Does the US Government Shutdown affect my ability or the speed at which I can receive a passport?
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Does the US government shutdown currently occurring affect either my ability or the speed at which I can receive a passport? If so, what can I do to ensure I can receive my passport as quickly as possible?
By the way, this is the most similar question I have found, on the 2015 shutdown, but the question and the answer did not directly address Passports, although a comment did vaguely say passports are "being affected"
Does the US governmental shutdown affect traveling to/from the US and if so, how?
usa passports event-based-effects
add a comment |
Does the US government shutdown currently occurring affect either my ability or the speed at which I can receive a passport? If so, what can I do to ensure I can receive my passport as quickly as possible?
By the way, this is the most similar question I have found, on the 2015 shutdown, but the question and the answer did not directly address Passports, although a comment did vaguely say passports are "being affected"
Does the US governmental shutdown affect traveling to/from the US and if so, how?
usa passports event-based-effects
add a comment |
Does the US government shutdown currently occurring affect either my ability or the speed at which I can receive a passport? If so, what can I do to ensure I can receive my passport as quickly as possible?
By the way, this is the most similar question I have found, on the 2015 shutdown, but the question and the answer did not directly address Passports, although a comment did vaguely say passports are "being affected"
Does the US governmental shutdown affect traveling to/from the US and if so, how?
usa passports event-based-effects
Does the US government shutdown currently occurring affect either my ability or the speed at which I can receive a passport? If so, what can I do to ensure I can receive my passport as quickly as possible?
By the way, this is the most similar question I have found, on the 2015 shutdown, but the question and the answer did not directly address Passports, although a comment did vaguely say passports are "being affected"
Does the US governmental shutdown affect traveling to/from the US and if so, how?
usa passports event-based-effects
usa passports event-based-effects
edited Jan 9 at 3:04
k2moo4
3,4951325
3,4951325
asked Jan 8 at 18:18
GooseGoose
26538
26538
add a comment |
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
Passports are not currently affected by the government shutdown. The passport service is, I think, not dependent on federal funding to operate.
I suspect that the rules here are the same as for USCIS services -- the majority of the budget for providing the passport service comes from the application fees rather than the federal government. Therefore a lapse in appropriations will not affect passport processing, save when they need to interact with agencies that are currently shutdown / significantly impeded.
According to the current passport office advisory notice:
We continue to offer passport services during the lapse of
appropriations for the federal government.
You can still apply for a U.S. passport book or passport card at all
passport agencies and centers and acceptance facilities (such as U.S.
post offices, libraries, or county clerk’s offices) during the lapse
of appropriations. You can also renew your passport by mail. Our
processing times remain the same: 4-6 weeks for routine service and
2-3 weeks for expedited service.
If you have a scheduled appointment at a U.S. Department of State
passport agency or center, please plan on keeping your appointment. If
you need to cancel your appointment, you may do so by visiting the
Online Passport Appointment System or by calling 1-877-487-2778. If
you have a scheduled appointment at a passport acceptance facility and
need to cancel your appointment, please contact the facility directly.
We will update this notice if there is a change in passport services
during the lapse in appropriations.
4
The Department of State issues them, not USCIS (which is an agency of the Department of Homeland Security).
– phoog
Jan 8 at 18:44
Quite correct. I was fooled by own familiarity with USCIS and their being the top google result for US passport. Answer corrrected.
– Mark_Anderson
Jan 8 at 18:47
I suppose that the point about being funded by fees probably also applies to the passport office, though.
– phoog
Jan 8 at 18:48
Agreed, I made the correction at top speed to avoid being potentially misleading! The overall budgeting point remains true, and I put it back in after getting the main correction saved :).
– Mark_Anderson
Jan 8 at 18:53
1
In particular IRS is among the shutdown, and if they have previously certified you for delinquent tax debt over $51k, State must deny a new passport (including IINM a renewal) and may revoke an existing one, until you pay or otherwise resolve the debt and IRS reverses the certification which I'm pretty sure will be delayed.
– dave_thompson_085
Jan 9 at 1:45
|
show 2 more comments
The official government website, found with a Google search for "passport services government shutdown", says, as of now:
You can still apply for a U.S. passport book or passport card at all
passport agencies and centers and acceptance facilities (such as U.S.
post offices, libraries, or county clerk’s offices) during the lapse
of appropriations. You can also renew your passport by mail. Our
processing times remain the same: 4-6 weeks for routine service and
2-3 weeks for expedited service.
Of course that may change.
3
There's some evidence on this site that actual processing times are often much shorter than the claimed times, which matches my memory of my "routine" renewal in 2009. That might also change during the shutdown.
– phoog
Jan 8 at 18:43
I should have mentioned the research I've already done. I have read that statement, but have seen conflicting information from news sources. usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2018/12/25/… and abcnews.go.com/beta-story-container/Politics/… (The only exception is passport agencies that are located within a government building that is closed because of the shutdown.)
– Goose
Jan 8 at 19:20
@Goose, it would be a good idea to edit the description of the research you've already done into the question, where it's more visible than in the comments on an answer.
– Peter Taylor
Jan 9 at 9:36
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
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oldest
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Passports are not currently affected by the government shutdown. The passport service is, I think, not dependent on federal funding to operate.
I suspect that the rules here are the same as for USCIS services -- the majority of the budget for providing the passport service comes from the application fees rather than the federal government. Therefore a lapse in appropriations will not affect passport processing, save when they need to interact with agencies that are currently shutdown / significantly impeded.
According to the current passport office advisory notice:
We continue to offer passport services during the lapse of
appropriations for the federal government.
You can still apply for a U.S. passport book or passport card at all
passport agencies and centers and acceptance facilities (such as U.S.
post offices, libraries, or county clerk’s offices) during the lapse
of appropriations. You can also renew your passport by mail. Our
processing times remain the same: 4-6 weeks for routine service and
2-3 weeks for expedited service.
If you have a scheduled appointment at a U.S. Department of State
passport agency or center, please plan on keeping your appointment. If
you need to cancel your appointment, you may do so by visiting the
Online Passport Appointment System or by calling 1-877-487-2778. If
you have a scheduled appointment at a passport acceptance facility and
need to cancel your appointment, please contact the facility directly.
We will update this notice if there is a change in passport services
during the lapse in appropriations.
4
The Department of State issues them, not USCIS (which is an agency of the Department of Homeland Security).
– phoog
Jan 8 at 18:44
Quite correct. I was fooled by own familiarity with USCIS and their being the top google result for US passport. Answer corrrected.
– Mark_Anderson
Jan 8 at 18:47
I suppose that the point about being funded by fees probably also applies to the passport office, though.
– phoog
Jan 8 at 18:48
Agreed, I made the correction at top speed to avoid being potentially misleading! The overall budgeting point remains true, and I put it back in after getting the main correction saved :).
– Mark_Anderson
Jan 8 at 18:53
1
In particular IRS is among the shutdown, and if they have previously certified you for delinquent tax debt over $51k, State must deny a new passport (including IINM a renewal) and may revoke an existing one, until you pay or otherwise resolve the debt and IRS reverses the certification which I'm pretty sure will be delayed.
– dave_thompson_085
Jan 9 at 1:45
|
show 2 more comments
Passports are not currently affected by the government shutdown. The passport service is, I think, not dependent on federal funding to operate.
I suspect that the rules here are the same as for USCIS services -- the majority of the budget for providing the passport service comes from the application fees rather than the federal government. Therefore a lapse in appropriations will not affect passport processing, save when they need to interact with agencies that are currently shutdown / significantly impeded.
According to the current passport office advisory notice:
We continue to offer passport services during the lapse of
appropriations for the federal government.
You can still apply for a U.S. passport book or passport card at all
passport agencies and centers and acceptance facilities (such as U.S.
post offices, libraries, or county clerk’s offices) during the lapse
of appropriations. You can also renew your passport by mail. Our
processing times remain the same: 4-6 weeks for routine service and
2-3 weeks for expedited service.
If you have a scheduled appointment at a U.S. Department of State
passport agency or center, please plan on keeping your appointment. If
you need to cancel your appointment, you may do so by visiting the
Online Passport Appointment System or by calling 1-877-487-2778. If
you have a scheduled appointment at a passport acceptance facility and
need to cancel your appointment, please contact the facility directly.
We will update this notice if there is a change in passport services
during the lapse in appropriations.
4
The Department of State issues them, not USCIS (which is an agency of the Department of Homeland Security).
– phoog
Jan 8 at 18:44
Quite correct. I was fooled by own familiarity with USCIS and their being the top google result for US passport. Answer corrrected.
– Mark_Anderson
Jan 8 at 18:47
I suppose that the point about being funded by fees probably also applies to the passport office, though.
– phoog
Jan 8 at 18:48
Agreed, I made the correction at top speed to avoid being potentially misleading! The overall budgeting point remains true, and I put it back in after getting the main correction saved :).
– Mark_Anderson
Jan 8 at 18:53
1
In particular IRS is among the shutdown, and if they have previously certified you for delinquent tax debt over $51k, State must deny a new passport (including IINM a renewal) and may revoke an existing one, until you pay or otherwise resolve the debt and IRS reverses the certification which I'm pretty sure will be delayed.
– dave_thompson_085
Jan 9 at 1:45
|
show 2 more comments
Passports are not currently affected by the government shutdown. The passport service is, I think, not dependent on federal funding to operate.
I suspect that the rules here are the same as for USCIS services -- the majority of the budget for providing the passport service comes from the application fees rather than the federal government. Therefore a lapse in appropriations will not affect passport processing, save when they need to interact with agencies that are currently shutdown / significantly impeded.
According to the current passport office advisory notice:
We continue to offer passport services during the lapse of
appropriations for the federal government.
You can still apply for a U.S. passport book or passport card at all
passport agencies and centers and acceptance facilities (such as U.S.
post offices, libraries, or county clerk’s offices) during the lapse
of appropriations. You can also renew your passport by mail. Our
processing times remain the same: 4-6 weeks for routine service and
2-3 weeks for expedited service.
If you have a scheduled appointment at a U.S. Department of State
passport agency or center, please plan on keeping your appointment. If
you need to cancel your appointment, you may do so by visiting the
Online Passport Appointment System or by calling 1-877-487-2778. If
you have a scheduled appointment at a passport acceptance facility and
need to cancel your appointment, please contact the facility directly.
We will update this notice if there is a change in passport services
during the lapse in appropriations.
Passports are not currently affected by the government shutdown. The passport service is, I think, not dependent on federal funding to operate.
I suspect that the rules here are the same as for USCIS services -- the majority of the budget for providing the passport service comes from the application fees rather than the federal government. Therefore a lapse in appropriations will not affect passport processing, save when they need to interact with agencies that are currently shutdown / significantly impeded.
According to the current passport office advisory notice:
We continue to offer passport services during the lapse of
appropriations for the federal government.
You can still apply for a U.S. passport book or passport card at all
passport agencies and centers and acceptance facilities (such as U.S.
post offices, libraries, or county clerk’s offices) during the lapse
of appropriations. You can also renew your passport by mail. Our
processing times remain the same: 4-6 weeks for routine service and
2-3 weeks for expedited service.
If you have a scheduled appointment at a U.S. Department of State
passport agency or center, please plan on keeping your appointment. If
you need to cancel your appointment, you may do so by visiting the
Online Passport Appointment System or by calling 1-877-487-2778. If
you have a scheduled appointment at a passport acceptance facility and
need to cancel your appointment, please contact the facility directly.
We will update this notice if there is a change in passport services
during the lapse in appropriations.
edited Jan 16 at 23:13
Community♦
1
1
answered Jan 8 at 18:41
Mark_AndersonMark_Anderson
40317
40317
4
The Department of State issues them, not USCIS (which is an agency of the Department of Homeland Security).
– phoog
Jan 8 at 18:44
Quite correct. I was fooled by own familiarity with USCIS and their being the top google result for US passport. Answer corrrected.
– Mark_Anderson
Jan 8 at 18:47
I suppose that the point about being funded by fees probably also applies to the passport office, though.
– phoog
Jan 8 at 18:48
Agreed, I made the correction at top speed to avoid being potentially misleading! The overall budgeting point remains true, and I put it back in after getting the main correction saved :).
– Mark_Anderson
Jan 8 at 18:53
1
In particular IRS is among the shutdown, and if they have previously certified you for delinquent tax debt over $51k, State must deny a new passport (including IINM a renewal) and may revoke an existing one, until you pay or otherwise resolve the debt and IRS reverses the certification which I'm pretty sure will be delayed.
– dave_thompson_085
Jan 9 at 1:45
|
show 2 more comments
4
The Department of State issues them, not USCIS (which is an agency of the Department of Homeland Security).
– phoog
Jan 8 at 18:44
Quite correct. I was fooled by own familiarity with USCIS and their being the top google result for US passport. Answer corrrected.
– Mark_Anderson
Jan 8 at 18:47
I suppose that the point about being funded by fees probably also applies to the passport office, though.
– phoog
Jan 8 at 18:48
Agreed, I made the correction at top speed to avoid being potentially misleading! The overall budgeting point remains true, and I put it back in after getting the main correction saved :).
– Mark_Anderson
Jan 8 at 18:53
1
In particular IRS is among the shutdown, and if they have previously certified you for delinquent tax debt over $51k, State must deny a new passport (including IINM a renewal) and may revoke an existing one, until you pay or otherwise resolve the debt and IRS reverses the certification which I'm pretty sure will be delayed.
– dave_thompson_085
Jan 9 at 1:45
4
4
The Department of State issues them, not USCIS (which is an agency of the Department of Homeland Security).
– phoog
Jan 8 at 18:44
The Department of State issues them, not USCIS (which is an agency of the Department of Homeland Security).
– phoog
Jan 8 at 18:44
Quite correct. I was fooled by own familiarity with USCIS and their being the top google result for US passport. Answer corrrected.
– Mark_Anderson
Jan 8 at 18:47
Quite correct. I was fooled by own familiarity with USCIS and their being the top google result for US passport. Answer corrrected.
– Mark_Anderson
Jan 8 at 18:47
I suppose that the point about being funded by fees probably also applies to the passport office, though.
– phoog
Jan 8 at 18:48
I suppose that the point about being funded by fees probably also applies to the passport office, though.
– phoog
Jan 8 at 18:48
Agreed, I made the correction at top speed to avoid being potentially misleading! The overall budgeting point remains true, and I put it back in after getting the main correction saved :).
– Mark_Anderson
Jan 8 at 18:53
Agreed, I made the correction at top speed to avoid being potentially misleading! The overall budgeting point remains true, and I put it back in after getting the main correction saved :).
– Mark_Anderson
Jan 8 at 18:53
1
1
In particular IRS is among the shutdown, and if they have previously certified you for delinquent tax debt over $51k, State must deny a new passport (including IINM a renewal) and may revoke an existing one, until you pay or otherwise resolve the debt and IRS reverses the certification which I'm pretty sure will be delayed.
– dave_thompson_085
Jan 9 at 1:45
In particular IRS is among the shutdown, and if they have previously certified you for delinquent tax debt over $51k, State must deny a new passport (including IINM a renewal) and may revoke an existing one, until you pay or otherwise resolve the debt and IRS reverses the certification which I'm pretty sure will be delayed.
– dave_thompson_085
Jan 9 at 1:45
|
show 2 more comments
The official government website, found with a Google search for "passport services government shutdown", says, as of now:
You can still apply for a U.S. passport book or passport card at all
passport agencies and centers and acceptance facilities (such as U.S.
post offices, libraries, or county clerk’s offices) during the lapse
of appropriations. You can also renew your passport by mail. Our
processing times remain the same: 4-6 weeks for routine service and
2-3 weeks for expedited service.
Of course that may change.
3
There's some evidence on this site that actual processing times are often much shorter than the claimed times, which matches my memory of my "routine" renewal in 2009. That might also change during the shutdown.
– phoog
Jan 8 at 18:43
I should have mentioned the research I've already done. I have read that statement, but have seen conflicting information from news sources. usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2018/12/25/… and abcnews.go.com/beta-story-container/Politics/… (The only exception is passport agencies that are located within a government building that is closed because of the shutdown.)
– Goose
Jan 8 at 19:20
@Goose, it would be a good idea to edit the description of the research you've already done into the question, where it's more visible than in the comments on an answer.
– Peter Taylor
Jan 9 at 9:36
add a comment |
The official government website, found with a Google search for "passport services government shutdown", says, as of now:
You can still apply for a U.S. passport book or passport card at all
passport agencies and centers and acceptance facilities (such as U.S.
post offices, libraries, or county clerk’s offices) during the lapse
of appropriations. You can also renew your passport by mail. Our
processing times remain the same: 4-6 weeks for routine service and
2-3 weeks for expedited service.
Of course that may change.
3
There's some evidence on this site that actual processing times are often much shorter than the claimed times, which matches my memory of my "routine" renewal in 2009. That might also change during the shutdown.
– phoog
Jan 8 at 18:43
I should have mentioned the research I've already done. I have read that statement, but have seen conflicting information from news sources. usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2018/12/25/… and abcnews.go.com/beta-story-container/Politics/… (The only exception is passport agencies that are located within a government building that is closed because of the shutdown.)
– Goose
Jan 8 at 19:20
@Goose, it would be a good idea to edit the description of the research you've already done into the question, where it's more visible than in the comments on an answer.
– Peter Taylor
Jan 9 at 9:36
add a comment |
The official government website, found with a Google search for "passport services government shutdown", says, as of now:
You can still apply for a U.S. passport book or passport card at all
passport agencies and centers and acceptance facilities (such as U.S.
post offices, libraries, or county clerk’s offices) during the lapse
of appropriations. You can also renew your passport by mail. Our
processing times remain the same: 4-6 weeks for routine service and
2-3 weeks for expedited service.
Of course that may change.
The official government website, found with a Google search for "passport services government shutdown", says, as of now:
You can still apply for a U.S. passport book or passport card at all
passport agencies and centers and acceptance facilities (such as U.S.
post offices, libraries, or county clerk’s offices) during the lapse
of appropriations. You can also renew your passport by mail. Our
processing times remain the same: 4-6 weeks for routine service and
2-3 weeks for expedited service.
Of course that may change.
edited Jan 9 at 9:35
Peter Taylor
2,06211322
2,06211322
answered Jan 8 at 18:36
Andrew LazarusAndrew Lazarus
12.3k22252
12.3k22252
3
There's some evidence on this site that actual processing times are often much shorter than the claimed times, which matches my memory of my "routine" renewal in 2009. That might also change during the shutdown.
– phoog
Jan 8 at 18:43
I should have mentioned the research I've already done. I have read that statement, but have seen conflicting information from news sources. usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2018/12/25/… and abcnews.go.com/beta-story-container/Politics/… (The only exception is passport agencies that are located within a government building that is closed because of the shutdown.)
– Goose
Jan 8 at 19:20
@Goose, it would be a good idea to edit the description of the research you've already done into the question, where it's more visible than in the comments on an answer.
– Peter Taylor
Jan 9 at 9:36
add a comment |
3
There's some evidence on this site that actual processing times are often much shorter than the claimed times, which matches my memory of my "routine" renewal in 2009. That might also change during the shutdown.
– phoog
Jan 8 at 18:43
I should have mentioned the research I've already done. I have read that statement, but have seen conflicting information from news sources. usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2018/12/25/… and abcnews.go.com/beta-story-container/Politics/… (The only exception is passport agencies that are located within a government building that is closed because of the shutdown.)
– Goose
Jan 8 at 19:20
@Goose, it would be a good idea to edit the description of the research you've already done into the question, where it's more visible than in the comments on an answer.
– Peter Taylor
Jan 9 at 9:36
3
3
There's some evidence on this site that actual processing times are often much shorter than the claimed times, which matches my memory of my "routine" renewal in 2009. That might also change during the shutdown.
– phoog
Jan 8 at 18:43
There's some evidence on this site that actual processing times are often much shorter than the claimed times, which matches my memory of my "routine" renewal in 2009. That might also change during the shutdown.
– phoog
Jan 8 at 18:43
I should have mentioned the research I've already done. I have read that statement, but have seen conflicting information from news sources. usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2018/12/25/… and abcnews.go.com/beta-story-container/Politics/… (The only exception is passport agencies that are located within a government building that is closed because of the shutdown.)
– Goose
Jan 8 at 19:20
I should have mentioned the research I've already done. I have read that statement, but have seen conflicting information from news sources. usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2018/12/25/… and abcnews.go.com/beta-story-container/Politics/… (The only exception is passport agencies that are located within a government building that is closed because of the shutdown.)
– Goose
Jan 8 at 19:20
@Goose, it would be a good idea to edit the description of the research you've already done into the question, where it's more visible than in the comments on an answer.
– Peter Taylor
Jan 9 at 9:36
@Goose, it would be a good idea to edit the description of the research you've already done into the question, where it's more visible than in the comments on an answer.
– Peter Taylor
Jan 9 at 9:36
add a comment |
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