this important information
From new policies to price increases, changes in the travel industry happen all the time – and recently, a small change in passport fees was announced. On January 31, 2018, the Department of State published a final rule that will increase the passport execution fee from $25 to $35, effective on Apri
U.S. passports expire every ten years. In 2007, new requirements for U.S. citizens traveling to Mexico and Canada caused a big spike in passport applications and the Department of State had a large backlog of documents to process. The documents that caused the 2007 crisis are set to expire in the ne
The U.S. Department of State is expecting an increase in passport applications through 2018. This comes as a result of the 2007 Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative (WHTI) that mandated that U.S. citizens entering the U.S. by air or land from Bermuda, Canada, the Caribbean and Mexico must have a val