Loading Page...

Does Delta check ID?

Whether you check in on delta.com, the Fly Delta app or in-person at the airport, you'll be expected to present government-issued photo identification along with your boarding pass.



People Also Ask

Beginning May 7, 2025, every air traveler 18 years of age and older will need a REAL ID-compliant driver's license, state-issued enhanced driver's license, or another acceptable form of ID to fly within the United States.

MORE DETAILS

The officer will insert each photo ID into the CAT unit where the ID is scanned and analyzed. CAT is linked electronically to the Secure Flight database, which confirms travelers' flight details, ensuring they are ticketed for travel that day.

MORE DETAILS

Teenagers between the ages of 15 and 17 Unaccompanied Teens in this age bracket have two options for traveling on Delta: Option 1: They can fly as a standard passenger, similar to an adult, with no restrictions. For this option, Delta does require your teen to have a form of photo ID that is accepted by the TSA.

MORE DETAILS

If you don't have any of the accepted IDs, you'll be asked to show two alternative forms of ID. One of them must show your name and identifying information, such as a photo, address, phone number or Social Security number, according to TSA.

MORE DETAILS

If you only have an expired passport, you can still bring it along for domestic travel within the United States, but you must convince TSA officers that you are who you say you are. However, if you're traveling internationally, you must have a valid passport.

MORE DETAILS

Digital Identification Download a TSA approved digital ID app to your mobile device. Scan in your state-issued driver's license or state ID. At select TSA PreCheck® checkpoints, scan the app issued QR code. Your photo will be taken by the TSA reader at security to proceed to screening.

MORE DETAILS

In the United States, you need a valid U.S. government-issued photo ID or a passport from your country of origin to travel through security. You must show that the name on your boarding pass matches the legal name on your unexpired government-issued ID.

MORE DETAILS

Travel Documents and Information
  1. Valid photo identification. ...
  2. Travel tickets (plane, train, bus; can be paper or electronic copies)
  3. Boarding passes.
  4. Reservation confirmations (rental car, hotel, pre-paid tickets for events; can be paper or electronic copies)
  5. Credit and debit cards. ...
  6. Cash.
  7. Emergency contact list.


MORE DETAILS

“TSA officers are really focused on looking for any possible explosives, and that's really what we're focused on because that could cause a catastrophic incident on an aircraft, said Farbstein.

MORE DETAILS

It all depends on the country and the airport. Some metal detectors and scanners are set to give a false positive signal at random intervals, leading to a personal search, but in many instances what are declared to be random searches are not that at all.

MORE DETAILS