Anonymous wrote:Don't you need her birthday to book the ticket?
If so, you'd have to fudge it when you book the ticket with the airline, or I'd think the airline would flag the age at purchase.
If you fudge it at purchase, then her ID and her ticket will not match. This is not an ideal situation for your kid if she is stopped at TSA.
Anonymous wrote:If it's American, you have to provide the birth certificate at the gate:
At check-in, parents / guardians will also need to provide:
A birth certificate or passport as proof of the child’s age
The adult’s government-issued photo ID with their current address
Your phone number so we can contact you
The name, address and phone number of the adult meeting your child at their destination
https://www.aa.com/i18n/travel-info/special-assistance/unaccompanied-minors.jsp
Anonymous wrote:If it's American, you have to provide the birth certificate at the gate:
At check-in, parents / guardians will also need to provide:
A birth certificate or passport as proof of the child’s age
The adult’s government-issued photo ID with their current address
Your phone number so we can contact you
The name, address and phone number of the adult meeting your child at their destination
https://www.aa.com/i18n/travel-info/special-assistance/unaccompanied-minors.jsp
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You can't, they check the age with the passport.
who does? And when?
TSA. When you arrive. She will need to show ID. They will see her age. Yes, if they can get $300 out of her they will.
It's not 1992.
So the TSA age is literally going to check her passport against her boarding pass and then make the mental calculation to realize that she is 14 years, 51 weeks old?
Really?
You don't need an ID to travel when you are under 18. "TSA does not require children under 18 to provide identification when traveling within the United States." And airlines only take your boarding pass when you board a plane.
Most people don't even have a passport. They just go by whatever date of birth you enter into the system when you book the flight.
OP just say he birthday is a month earlier when you book the ticket.
Anonymous wrote:It’s a one hour flight which makes it what, a 4 hour drive at most? Drive her there. Or pay an additional $100 and fly there with her. Or cal the airline and plead your case, they may be understanding and either give you the unaccompanied minor treatment for free or say she doesn’t need it.
Anonymous wrote:I think most of these people haven't flown with children.
Children under 16 don't need to show any kind of ID to fly domestically. No one will be asking for the girl's ID.
What I don't know is how TSA handles a kid without a parent going through security. She'll probably have to explicitly lie to a TSA agent to tell them she's 15 (which in this case seems to be the golden age between not needing to pay the UM fee and not needing ID).
As a PP said, for southwest the magic age is 12. See if there's a flight that would work with them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
She is flying for a funeral of a friend who died. It's very sad.
We really don't have the extra $300 for this fee (on top of $400 for the ticket).
This sounds like something you should accompany her to -- sorry that's not something i would send my teenager alone to do.
Good Lord.
Stop with the criticism.
She is meeting a parent who will be there already. Parent #2 lives in that town. Please stop with the holier-than-thou parenting.
It's a funeral for a teenager - that's heavy. Sorry you are ok with being a crappy parent.
F-you. The kid is attending WITH A PARENT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You can't, they check the age with the passport.
who does? And when?
TSA. When you arrive. She will need to show ID. They will see her age. Yes, if they can get $300 out of her they will.
It's not 1992.
So the TSA age is literally going to check her passport against her boarding pass and then make the mental calculation to realize that she is 14 years, 51 weeks old?
Really?