_auroraborealis_
I like marshmallows. And adult beverages.
- Joined
- Oct 18, 2015
- Messages
- 23,814
I would at least get passport cards.
Actually the White Pass railroad is in Skagway. But, yes, if you're on an excursion that crosses the border there, you must have a passport.
I think you need the birth certificate to get the passport??So what I'm getting from this is it would probably be fine to just use a birth certificate (I will be traveling into Seattle then taking the train in) and every government page and even the disney one say that is so. However most people here are freaked out at the idea of not having one for some reason, even though the odds of an international incident are really low (nearly all of the time will be on or near US soil).
Even so, I will probably get a passport for my kid because it turns out a certified birth certificate from his birth state would be nearly $50, and the passport has bragging rights
even though the odds of an international incident are really low
Actually - if you are travelling by land or by sea, children under 16 do not require passports.
They like looking at their stamps afterwards.
it would probably be fine to just use a birth certificate (I will be traveling into Seattle then taking the train in) and every government page and even the disney one say that is so.
Even so, I will probably get a passport for my kid because it turns out a certified birth certificate from his birth state would be nearly $50, and the passport has bragging rights
I think you need the birth certificate to get the passport??
This isn't necessarily about an international incident. I'm sure the mom on our cruise whose daughter started unexpectedly having seizures at 10:30 at night on our sea day thought the odds were low, too, but they still were stuck the next day in Nassau without passports and needing to obtain air travel home. You just never know. My daughter has had a passport for her last four cruises and we haven't needed to debark the ship and get home, but it was still worth the piece of mind. (And as others have said, she loves collecting stamps!)
We entered Canada by Amtrak and the kids did need a passport.
US and Canadian Citizens under 16
(Under 19 if traveling with an organized group such as a school trip)
- One of the above documents, or
- Certified Copy of a Birth Certificate (bearing the raised seal of the issuing office and a statement that it is a certified copy of the original document on file at that office) or
- U.S. Citizen Children Only: Consular Report of Birth Abroad, or United States Naturalization Certificate
- Canadian Citizen Children Only: Canadian Citizenship Certificate Card
With an *Alaska* cruise, for most of it you are right there next to Alaska. Even if a hospital couldn't help in Juneau, a flight to Seattle would be possible. Therefore the passport wouldn't be needed. There's only a brief period of time when they are in Canada.
I'm a major passport person, but being in Vancouver isn't like being in Sint Maarten...
I'm not sure this is true, or at least it wasn't our experience. We entered Canada by Amtrak and the kids did need a passport.