PHOENIX — Editor's note: the video shows step by step on how to get new identification to comply with federal requirements.
It's about time to get that Travel ID. You'll need it at airports and federal buildings next year.
Oct. 1, 2020, is when the TSA ID rules go into effect.
“This date is looming large for Arizonans with driver licenses and ID cards,” said MVD Stakeholder Relations Manager Jennifer Bowser Richards. “We don’t want to see peoples’ travel plans ruined because they don’t have an ID that meets the upcoming new federal TSA checkpoint requirements, but that’s a very real risk for people who don’t get a Travel ID.”
RELATED: Does your Arizona driver’s license have a gold star? If not, you may not be able to fly in 2020.
The travel ID would be accepted when boarding a plane without a passport to travel domestically.
ADOT MVD urges Arizonans to make an appointment to get their Travel ID.
Arizona is one of 37 states giving motorists the option to keep their non-federally complaints licenses or get the Travel ID.
Appointments can be scheduled online at servicearizona.com and the cost of the new ID is $25.
ADOT MVD says the Travel ID is valid under federal law for eight years.