TSA Touchless ID biometric entry lanes coming to 50 additional US airports
The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) is expanding its
PreCheck Touchless ID program, promising deployments in a total of 65 airports
in the first quarter of 2026.
According to a post from Travel Weekly, 15 airports currently have
Touchless ID lanes: Atlanta, Dallas-Fort Worth, Chicago O’Hare, Detroit, Las
Vegas, Los Angeles, Newark, New York JFK, New York LaGuardia, Phoenix, Salt
Lake City, Seattle, San Francisco and Washington Reagan National.
Priority airports for expansion include
Houston Bush Intercontinental, Washington Dulles, Boston, Palm Beach, Miami,
Orange County, Dallas Love Field, Kansas City, Houston Hobby, Fort Lauderdale,
San Jose, Sacramento, Anchorage, Baltimore, Orlando and Long Beach.
The opt-in program is available through
Alaska, American, Delta, Southwest and United airlines. The system is designed
to enable touchless screening through facial verification in 10 seconds or
less. To be eligible, passengers must be registered TSA PreCheck travelers and
have an active profile with a participating airline, a Known Traveler Number
and a valid passport.
The announcement would seem to paint an
optimistic picture of the TSA’s progress – countering reports that, on its
current funding trajectories, it would take years for it to complete nationwide
deployment of advanced identity verification and baggage screening technologies.
The TSA is gearing up for an expected surge
in travel to the U.S. around the 2026 FIFA World Cup. However, at present,
tourism to the U.S. has plummeted, as a growing number of countries issue
travel advisories and the fear of illegal seizure and imprisonment by
immigration forces spreads. A recent BBC report cites numbers from the World
Travel & Tourism Council (WTTC), projecting losses of 12.5 billion dollars
in international visitor spending in 2025.
The current mood may also have implications
for preclearance work between the U.S. and Canada, which has also seen a drop
in visitors heading to the States. A report from the Canadian Press says two
preclearance projects are scheduled to roll out in 2026, despite statements by
U.S. Ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra, indicating that preclearance at
Canadian airports for trips into the U.S. would no longer be adequate, and that
travelers would be required to clear checkpoints on U.S. soil.
Toronto’s Billy Bishop Airport and Cannon
Corners, N.Y., on the border with Quebec are the planned deployments for U.S.
preclearance. More sites are reportedly under discussion, including rail
stations, cruise ports and ferry terminals.
However, the Canadian public could grow less
comfortable with the idea, depending on how political winds blow. Public Safety
Canada says “the idea of preclearance is to push the border out so officials
can intercept threats before people or goods cross the border.” But the
question of who is pushing the border, and which way, has taken on a new
urgency in a world of fresh and unprecedented conquest.