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TSA at Airports in the USA — Security Check, REAL ID, PreCheck, Global Entry (2026)

The TSA (Transportation Security Administration) screens all passengers at American airports, providing a comprehensive guide on REAL ID requirements (effective May 7, 2025), carry-on regulations, TSA PreCheck ($78/5 years — shorter lines), Global Entry ($120/5 years — immigration bonus), CLEAR, traveling with children, and Polish medications.

TSA (Transportation Security Administration) controls all passengers at American airports. Average screening time: 15-45 minutes during peak times, longer during holidays. This guide explains how it works, what you can/must do, and how to skip lines through PreCheck / Global Entry.

REAL ID — KEY from May 7, 2025

From May 7, 2025, all domestic flights require:

  • REAL ID compliant driver's license / state ID (with a star in the corner)
  • OR U.S. passport
  • OR Permanent Resident Card (Green Card)
  • OR military ID
  • OR tribal ID
  • OR Enhanced Driver's License (MI, NY, VT, WA, MN)

Without REAL ID or equivalent ID = NO BOARDING.

What if I only have a standard driver's license (non-REAL ID)

  • Go to the DMV and upgrade to REAL ID
  • Requirements: passport / birth certificate + SSN card + 2 proofs of address
  • Cost: $0-15 typically
  • OR: fly with a Polish passport / Green Card

TSA Standard — What to Expect

Step 1: Document Check

  • You show ID + boarding pass
  • TSA officer scans both
  • Checks name match
  • IMPORTANT: the name on the ticket MUST exactly match the ID. A typo = problem.

Step 2: Body Scanner

  • Stand in the scanner, hands above your head
  • 5 seconds
  • Alternative: pat-down (if you refuse or the system selects you)

Step 3: Bag X-ray

  • Carry-on goes on the conveyor
  • Shoes, belt, phone, keys, laptop, electronics in a separate container
  • (PreCheck = you do not need to remove)

Step 4: After Screening

  • Gather your belongings
  • Put on shoes, belt
  • Pack laptop
  • Go to the gate

What You Can Bring in Carry-On

3-1-1 Rule for Liquids

  • Containers max 3.4 oz / 100 ml each
  • All in 1 quart-size zip-lock bag
  • Per passenger: 1 bag
  • Exception: medications + infant formula/food (unlimited)

What You CAN Bring

  • Clothes, books, documents
  • Laptop, tablet, phone, camera
  • Power bank (up to 100Wh = ~27,000 mAh)
  • Gold, jewelry (better in carry-on than suitcase)
  • Medications + medical supplies (unlimited if essential)
  • Infant formula/food (unlimited if traveling with a child)
  • Cigarettes / e-cigarettes (NOT in suitcase, only carry-on!)
  • Lithium-ion batteries (separately from laptop)
  • Small scissors (blades up to 4 inches)
  • Tweezers, nail clippers

What You CANNOT Bring in Carry-On (but OK in suitcase)

  • Knives > 4 inches, weapons, tools
  • Liquids > 100 ml
  • Sports gear (baseball bats, golf clubs, paintball)
  • Liquid medications > 100 ml (you can, but inform TSA before screening)

What You CANNOT Bring AT ALL

  • Lithium batteries over 160Wh (most laptops: OK)
  • Hoverboards (all airlines banned since 2016)
  • Explosives, flammable materials
  • Some foods: caviar > 4 oz, fresh apples (to the USA — federal agricultural restrictions)

What You Can Bring in Checked Bag

LOT Limits (economy, to/from Poland)

  • 23 kg / 50 lbs max (overweight $100-200)
  • Linear dimension: 158 cm (62 inches)

What You CAN Bring

  • Liquids of any size (packaged alcohol, perfumes)
  • Liquids up to 70% alcohol — no problem (above: limited)
  • Sharp tools (knives, scissors)
  • Sports equipment (sticks, paintball ammunition in certified containers)
  • Polish cakes (cheesecake, poppy seed cake — YES, checked but: no fresh fruits to the USA on return)
  • Cream, butter, honey, jam

NOT in Checked Bag

  • Cigarettes / e-cigarettes — only carry-on (FAA regulations)
  • Laptops / lithium batteries — not recommended (fire risk)
  • Expensive jewelry, cash > $10,000 — loss if misplaced

TSA PreCheck — $78/5 years

What It Offers

  • Separate line — typically <5 minutes
  • DO NOT remove: shoes, belt, jacket, laptop, liquids
  • Available at 200+ U.S. airports
  • 80% of PreCheck passengers wait <5 minutes

Who Qualifies

  • U.S. citizens
  • Lawful Permanent Residents (Green Card holders) ✅
  • NOT for tourists / short-term visa holders

Application

  1. Online: tsa.gov/precheck
  2. Select enrollment provider (IDEMIA / Telos)
  3. Schedule an appointment at an enrollment center
  4. Go with passport / Green Card + proof of residency
  5. Short interview + fingerprints + photo
  6. Decision: 3-5 days (typically)
  7. You receive a Known Traveler Number (KTN)

Child Traveling with PreCheck Parent

  • Up to 12 years: automatically with PreCheck parent
  • 13-17 years: only if parent on the same passenger record

Global Entry — $120/5 years (BETTER THAN PRECHECK)

What It Offers

  • Everything from PreCheck (automatically)
  • + Expedited entry when returning from abroad
  • Upon landing: go to Global Entry kiosk instead of immigration line
  • 5-10 minutes instead of 30-90 minutes
  • For frequent travelers USA-Poland: ESSENTIAL

Who Qualifies

  • U.S. citizens
  • Lawful Permanent Residents
  • Polish citizens (Poland in the program since 2019) ✅

Application

  1. Online: ttp.cbp.dhs.gov
  2. Enter details, pay $120
  3. Conditional approval: 3-5 days
  4. Interview required at Global Entry Enrollment Center (at the airport or in the city)
  5. Wait time: 2-6 months (popular)
  6. Interview: 15-30 min — passport, travel questions
  7. Final approval: typically on-site

Credit Cards Covering the Cost

  • Chase Sapphire Reserve — refund $120 every 4 years
  • Amex Platinum — refund
  • Capital One Venture X — refund
  • Apply for GE, use the card, get refund — net $0

CLEAR — $189/year

  • Skip security ID check (biometric)
  • Go to CLEAR lane → go straight to scanning
  • Does NOT replace PreCheck (separate)
  • Best: CLEAR + PreCheck together (combo)
  • Available at 50+ airports

Traveling with Children through TSA

Infant

  • Child in a carrier — can go through scanner together
  • Stroller — fold it, on X-ray
  • Car seat — on X-ray
  • Milk / formula — unlimited
  • Diapers, wipes — no limit

Small Child

  • 12 and under: DO NOT need to remove shoes
  • DO NOT need to remove electronics
  • DO NOT need to show ID (parent has it)

Tip for Families

Some airports have a family lane with TSA officers accustomed to children. Ask.

With Medications

Medication in Polish

  • OK in carry-on with a prescription (best in English)
  • Polish names usually accepted, but be prepared to explain
  • DO NOT remove from packaging (keep original)
  • TSA may request "explanation" if unusual

Liquids (insulin, drops, etc.)

  • DO NOT have to be in 3-1-1 bag
  • Inform TSA before screening: "I have liquid medications"
  • TSA may test separately

Syringes / needles

  • OK with a prescription
  • Show TSA

CBD / medical marijuana

  • FEDERALLY illegal regardless of state
  • TSA technically does not check but if found → may call the police
  • DO NOT FLY with marijuana between states

Special Situations

Polish Passport — without REAL ID

A Polish passport DOES NOT work as REAL ID. But it works as a document for all flights (domestic + international). You can show a Polish passport instead of REAL ID.

Without ID

If you lost your ID:

  • TSA may allow you after additional screening
  • Pat-down, additional questions
  • Accepted: credit card, Polish ID, college ID
  • May add 30-60 minutes to your process

Religious Head Coverings

  • Hijab, turban, kippah: OK, you can wear through the scanner
  • TSA may request a pat-down but you can ask for a female officer / private screening

Disability

  • Wheelchair — through an alternative scanner
  • Medical implant — show documentation
  • Service animal — requires documentation

Common Mistakes

  1. No REAL ID / passport in 2025+ — will not be allowed
  2. Liquids > 100 ml in carry-on — will be discarded
  3. Not turning off laptop before screening
  4. Name on ticket ≠ ID — denial
  5. No PreCheck despite qualification — waste of time
  6. Late arrival — minimum 2h before domestic flight, 3h international
  7. Packing prohibited items in carry-on (knives, weapons)
  8. Ignoring 3-1-1 rule for liquids
  9. Bringing power bank in suitcase — FAA forbids

Final Tips

  • Arrive early — 2h domestic, 3h international
  • Pack wisely — boots, beret, jacket easily removable
  • Small cash separately — you can change at kiosks
  • Charged phones — TSA may want to demonstrate it works
  • Layered clothing — easy to remove
  • Bidet bottle / hydroflask — empty through screening, fill afterward

Official Links

Related: [[cheap-flights-usa-poland-how-to-find-2026]] · [[polish-passport-for-child-born-in-usa]] · [[lost-polish-passport-in-usa-what-to-do]]

Official sources

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