That’s why I was considering holding off. My now 20 year old has to renew too but my 21 year old doesn’t because she was 16 last time. |
If there is any way anyone might question their citizenship, get the passport renewed. It’s the cheapest way to prove citizenship. Also for applying to college, it’s important to have that proof. |
OPs kid is 8. Doubt they’re going to college anytime soon |
I would anticipate lots of delays and bottlenecks with all the hiring freezes and firings. So whatever you do, anticipate it taking longer than normal. |
Do you have other kids? If so, it’s very convenient to have them on the same renewal schedule. We renewed one kid’s passport very early to get him on the same schedule as our other kid. If not, I would still renew. You never know, and it will save you the bother of having to do it before your next trip. |
Do it now. The only family members who don’t have one are my parents because they are in their 80s with health issues too complex to GTFO. For example, my mom could die instantly if she falls. |
I'd get the passport renewed now. It makes it easy to do an international trip on short notice, even if its to an all inclusive in Mexico or the Caribbean, Mexico, or visiting a cool city in Canada. Additionally, passport wait times aren't too bad right now. If there are staffing challenges at the State Department there could be massive backlogs (this was the case during covid and it lasted up until a couple years ago).
If there is some sort of wacky citizenship stuff that comes out of the Trump admin. the State Department can and will cancel people's passports. However that process will take time. It's best to have the document in hand. Of course, if you just want proof of citizenship and don't need the passport, a passport card should do the trick. The application process is the same, but it's cheaper. The card has less utility than the actual passport (only valid for land and sea border crossings to Canada, Mexico, Bermuda, and some Caribbean jurisdictions). The card isn't valid for international air travel, but does serve as proof of citizenship and identity. |
Well, I would definitely go get a passport now. Who knows what kinds of delays will happen due to federal workforce shakeup. |
$1000 is not going to get you much… |
Yes I’d renew it. It is a pain, but I keep all 3 of my kids’ up to date. You just never know when it could be needed in some sort of crisis (so incredibly unlikely, but I am a worrier)- or far more likely, an opportunity for a trip will come up and then you will have to scramble around (and when you really need it, of course there will be some sort of delay or issue….right? lol). just easier to renew when not under a time crunch, and keep it up to date.
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Would love to hear more about a crisis in which it's severe enough that you decide to leave the country, but at the same time whether you have a passport in your hand matters.... |
We got both of our kids new passports. If you fill out all the paperwork online and get their pictures taken before hand at CVS or the like, the actual appointment at the Post Office took less than 15 minutes.
Yes it was annoying to find a time during Post Office hours we could all go, but it was well worth it. |
NP. If you have a relative living or traveling abroad, you might all need to leave immediately if they are dying or to go to the funeral. |
Fair, although I think the relatively small percentage of people in this situation (especially a close relative living abroad- that would be what max 10% of Americans?) would generally always have valid passports. OP didn't seem to be in this situation. Saying that as someone who had a close family member living abroad for a while because of marriage- and the spouse died during covid travel restrictions. It was awful. |
We went to get a new passport for our kid the week after the election, *because* of the election results. I also renewed mine extra early, even though it didn't expire for at least two years. I decided not to expedite these applications since we had plenty of time. Mine took 4 weeks. There ended up being an issue with my kid's, though. We turned in the passport, but we did not send the passport card along with it. I didn't even realize we had such a thing, and, of course, had no idea where it might be. So it took a while for us to be notified of the issue and for us to report a lost passport card. The passport finally arrived the Saturday before Inauguration and it was such a relief to have that in hand. I thought I was being overly cautious, but now I regret that we didn't also renew my spouse's, which will expire under this administration. |