bumbershoot
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2007
- Messages
- 69,750
I’ve been told you need one in the case of an emergency (having to fly back) but I’m not sure?
Yes. That is true.
So if someone gets terribly ill or injured, or if something awful happens at home, and your party needs to fly home from a foreign country, before you do so you’ll be in a bureaucrat’s office paying a lot plus expediting fees to get a limited-time-use emergency passport.
I choose to not have to do that. So I have a passport.
Frankly we tell family if there is an emergency at home, we'll deal with it when we get home at the end of the trip.
So true. My now-ex is the POA, and I was the main caregiver for, for his mom, and if we were traveling internationally we told everyone what her choices were. Even if the worst happened, things could wait for most trips we took
You'll get probably 50/50 opinions. Weigh the cost of a passport against the possibility of an emergency. We always go with a passport, but we do other travel as well so it's a no brainer. I would say I'd be very nervous sailing without a passport during one of these government shutdowns. And since they seem to happen about once a year, I'd go with a passport.
What would a passport do during a shutdown that brings you peace of mind?
Nine US States require a passport for domestic travel now and the rest will follow eventually.
No states require a passport for flying domestically at this time. You can get on a domestic flight with NO ID still. See below.
Run Disney race DH left his wallet on the bus. While he went to try to chase down the bus, it hit me that his license was in the wallet and he would not be able to fly home the next day
Not currently true.
Look at the part under Forgot Your ID?: https://www.tsa.gov/travel/security-screening/identification
That’s how my dad flies. He’s locked in a battle (in his mind) with the California dmv and hasn’t had a license or ID for years. And he flies about once a year. He gives himself plenty of time to chat with TSA.
Should any of the passport/real id stuff actually happen (look at the number of years it’s been going on and how many times it’s been postponed for an explanation of my hesitation to worry about this),then that’ll change. But until then...
Is a passport card enough to get back into the states in case of emergency?
Nope. Not by air.
The card is absolutely no better than birth certificate and ID for cruising on itineraries that don’t require passports.
And FYI this isn’t a Disney Cruise thing, it’s on all cruiselines that have the itineraries that allow it.