Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Not to summer camp, but to visit his grandparents. Be sure to check the airline's policy for unaccompanied minors. Some will charge an extra fee. I found Southwest to be very cooperative. You can get a gate pass to make sure she gets on the correct plane at this end. If she has a cell phone, she can touch base with you on the other end and relieve some anxiety.
I'm pretty sure you have to be under 12 to be considered an unaccompanied minor. A 15yo can fly alone freely.
Any minor without the appropriate ID can fly as an unaccompanied minor. I nannied for a very conservative family who homeschooled the kids, the 15 year old flew as unaccompanied because she didn't have a school ID, state ID or driver's license.
This is not true. I tried to fly my friend's just turned 13 year old daughter out to see us. We were told that unaccompanied minor was not an option.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Not to summer camp, but to visit his grandparents. Be sure to check the airline's policy for unaccompanied minors. Some will charge an extra fee. I found Southwest to be very cooperative. You can get a gate pass to make sure she gets on the correct plane at this end. If she has a cell phone, she can touch base with you on the other end and relieve some anxiety.
I'm pretty sure you have to be under 12 to be considered an unaccompanied minor. A 15yo can fly alone freely.
Any minor without the appropriate ID can fly as an unaccompanied minor. I nannied for a very conservative family who homeschooled the kids, the 15 year old flew as unaccompanied because she didn't have a school ID, state ID or driver's license.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Not to summer camp, but to visit his grandparents. Be sure to check the airline's policy for unaccompanied minors. Some will charge an extra fee. I found Southwest to be very cooperative. You can get a gate pass to make sure she gets on the correct plane at this end. If she has a cell phone, she can touch base with you on the other end and relieve some anxiety.
I'm pretty sure you have to be under 12 to be considered an unaccompanied minor. A 15yo can fly alone freely.
Any minor without the appropriate ID can fly as an unaccompanied minor. I nannied for a very conservative family who homeschooled the kids, the 15 year old flew as unaccompanied because she didn't have a school ID, state ID or driver's license.
This is not true. I tried to fly my friend's just turned 13 year old daughter out to see us. We were told that unaccompanied minor was not an option.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Not to summer camp, but to visit his grandparents. Be sure to check the airline's policy for unaccompanied minors. Some will charge an extra fee. I found Southwest to be very cooperative. You can get a gate pass to make sure she gets on the correct plane at this end. If she has a cell phone, she can touch base with you on the other end and relieve some anxiety.
I'm pretty sure you have to be under 12 to be considered an unaccompanied minor. A 15yo can fly alone freely.
Any minor without the appropriate ID can fly as an unaccompanied minor. I nannied for a very conservative family who homeschooled the kids, the 15 year old flew as unaccompanied because she didn't have a school ID, state ID or driver's license.
Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Not to summer camp, but to visit his grandparents. Be sure to check the airline's policy for unaccompanied minors. Some will charge an extra fee. I found Southwest to be very cooperative. You can get a gate pass to make sure she gets on the correct plane at this end. If she has a cell phone, she can touch base with you on the other end and relieve some anxiety.
I'm pretty sure you have to be under 12 to be considered an unaccompanied minor. A 15yo can fly alone freely.
Anonymous wrote:Our 16 year old has flown to ballet summer programs since she was 13 and has been allowed to roam around various cities during these summers (with at least 2 peers with her) including getting herself from NJ to downtown Manhattan with a friend via bus to subway plus walking when she was 12. She did amazingly well using public transport including arriving in 1 city out west at 9 pm and getting a cab to a university and then contacting the point person to get her dorm room assignment. We found cell phones make it much less nerve wracking for parents. Most kids are eager for such responsibilities and more than capable.
Anonymous wrote:We're thinking of doing that this summer since the camp is in the middle of nowhere (she could ride a shuttle to and from the airport). She's been on lots of flights but never on her own and I'm worried because she's very absent-minded and not the most resourceful kid around. Wondering about other people's experiences and/or advice. Thanks.
Anonymous wrote:The one thing you should do though, if she really is ADHD/absentminded, is triple check and strap her ID on to her; my nieces and nephews fly alone a lot and the biggest issue the absentminded ones have is leaving their IDs at home, or at camp, or in the taxi, or on the shuttle.