TSA PreCheck: Should You Ditch Your Travel Companion If They Don't Have It?


Travel Debates is a sequence wherein our editors weigh in on probably the most contentious points that come up in-transit, like whether or not you need to ever swap seats on a aircraft or when you ought to verify your work e mail whereas on trip.

You’ve bought TSA PreCheck and Clear, your journey associate doesn’t. To keep or to go away, goes the trendy ethical dilemma. Sacrifice time (and clear socks) within the title of a shared journey or go solo in an ever-so-slightly shorter queue, rising on the opposite facet with a bottle filled with water but a coronary heart racked with disgrace. Or you simply is perhaps the PreCheck-less traveler who is aware of very effectively your associate’s enrolled but nonetheless guilts them into sticking it out with you—a punishment for his or her planning forward.

This patience-testing, doubtlessly flamable state of affairs is one we’re very accustomed to at Traveler. Should you ditch your journey companion in the event that they don’t have TSA PreCheck? Are you inclined to make use of what you’ve paid for—or are you set on leaving no man behind? Is there a approach, dare we are saying, to make use of your lack of PreCheck to your benefit? Below, senior options editor Rebecca Misner, international digital director Arati Menon, locations senior editor Shannon McMahon, and senior visuals editor Pallavi Mohan Kumar weigh in on all that might go down on the safety crossroads.

This article has been up to date with new info since its authentic publish date.

See you on the opposite facet?

“Hard yes. Unless your companion could use a hand or is traveling with young kids (in the latter case, if this person also happens to be your spouse or partner, really not cool to leave them with the stroller, diaper bag, squirming kids). Otherwise, ditch away. Getting through security is often stressful, especially at airports where you’re still taking out your laptop or seemingly putting every item in its own bin. A little alone time for both parties during a potentially high-stress point—especially at the start of a trip that you’ll have plenty of togetherness on—isn’t a bad idea. The kind thing to do, if you’re first through, is to go get in the coffee line or scout the best food options.” —Rebecca Misner, Features Director

Think of the traveler you as soon as had been…

“I have plenty of family members who don’t have TSA PreCheck, so my answer is easy: I wait with them. Now, I should probably disclose two things. First, I have a planet-sized guilty conscience, so leaving a loved one to the regular security line while I breeze through would haunt me all the way to my destination. Second, I vividly remember instances (not dissimilar to this) where I was the one with the weaker passport in the travel hierarchy, and had folks willingly stand with me in the much longer immigration queue. That kind of solidarity sticks with you. To me, it’s a small price to pay for traveling together—and racking up brownie points as the favorite family member or best friend.

That said, I do have a larger question, perhaps for another discussion: what happens when everybody gets TSA PreCheck and the balance tips the other way? If everyone gets the privilege lane, who ends up waiting with whom? Is there a new hierarchy?” —Arati Menon, Global Digital Director

…and the traveler you may have turn into

“I usually don’t mind being separated from my husband or travel partner while traveling—it’s fine to have some alone time and pair up later. But recently I gave birth to twins and am a first-time mom, and so I think that really upends things. My days of saying to him ‘see you on the other side’ are over. With one baby I think we would both say that ditching the other is grounds for divorce, so with two, you better stick with me and take those shoes off. If we’re alone somehow though and his TSA PreCheck has lapsed while I still have mine? See you on the other side with a coffee, like Becca said.” —Shannon McMahon, Senior Editor, Destinations



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