TRANSPORTATION SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
Accommodations for U.S. Military Personnel
Special Considerations
Thank You for Your Service to Our Country!
We salute and appreciate the sacrifice of all of the men and women of the U.S. Armed Services. The following are some helpful hints for screening your person, carry-on bags and checked baggage to help you achieve a trouble-free travel experience at the airport.
We provide information for family members who would like to obtain gate passes to accompany or meet loved ones at the gate and in addition provide comprehensive airport security information for severely injured military personnel.
Screening of Military Personnel
Checkpoint:
When you arrive at the checkpoint, the following tips will assist you in getting through the screening process easily and efficiently:
- Keep boarding pass and ID available
- Remove class A uniform jacket, metal items in pockets, and metal belt buckle and submit them for X-ray screening
- Military personnel in uniform, with a valid military ID are not required to remove their footwear unless it alarms the walk through metal detector
- Ensure your carry-on luggage does not contain any prohibited items
Packing Tips for Military Personnel
Checked Baggage:
Pack your heavier, denser equipment/personal items at the top of your checked baggage (i.e. helmets, boots and books). Place your clothing and smaller items in the bottom of the bag. This will help TSA screeners re-pack your bag neatly if a physical search is required.
Take all valuables and electronics with you as carry-on items unless they are prohibited items.
If you wish to lock your checked baggage, use a TSA-recognized lock.
Transporting Firearms and Ammunition
Transport of Weapons by the Unit
- The unit must declare weapons and ammunition to the aircraft operator.
- Weapons must be unloaded and collectively secured in a crate and banded or individually locked in a hard-sided case.
- Ammunition must also be securely packed in fiber (such as cardboard), wood or metal boxes or other packaging specifically designed to carry small amounts of ammunition.
- You can't use firearm magazines/clips for packing ammunition unless they completely and securely enclose the ammunition (e.g., by securely covering the exposed portions of the magazine or by securely placing the magazine in a pouch, holder, holster or lanyard).
- You may carry the ammunition in the same hard-sided case as the firearm, as long as you pack it as described above.
- A unit representative must submit the unit's official travel orders and an inventory of weapons and ammunition being transported.
- The unit representative must certify to TSA in writing that the weapons are unloaded.
Transport of Weapons by an Individual Soldier
Firearms, ammunition and firearm parts may only be transported in checked baggage. Firearms, ammunition and firearm parts are prohibited in carry-on baggage. If you have just returned from overseas duty or any assignment where you carried a gun or ammunition, please be sure to double check your belongings, particularly your carry-on bag, to make sure firearms, parts or ammunition are not present.
Sharp Objects and Tools - You may not bring knives and certain tools in your carry-on luggage. Tools greater than seven inches are not permitted as a carry-on and all hammers, drills, saws and crowbars are prohibited regardless of length. Pointed scissors with a blade greater than four inches is also prohibited as a carry-on. Pack these items in your checked luggage. Please sheath or securely wrap any sharp objects in your checked luggage so that it does not injure baggage handlers and security officers.
Hazardous Materials:For a list of hazardous materials that are prohibited from the airplane, please visit the Federal Aviation Administration Web site.
Accommodations for U.S. Military Personnel
Military Family Member Gate Passes
Family members who want to accompany a military service member being deployed to the boarding gate or greet them returning from deployment at the arrival gate may receive passes to enter the secure area of the airport.
Interested military family members should contact their air carrier representative at the departure/arrival airport for proper local procedures.
Severely Injured Military Personnel
Military Severely Injured Joint Services Operations Center (MSIJSOC) Program
TSA wants to facilitate the screening of injured and wounded service members. To address these specific situations TSA has partnered with the Department of Defense (DOD) to develop a process so that we have better awareness of when our injured military heroes are traveling through our nation's airports. In early February 2005, TSA was granted permission by DOD to place TSA staff in the newly commissioned Military Severely Injured Joint Services Operations Center Program on a 24-hour, 7-day a week basis.
Here is how the process works:
- Once flight arrangements are made with the airline, the severely injured service member and his or her family can call the Operations Center's 24/7 toll-free number (888) 774-1361) with details of the itinerary. The number is also available to representatives of programs for the severely injured, military treatment facilities and Veterans Administration hospitals acting on behalf of the injured service member.
- The caller will be connected to a TSA liaison team member via the center's care managers.
- The TSA liaison person will then notify the appropriate Federal Security Directors at the involved airports to ensure that any security screening required at those airports will be conducted by TSA screening experts with empathy and respect in order to make the overall experience for the service member as expeditious and pleasant as possible.
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Military Family Member Gate Passes
Family members who want to accompany a military service member to the boarding gate or greet them at the arrival gate may receive passes to enter the secure area of the airport. While the pass provides non-flying family members access to the gate area, they will still have to pass through the security checkpoint.
Interested military family members should contact their air carrier
representative at the departure/arrival airport for proper local procedures.
Severely Injured Military Personnel
TSA is working closely with the Department of Defense in its Military Severely
Injured Joint Support Operations Center to assist service members and their
families with airport security screening.
A team is available to answer questions from service personnel and their families about how to facilitate travel through the commercial aviation system. TSA representatives will explain applicable aviation security
procedures and answer any other security-related questions.
Interested persons can contact the Center by phone toll-free at
(888) 774-1361. The Center is staffed 24 hours a day, seven days a week.