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
The REAL ID Act passed in 2005, recommended by the 9/11 Commission. Original deadline: 2008. It was pushed back roughly every two years for the next sixteen years — first because most states couldn't meet the technical requirements, then because of state pushback on cost, then because of the COVID-19 pandemic. The May 7, 2025 date held because by 2024 every state was issuing REAL ID-compliant licenses and the federal infrastructure was in place.
What enforcement actually looks like
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. What's happening in practice:
- If you have an alternative ID (passport, Global Entry, military, EDL, etc.): standard screening, no issue.
- If you have a non-REAL-ID license and nothing else: TSA may allow you through with additional screening — answering identity questions, extra search of your belongings — but they're explicit that this is not guaranteed and not a long-term fallback.
- If you have nothing valid at all: you're not flying. Same rule as before REAL ID.
The "extra-screening" option appears to be tightening month over month. Plan as if it isn't there.
Federal buildings
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. If you regularly visit a federal facility, ask in advance which IDs the building's security officer accepts.
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 +$10-30. 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 pay a duplicate license fee ($5-30) 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.
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.
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.
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