After three deadline extensions across nearly twenty years, REAL ID enforcement at TSA checkpoints began on May 7, 2025. The grace-period messaging has stopped. As of mid-2026, you need a REAL ID-compliant license, a passport, or another federally accepted ID to board a domestic US flight. Here's the actual state of enforcement — not the press-release version.
The Short Version
- Enforcement start: May 7, 2025
- What it covers: domestic air travel + entry to most federal buildings
- Who is exempt: children under 18, anyone with a US passport / passport card, anyone with another federally accepted ID (Global Entry, military ID, EDL, tribal ID, permanent resident card)
- What happens if you show up without one: TSA can let you through with extra screening once or twice — but cannot rely on it as a routine accommodation
How We Got Here: A Timeline of Deadline Extensions
The REAL ID Act passed in 2005, recommended by the 9/11 Commission. The original implementation date was 2008. It then slipped repeatedly for the next seventeen years — a pattern that shaped how Americans treated the deadline. By the time enforcement actually arrived, a sizable share of the country assumed it would slip again.
- May 2005 — REAL ID Act signed into law. Sets minimum security standards for state-issued IDs used for federal purposes.
- May 2008 — Original compliance deadline. Most states are nowhere close. DHS grants extensions to almost every state.
- December 2013 — DHS announces a phased enforcement plan starting at federal facilities, with airport enforcement pushed years out.
- January 2017 — Phased enforcement at federal buildings begins. IDs from non-compliant states no longer accepted at certain DHS facilities, nuclear power plants, and federal courthouses.
- October 2020 — Original air-travel enforcement date. Pushed to October 2021 because of COVID-19 DMV backlogs.
- April 2021 — Air-travel enforcement pushed again to May 3, 2023, citing pandemic-driven DMV closures.
- December 2022 — DHS pushes enforcement to May 7, 2025, citing application backlogs and ongoing issuance-system upgrades.
- May 7, 2025 — Enforcement begins. TSA starts flagging non-compliant licenses at the document checker.
- Mid-2026 — The "soft" enforcement phase continues, but the warning script and secondary-screening process are tightening month over month.
The May 2025 date held because by 2024 every state and territory was issuing compliant licenses and the federal infrastructure was in place. The political appetite for another extension had also run out.
What Enforcement Actually Looks Like at TSA
Walking up to a TSA checkpoint without a REAL ID and without an alternative federally accepted ID does not, in 2026, automatically mean you don't fly. TSA has discretion. Here's what's happening in practice at the document checker:
- If you have an alternative federally accepted ID (passport, passport card, Global Entry / NEXUS / SENTRI, active-duty military, EDL, permanent resident card, tribal ID): standard screening, no issue. The document checker scans the barcode, you proceed.
- If you have a non-REAL-ID license and nothing else: the TSA officer reads a short warning script noting the license is non-compliant and that future travel will require a compliant ID. You're flagged for secondary screening — typically additional questions to verify identity, an enhanced pat-down, and a hand-search of your carry-on. You usually still fly, but you should plan an extra 30-60 minutes.
- If you have nothing valid at all: you're not flying. Same rule as before REAL ID.
Secondary screening for non-compliant IDs is not the friendly "extra swab" experience. Expect to be pulled to a side area, asked questions about address history and travel itinerary, and to have every item in your bag opened. Travelers report total checkpoint time of 45-90 minutes when this happens. The accommodation appears to be tightening month over month — plan as if it isn't there.
"I Forgot My REAL ID at Home" — TSA's Identity-Verification Fallback
This procedure existed long before REAL ID and still applies. If you arrive at the checkpoint with no ID at all — left it in the hotel, lost it in the parking lot, kid grabbed it from your bag — TSA can run an alternate identity-verification process.
- You complete a short form at the document checker.
- TSA contacts a third-party verification service that asks you a series of knowledge-based authentication questions — past addresses, vehicles you've owned, names of relatives — pulled from public records.
- If your answers match, you're cleared for enhanced secondary screening (full pat-down, full bag inspection) and allowed to fly.
- If you can't be verified, you don't fly.
This works for travelers with a US public-records footprint. Recent immigrants, young adults without credit history, and frequent movers may fail. It also adds 30-60 minutes on top of normal screening, and TSA offers it at its discretion. Don't rely on it intentionally — it's a one-time backstop, not a strategy.
Federal Buildings: Enforcement Varies by Facility
REAL ID has been required to enter many federal facilities since 2014 — Veterans Affairs hospitals, certain DoD installations, federal courthouses. Some of those exempted state IDs through 2025; that grace period is over. But "federal facility" is not a single category, and the rules differ:
| Facility type | REAL ID required? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| TSA checkpoints (airports) | Yes | The most visible enforcement surface |
| Federal courthouses | Yes, in most districts | Some districts also accept state IDs with extra screening; varies by US Marshals Service |
| VA hospitals + medical clinics | Patient access usually accommodated | Restricted areas (admin offices, secure wings) follow federal-facility rules |
| Military bases | Yes for visitors | Active-duty / dependent IDs always work; visitor pass requires REAL ID or passport |
| Federal prisons + detention centers | Yes | Bureau of Prisons enforces strictly; visitors turned away without compliant ID |
| Nuclear power plants | Yes | NRC-regulated sites follow federal-facility rules; tours and contractor access require REAL ID |
| Federal office buildings (GSA-managed) | Yes for non-public areas | Public lobbies open without ID; meetings or appointments require check-in with compliant ID |
| Social Security / IRS field offices | Public service access usually accommodated | Same as VA — service delivery shouldn't be blocked, but staff areas are restricted |
The pattern: service delivery to the public usually continues even without a compliant ID, but anything past a public lobby requires a REAL ID or a federally accepted alternative. If you regularly visit a federal facility, call the building's security office in advance — the front-door sign is often out of date.
The Post-Enforcement "Soft Phase"
From May 2025 onward, TSA has operated what the agency itself describes as a "phased enforcement" model. In practice this has meant non-compliant licenses are warned, screened, and let through, rather than denied outright. The agency has not committed to a public date when the soft phase ends.
What's changing through 2026:
- The warning script has firmed up. Early 2025 versions said "this is the last time"; mid-2026 versions are more declarative about future denials.
- Hub airports during peak travel weeks are reportedly stricter than smaller regional fields.
- Patience for repeat non-compliant travelers has dropped. Travelers stopped twice at the same hub within a month report being told extra screening won't be offered a third time.
- Some states have stopped issuing standard licenses entirely, gradually narrowing the pool of non-compliant IDs in circulation.
No public date has been set for ending extra screening. Treat the current accommodation as a courtesy that will eventually disappear, not a feature.
What If You Have a Non-Compliant License Now?
Three options:
- Upgrade to REAL ID at your next renewal. If your renewal is coming up anyway, just bring the REAL ID document set (see the requirements list) and the upgrade is usually free or a small add-on. This is the easiest path.
- Upgrade now, before your scheduled renewal. Most states allow you to walk into the DMV and upgrade an existing license to REAL ID without a full renewal. You typically pay a duplicate license fee and your expiration date doesn't change. Worth it if you fly soon.
- Use a passport instead. If you have a current US passport or passport card, you don't need to upgrade. Carry your passport on flights. Standard licenses still work for everything else — driving, alcohol, banking.
State-Level Expiration: Read the Fine Print
Some states are issuing standard (non-REAL ID) licenses with shorter validity periods to encourage upgrades. A few states have stopped issuing standard licenses entirely — every new or renewed license is REAL ID by default unless you opt out in writing. Your state page shows the current policy. Fees and procedures vary; check the linked state page for current amounts before you go.
What About Kids and Teens?
Federal law: children under 18 don't need any ID at TSA checkpoints when traveling with an accompanying adult. This hasn't changed under REAL ID. For unaccompanied minors, airline policies apply — most major US airlines accept a school ID or birth certificate for domestic travel. The REAL ID rules do not impose a separate identification burden on minors.
What About Global Entry, EDL, Military, Tribal ID?
All federally accepted as alternatives to REAL ID at TSA checkpoints:
- Global Entry / NEXUS / SENTRI / FAST cards (Trusted Traveler programs)
- Enhanced Driver's License (EDL) — issued by Michigan, Minnesota, New York, Vermont, Washington
- Active-duty US military ID
- Permanent Resident Card (Green Card)
- Tribal-issued photo ID for federally recognized tribes
- Department of Homeland Security trusted-traveler cards
- US passport book or passport card
- HSPD-12 PIV cards (for federal employees and contractors)
Any one of these is sufficient — you do not need a REAL ID in addition. For the full list, see the TSA identification page linked below.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I still fly without a REAL ID in 2026?
In most cases, yes — but only with extra screening, and only if the document checker decides to accommodate you that day. The agency has been clear this is a transition courtesy, not a permanent fallback. If you fly more than once or twice a year, get a compliant ID.
Will my expired REAL ID work at TSA?
TSA accepts driver's licenses up to one year past the expiration date for identification at checkpoints. This is policy under the agency's general identification rules, not specific to REAL ID. After one year, the document is not accepted and you'll need to use the alternate identity-verification process or a different ID.
Do I need a REAL ID to drive?
No. REAL ID is only required for boarding domestic flights and entering certain federal facilities. A standard (non-REAL ID) license is fully valid for driving in your state and in any state that recognizes your home state's license (which is all of them).
Does REAL ID work for international flights?
No. International flights always require a passport book — REAL ID is domestic-only. The passport card works for land and sea entry from Canada, Mexico, Bermuda, and most Caribbean countries, but not for air travel.
Is the REAL ID upgrade always more expensive than a standard license?
Not always. Some states charge the same fee for either type. Some states charge a small REAL ID add-on. A few states have made REAL ID the default and charge a fee to opt out. See the requirements article and your state page for current pricing.
What happens if I lose my REAL ID right before a flight?
If you have any other federally accepted ID (passport, military ID, EDL, etc.), use that. If not, you can attempt the TSA alternate identity-verification process at the checkpoint — but it can take 60+ minutes, you'll get enhanced screening, and there's no guarantee it will succeed. Arrive 2-3 hours early.
Do I need a REAL ID for Amtrak or Greyhound?
No. REAL ID applies to federal facilities and TSA-screened air travel. Long-distance rail and bus travel inside the US doesn't require any federal ID standard. Carriers may require ID at ticket purchase or boarding under their own policies, but a standard state license satisfies them.
Can I get a REAL ID if I'm not a US citizen?
Yes. Lawful permanent residents and individuals with valid immigration status (visa holders, asylees, refugees, DACA recipients in eligible states) can get a REAL ID. The document set is typically a foreign passport plus visa or I-94, or a Permanent Resident Card. The REAL ID is valid only as long as your underlying immigration status is valid.
How do I know if my current license is REAL ID-compliant?
Look in the upper-right corner. Compliant licenses carry a star — usually gold or black, sometimes inside a state-outline cutout, circle, or bear (California). If there is no star and the card reads "Federal Limits Apply" or "Not For Federal Identification", it's standard.
Why did the deadline get pushed so many times?
Three reasons stacked: state resistance on cost and federalism grounds, technical requirements (secure issuance systems, anti-counterfeiting features) that took longer to roll out than projected, and COVID-19 closing DMVs for months in 2020-2021. By 2024 the obstacles cleared and the political consensus to enforce had hardened.
Sources
- DHS REAL ID program
- TSA REAL ID page
- TSA accepted identification
- TSA newsroom and press releases (enforcement-phase announcements)
- GAO report on REAL ID implementation (historical background on deadline slippage)
- DHS news releases (current enforcement guidance)