Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Travel
  3. News

The TSA Is Now Testing Self-Service Airport Security Checkpoints

As we get deeper into this pandemic, more everyday transactions are becoming contact-less. Cashing out at the grocery store, school learning, even buying a car can all be handled without commingling with another human being. While it’s undoubtedly less personal, it’s also safer from a health perspective. Now, the Transportation Security Administration wants to bring that same level of automation and efficiency to airport security checkpoints around the country.

self airport security
Bignai / Shutterstock

To further promote social distancing and reduced human-to-human contact, the TSA this month launched a pilot program for contact-free checkpoints at Ronald Reagan National Airport in Washington, D.C. The new self-service protocol replaces the process of travelers physically handing their passports and other travel documents to a TSA agent. Instead, travelers now scan their own documents, and facial recognition software automatically matches their face to the photo on their passport or personal identification. An agent seated behind a protective acrylic barrier then reviews and approves the match. Eventually, the goal is to remove the agent from the process entirely. For now, the new procedure is voluntary. Passengers can opt for the old-school route of having a TSA agent manually verify their documents.

Recommended Videos

Facial recognition technology has long been standard in parts of Europe and Asia. The TSA has slowly been moving toward automated security checkpoints for years. However, the importance of adopting the next-gen technology is more critical now than ever. In 2019, the TSA tested a similar program at Vegas’ McCarran International Airport. This year, the administration rolled out automated facial scanning booths for Global Entry members at 15 U.S. airports to expedite border crossings. The historical downturn in travel (and tourism dollars) has left the industry scrambling for creative ways to ensure passengers that they can travel safely. That’s included everything from pre-flight COVID-19 blood testing to full-body, car-wash-style disinfecting chambers to extreme new onboard cleaning protocols.

The TSA is piloting these voluntary self-service checkpoints only for some TSA PreCheck program customers at Ronald Reagan National Airport. Given this so-called “new normal” we’re living in — especially considering that this pandemic could last well into next year — the technology is likely to roll out to other U.S. airports in one form or another.

If you’re already looking ahead to where and whether you might travel next year, now is the time to start planning.

Mike Richard
Mike Richard has traveled the world since 2008. He's kayaked in Antarctica, tracked endangered African wild dogs in South…
The Palouse: America’s Most Underrated Scenic Drive
Waterfalls, barns, and the wide open spaces the West is known for. All at the tip of your fingers in the Pacific Northwest
Field, Grassland, Nature

When Americans talk about spectacular landscapes, they usually mention the obvious headliners: the Grand Canyon, Yellowstone, Yosemite, the Rocky Mountains, or the dramatic coastlines of California and Oregon. Far fewer people have heard of the Palouse, a remarkable agricultural region straddling eastern Washington and western Idaho.

That is a shame because the Palouse is one of the most visually distinctive landscapes in North America—and one of the most rewarding road trips you can take in the Pacific Northwest. I have visited this area several times, both as a destination in its own right and on my way through to the Idaho Panhandle.  

Read more
Inside Gordon Ramsay’s spectacular new London restaurant in the sky
From skyline views to Gordon's famous fried chicken, Lucky Cat delivers on every level
City, Urban, Metropolis

I'm not saying Gordon Ramsay is the reason I booked a dinner reservation in London.

But after my partner and I binged Being Gordon Ramsay on Netflix earlier this year, visiting Lucky Cat suddenly shot to the top of our list.

Read more
London has no shortage of rooftop bars. Florattica still stands out
This East London rooftop bar proves you don't need to be 50 floors up to impress
Bar, Person, Candle

London does not need another rooftop bar. The city has them stacked on top of skyscrapers, tucked behind hotel lobbies, and squeezed onto buildings where you'd swear there isn't room for a bar, let alone a view. So when a new one claims to be worth your evening, it has some convincing to do.

Florattica, perched on the 11th floor of Canopy by Hilton London City, did the convincing. It just recently picked up its first PIN from The Pinnacle Guide, and after a night spent working through its cocktail menu (slowly, responsibly, mostly), it's easy to see why.

Read more