US Passport Card Now In Production
State.gov
September 01, 2008
We began production of the U.S. Passport Card on July 14. To date, we have received and adjudicated well over 350,000 applications for the U.S. Passport Card. Customers who submitted an application for the U.S. Passport Card prior to production, will receive their Passport Card between now and early September.
The passport card facilitates entry and expedites document processing at U.S. land and sea ports-of-entry when arriving from Canada, Mexico, the Caribbean and Bermuda. The card may not be used to travel by air. Otherwise, it carries the rights and privileges of the U.S. passport book and is adjudicated to the exact same standards.
Note: A previous passport book holder, eligible to use Form DS-82 , may apply for a passport card as a Renewal. First time applicants for a U.S. Passport, and those not eligible to use the DS-82, should apply for a passport card using Form DS-11.
The Department of State is issuing this passport card in response to the needs of border resident communities for a less expensive and more portable alternative to the traditional passport book. The card has the same period of validity as a passport book: 10 years for an adult, five for children 15 and younger. Adults who already have a fully valid passport book may apply for the card as a passport renewal and pay only $20. First-time applicants pay $45 for adult cards and $35 for children.
To facilitate the frequent travel of U.S. citizens living in border communities and to meet DHS’s operational needs at land borders, the passport card contains a vicinity-read radio frequency identification (RFID) chip. This chip points to a stored record in secure government databases. There is no personal information written to the RFID chip itself.
Read more about US Passport Cards.
• Form DS-82
• For DS-11
ScoobyDoo
2 months ago
1216 comments
COuld also be another way to track US travel abroad.
amf85
2 months ago
1612 comments
Probably a cheap forgery he got for $500 in a back alley somewhere. The name "Happy Traveler" is a sure giveaway. Hah!
Kyle
2 months ago
252 comments
That man looks quite old for age 27!
amf85
2 months ago
1612 comments
They need to make this work for overseas travel so I can get one and go to Germany.
kylenstone
2 months ago
12 comments
Yeah, it's very interesting that the official government publication would specify "There is no personal information written to the chip...". Clearly, it's a hot topic of discussion, internally as well.
ScoobyDoo
2 months ago
1216 comments
Might make travel easier, but will make a national ID easier to get through as well.