Passport renewal

hermosabeach

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Years ago I was almost blocked from leaving the US as my passport expired 3 days after my return flight.

I have now heard conflicting details as to how long your passport must be valid for before you travel. The numbers vary from 3 month to 6 months.

I hate to renew it too early.

Any feedback? When do you renew your passport?
 
From USA.GOV
  • Check the expiration date because certain countries require passports to remain valid for up to 6 months after travel. Also, some airlines do not allow you to board if you don't meet this requirement.
I’d just go with 6 months and be on the safe side. I should check mine as we are planning on leaving the US this next year.

Seems dumb to me that if it is still valid why can’t you travel but I guess logic doesn’t apply to everything.
 
From USA.GOV
  • Check the expiration date because certain countries require passports to remain valid for up to 6 months after travel. Also, some airlines do not allow you to board if you don't meet this requirement.
I’d just go with 6 months and be on the safe side. I should check mine as we are planning on leaving the US this next year.

Seems dumb to me that if it is still valid why can’t you travel but I guess logic doesn’t apply to everything.

Because some countries actually take their borders seriously and don't care much for "undocumented" or "Expired Documented" types hanging around. They expect you to have your stuff in order along with a margin of safety incase something happens and you get stuck there.
 
Hi,

Doesn't everyone alternate their 2 passport renewals between the 10 year expiration one and the 4 year expiration one?
So that you ALWAYS have a passport that is greatly within the expiration limits of travelling.

Sincerely,
Theis

Sometimes you know when you have 2 or 3 or more passports you might forget which one has which expiration date, especially if some are a bit more work to renew that just mailing a form at the post office.
 
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I get all of mine done around the same time. It's the "new thing".

7048190
 
uh, for us unwashed, "more than one passport???" how's that work?

Or is this in reference to Jason Bourne, and the like? Pick a country, any country.... ;D

Hi,

USA citizens are allowed a Primary USA Passport with 10 year expiration and a Secondary USA Passport with 4 year expiration.
Particularly for instances where stamps of x country would cause you "detention" or entry denial into y country.

For example:
Having a resident Visa from Saudi, UAE, Oman, Qatar, Bahain, etc then trying to enter Israel. You do NOT want to use same USA passport for that trip, so you get those resident Visas in your primary and enter Israel on your secondary.

Sincerely,
Theis
 
You can get a duplicate passport, however they are only good for 2 years, not 4. Most countries will require you to have 6 months left on your passport. Some like Brazil even require two empty pages, even though the stamp only takes up 1/4 of 1 page. I work over seas all the time, my company requires us (and pays for) to have a duplicate passport. Some countries it takes months to get a work visa for, so we always have the duplicate. I always travel on the 2 year, and keep the 10 year in my pocket. There are other reasons as well, some places in West Africa they will hold your passport while you are working there. As crazy as it sounds that is how they roll over there. So always give them the 2 year and keep the 10 on you in case you need to jump in a plane and fly home.

 
Hi,

USA citizens are allowed a Primary USA Passport with 10 year expiration and a Secondary USA Passport with 4 year expiration.
Particularly for instances where stamps of x country would cause you "detention" or entry denial into y country.

For example:
Having a resident Visa from Saudi, UAE, Oman, Qatar, Bahain, etc then trying to enter Israel. You do NOT want to use same USA passport for that trip, so you get those resident Visas in your primary and enter Israel on your secondary.

Sincerely,
Theis

Or better yet, go to Israel on your American passport, then go to visit our other "allies" using your passport from a different country.
Also useful when you might want to stay longer as a "tourist" in a country than they usually are happy about, in and out on one, then in and out on another.
 
Hi,

Thanks for the correction. It appears that is a new(ish) revision by DoS.

LOL you had your passport held by your Companies local "Agent" in Ghana or Benin?


Sincerely,
Theis
Actually Ghana is not to bad, Angola and Congo is where I have had issues. Yes some of those agents will hold your passport for weeks sometimes. I did my time in those shit holes, don't care if I ever go back. Found a decent gig in South America, so sticking this out for a couple years.
 
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Because some countries actually take their borders seriously and don't care much for "undocumented" or "Expired Documented" types hanging around. They expect you to have your stuff in order along with a margin of safety incase something happens and you get stuck there.

Thanks! I assumed that people would do their best to get back to their country and not hang around but I guess that is me not others.
 
I'm so glad I don't have to "visit" shit hole countries any more and have to worry about dual passports and shit.

Answer to the OP's question, there is little to no reason to have a passport with less than a year on it if you intend to travel outside the country. The last thing you want on a trip is a stressful adventure at a foreign passport control booth, or even worse their back office for further questioning and screening. That shit has added a few of the gray whiskers to my beard. I recommend the double pages while you're at it if you remotely think you will be visiting a lot of countries, far cheaper than getting pages added.

While you're at it, get Global Entry (and thereby TSA PreCheck) too for $100, saves mad time at the airport and pays for itself the first time it saves you from missing a flight because you were standing in some stupid passport line for over an hour. BTDT too and had to rent a car at far more to get me to the same place faster than the next connecting flight would have, got global entry at the very next opportunity.
 
I'm so glad I don't have to "visit" shit hole countries any more and have to worry about dual passports and shit.

Answer to the OP's question, there is little to no reason to have a passport with less than a year on it if you intend to travel outside the country. The last thing you want on a trip is a stressful adventure at a foreign passport control booth, or even worse their back office for further questioning and screening. That shit has added a few of the gray whiskers to my beard. I recommend the double pages while you're at it if you remotely think you will be visiting a lot of countries, far cheaper than getting pages added.

While you're at it, get Global Entry (and thereby TSA PreCheck) too for $100, saves mad time at the airport and pays for itself the first time it saves you from missing a flight because you were standing in some stupid passport line for over an hour. BTDT too and had to rent a car at far more to get me to the same place faster than the next connecting flight would have, got global entry at the very next opportunity.
All of this ^
And if you use your Amex they credit you back the $100.
global entry is the best investment you can make if you travel abroad.
 
You can get expedited passport in something like 72 hrs.
Yrs back i forgot to renew and to be safe just spent the money. If you travel like I do "the phone rings and away you go in a few hrs" being caught without can miserable.
 
If you're DoD, also request a DoD passport. It carries a little extra weight when trying to leave a country that you don't have an entry stamp for (don't ask me how I know). It also allows (as Theis mentioned) the ability to segregate countries that prohibit entry based on past travel history.