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Traveling Without Real ID? It’s Going to Cost You

woman getting ID checked at airport security checkpoint

Just a short 20 years after Congress passed the Real ID Act, which codified the 9/11 Commission’s recommendation of higher security standards for personal identification, there will be financial consequences for not having a Real ID driver’s license or non-driver's document when trying to board a commercial airplane.

For the 19% of people who arrived at airport security checkpoints in 2025 with neither a passport nor a Real ID license—even though the deadline to obtain a Real ID license was pushed back several times over two decades until it was finally set as May 7, 2025—what will those consequences be?  

Well, come February 1, noncompliant passengers will have to stop at a biometric kiosk before getting to a checkpoint, then pay a $45 fee to cover the cost associated with new technology needed to verify their identity, said the TSA in a November 20 public notice.  

From there, “TSA will use the individual’s biographic and/or biometric information to verify identity and match the individual to their Secure Flight watchlist result. …Individuals also may be subject to additional screening or experience delays.”

That passenger's security clearance would remain on file with TSA for 10 days, meaning that most round trips would require only one $45 payment.

Again, passports are an acceptable form of identification at security checkpoints for both domestic and international air travel. But for those who don’t have a Real ID license after 20 years: Perhaps it’s finally time to get one. 

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About the author
Rob Carey | Content Manager, Features & News

Rob Carey serves as content manager, news and features for Meetings Today, where he leads coverage of the latest trends, happenings, data and insights related to corporate meetings and incentives as well as association conventions and exhibitions.

 

Carey has been covering the business-events industry since 1992, when he was hired as an intern at Successful Meetings magazine in New York while still a student at Columbia University. During his 15 years at SM’s parent company Nielsen, Carey moved steadily through the ranks to become editorial director for Successful Meetings, Meeting News and the Meeting World conference and exhibition. SM and MN won several FOLIO: Eddie Awards for editorial coverage during his tenure.  

 

Carey then spent 11 years as principal of Meetings & Hospitality Insight, covering not just the MICE market for various industry publications but also writing about business disciplines such as hotel management, golf-facility management, small-business operations, middle-market leadership and others. For several years he wrote the annual trends white paper for the International Association of Conference Centers.  

 

In 2018, Carey became a senior content producer for MeetingsNet, an Informa media brand, and a panel moderator for Informa’s Pharma Forum annual event. 

 

Come September 2025, he moved to Meetings Today.  

 

A native of New York  Carey now resides in the Phoenix/Scottsdale metro area with his wife Kelley and their dog Ziggy.