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What information do UK officers see in airports when they scan your passport?

They can see: Your biometric picture, so they can verify that the person in front of them is the person to whom the passport was issued. All previous arrivals in the UK. Any information shared by other governments about travel.



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Your passport (and visa if you have one) will be checked at border control. You'll usually be asked why you're coming to the UK.

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ePassport gates are automated self-service barriers (an automated border control system) operated by the UK Border Force and located at immigration checkpoints in arrival halls in some airports across the UK and at the juxtaposed controls in international railway terminals abroad, offering an alternative to using desks ...

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There are signs that will indicate you have been flagged for additional screenings: You were not able to print a boarding pass from an airline ticketing kiosk or from the internet. You were denied or delayed boarding. A ticket agent “called someone” before handing you a boarding pass.

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Upon arrival, go through the immigration and passport control area of the airport. Passengers are split into multiple lines. There is generally a line for host country nationals (people with a passport from that country), sometimes a line for citizens of the region (EU, ECOWAS, etc), and non-immigrant visitors.

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TSA works with the airport to reunite passengers with all lost or unclaimed personal property, including personal identification items such as drivers' licenses and passports, left behind at a checkpoint. If the ID is not claimed within 30 days, it is destroyed.

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UK immigration questions and answers for tourists
  • Why do you wish to visit the United Kingdom? ...
  • How long will you be in the United Kingdom? ...
  • Who is paying your expenses? ...
  • Have you ever visited the United Kingdom? ...
  • Do you plan to work in the United Kingdom? ...
  • Where in the United Kingdom do you plan to stay?


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Yes, it will show up as an object made of (probably) paper, maybe with a chip in it. The chip might give it away as specifically a passport, if the security person manning the system was actually looking for that. But their primary role is to look for weapons and other potential hazards to flight safety.

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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.

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The verification, the airline says, happens by scanning the photo page and reading the embedded passport chip. The digital identity is then created, stored on the mobile device and ready to use for future travel.

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Transportation Security Administration (TSA) screeners at airports check passengers and personal items for dangerous items such as weapons, chemicals and liquids that are not allowed as carry-on items.

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The only time your passport is likely to be 'flagged' is when: there is a warrant out for your arrest either nationally or internationally through Interpol. you are currently undergoing investigation for a possible criminal offence. you have been engaged in some kind of terrorist activity and/or on a Watch List.

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Entry and exit into and out of the UK. Your travel history can be provided for the past 5 years if a passport or travel document is submitted for this period.

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Exaggerated or repetitive grooming gestures are considered possible terrorist signals to the TSA. —Gazing down could land you in hot water, so gaze forward into the middle distance at all times. But not with wide, staring eyes.

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You're Deemed Suspicious Prior to Check-In This could happen for a varietyof reasons. The TSA, as well as airports around the world, identify certain behaviors as suspicious. There is an extensive list of about 92 of these behaviors in the U.S., but the most common ones are: Paying for any of your tickets in cash.

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