TSA PreCheck Touchless ID: Every airport with the speedy, new security lanes

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If you’re flying this summer, be sure to check your airline profile before you head to the airport.

Millions of frequent flyers are now eligible for one of the best time-savers around … but only if they sign up ahead of time.

Over the last few months, the Transportation Security Administration rapidly expanded its new TSA PreCheck Touchless ID program to dozens of the nation’s largest airports. The new program allows travelers to quickly pass through TSA checkpoints without having to pull out their boarding pass or ID.

It’s now available at more than 60 hubs nationwide, and it’s a great way to speed up your trip through airport security during the busiest travel months of the year.

How does TSA PreCheck Touchless ID work?

The TSA PreCheck Touchless ID program uses facial comparison technology to help travelers breeze through the first stage of the TSA checkpoint in a matter of seconds.

Travelers passing through these lanes get their picture taken as they approach the TSA officer, and the TSA’s computers compare that image to a passport photo on file.

TSA PreCheck Touchless ID at Denver International Airport (DEN). AL DRAGO/GETTY IMAGES

Typically, travelers using these fast lanes can then speed through without pulling out their wallet or boarding pass. The experience is often faster than using any other security lane, even Clear.

TPG’s Clint Henderson wrote about his experience using the TSA PreCheck Touchless ID lanes, which are typically marked by blue-and-green signage at checkpoints.

Read more: 8 ways to get free or discounted TSA PreCheck, Global Entry and Clear

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Who can use TSA PreCheck Touchless ID?

If you’re a TSA PreCheck member or get your TSA PreCheck access through Global Entry, you’re eligible to use the TSA PreCheck Touchless ID lanes — as long as you opt in.

How to opt in

To do that, you’ll want to go to your airline frequent flyer profile, upload an image of your passport and consent to the facial identification program.

For instance, ahead of a recent United Airlines flight out of Newark Liberty International Airport (EWR), I pulled up my United app. I clicked on “TSA PreCheck and travel documents.”

UNITED AIRLINES

Then, I selected “TSA PreCheck Touchless ID.”

UNITED AIRLINES

The app prompted me to add a photo of my passport, just like you might before an international flight.

And then there were a couple of pages where I had to opt in and consent. Once you do this, you should be clear to use the TSA PreCheck Touchless ID lanes.

UNITED AIRLINES

Which airports offer TSA PreCheck Touchless ID?

This spring, the TSA completed an aggressive rollout of the new technology to more than 60 airports nationwide.

Each of the five largest U.S. carriers now partners with the administration to allow passengers access to the TSA PreCheck Touchless ID lanes at many of the nation’s largest hubs, as well as at a bunch of medium and smaller airports.

Here’s the full rundown of airlines and airports where it’s available as of May 2026:

Airport American Airlines Delta Air Lines United Airlines Southwest Airlines Alaska Airlines
Albuquerque International Sunport (ABQ)

Austin Bergstrom International Airport (AUS

Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood 

Birmingham-Shuttesworth International Airport (BHM)

Boise Airport (BOI)

Boston Logan International Airport (BOS)

Bradley International Airport (BDL) in Hartford

Buffalo Niagra International Airport (BUF)

Charleston International Airport (CHS) in South Carolina

Charlotte Douglas International Airport (CLT)

Cincinnati-Northern Kentucky International Airport (CVG)

Cleveland-Hopkins International Airport (CLE)

Dallas Fort Worth International Airport (DFW)

Dallas Love Field (DAL)

Daniel K. Inouye International Airport (HNL) in Honolulu

Denver International Airport (DEN)

Detroit Wayne County Metropolitan Airport (DTW)

Dulles International Airport (IAD) near Washington

Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport (FLL)

George Bush Intercontinental Airport (IAH) in Houston

Harry Reid International Airport (LAS) in Las Vegas

Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL)

Jacksonville International Airport (JAX)

John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) in New York

John Glenn Columbus International Airport (CMH)

John Wayne Airport (SNA) in Orange County, California

Kansas City International Airport (MCI)

LaGuardia Airport (LGA) in New York

Los Angeles International Airport (LAX)

Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport (MSY)

Luis Munoz Marin International Airport (SJU) in San Juan, Puerto Rico

Miami International Airport (MIA)

Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport (MKE)

Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport (MSP)

Nashville International Airport (BNA)

Newark Liberty International Airport (EWR)

Oakland San Francisco Bay Airport (OAK)

O’Hare International Airport (ORD) in Chicago

Palm Beach International Airport (PBI) in West Palm Beach, Florida

Palm Springs International Airport (PSP)

Philadelphia International Airport (PHL)

Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport (PHX)

Pittsburgh International Airport (PIT)

Portland International Airport (PDX) in Oregon

Raleigh-Durham International Airport (RDU)

Rhode Island T.F. Green International Airport (PVD) near Providence 

Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA)

Sacramento International Airport (SMF)

Salt Lake City International Airport (SLC)

San Antonio International Airport (SAT)

San Diego International Airport (SAN)

San Francisco International Airport (SFO)

San Jose Mineta International Airport (SJC)

Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (SEA)

St. Louis Lambert International Airport (STL)

Tampa International Airport (TPA)

Tulsa International Airport (TUL)

Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport (ANC)

William P. Hobby Airport (HOU) in Houston

Westchester County Airport (HPN)

Will Rogers International Airport (OKC) in Oklahoma City

You’ll only be able to use the TSA PreCheck Touchless ID lanes if your airline partners with the service at that specific airport and if you opt into the service with that specific carrier.

Also, keep in mind that there are cases (as shown above) where one airline allows Touchless ID access, while another at the same airport doesn’t. When that discrepancy happens, it’s typically because the new TSA technology is only available in certain terminals.

Take my home airport, Raleigh-Durham International Airport (RDU), for example. Alaska Airlines and Southwest don’t offer the service here because the TSA’s Touchless technology isn’t available at the smaller terminal where those carriers operate. But the new fast lanes are open in Terminal 2 for passengers flying with American, Delta and United.

Bottom line

You should still bring your Real ID or an acceptable alternative, like a passport, to the airport, even if you’ve opted into TSA PreCheck Touchless ID.

As I’ve seen numerous times at airports, technology can malfunction, or some other snafu can arise that prompts officers to ask you to present a valid ID.

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Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: thepointsguy.com