Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I did it just last Spring. I'm not sure if anyone ever asked to see it or DC's birth certificate, but I'm glad I had it just in case.
Traveling with a toddler is already a teacup of madness, why add to the worries?
Oh, and bring Benedryl. Just bring it.
Did you bring your child's birth certificate in addition to a passport?
Anonymous wrote:
I did it just last Spring. I'm not sure if anyone ever asked to see it or DC's birth certificate, but I'm glad I had it just in case.
Traveling with a toddler is already a teacup of madness, why add to the worries?
Oh, and bring Benedryl. Just bring it.
ThatSmileyFaceGuy wrote:Think of it this way, is it better to take the hour to draft the letter and get it notarized and not need it; or sit on your couch for an hour, not have the letter and then have to scramble to get it at the last minute or even worse be barred from entering the plane.
Anonymous wrote:It usually applies even if you're married. How would someone know, just from your passport, whether you are married to the other parent? (At least with a US passport. Some countries do record marital information in passports.) Also, parental abductions don't only happen within couples that have already formally separated, so proof of current marital status wouldn't prove much anyway.
I think this is a case of better safe than sorry. It's not like you need to pay lots of money to have a lawyer draft this or something...
Anonymous wrote:I did it for mom-baby trip to England, but only because my DD has a different last name than me (I kept my maiden). It wasn't an issue though. Better to be safe than sorry though.