News

TSA eliminates the 20-year shoe removal rule for all travelers with Real-ID documents, streamlining airport security nationwide.
That’s because the Transportation Security Administration recently eliminated its no-shoes policy, meaning the extra step of taking off your shoes will no longer be required at TSA-operated airports.
People will no longer have to de-shoe on the way to catching a flight at U.S. airports, following an announcement from Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem.
Travelers will notice a big change as they go through airport security. The Transportation Safety Administration announced the end of the shoe-removal rule for passengers at security checkpoints, ...
Here are the essential items you should never pack in your checked luggage, and several of them are discounted during the ...
Traveling through Rhode Island's T.F. Green International Airport? You can now keep your shoes on at the security checkpoint, ...
Passengers at domestic airports will be able to go through security screening with their shoes on for the first time since ...
Beginning immediately, passengers traveling through airports across the country will keep their shoes on when passing through ...
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem confirmed the change, stating that shoes can remain on for most passengers at ...
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced Tuesday that the mandate for passengers to remove their shoes at screening ...
The TSA recently said passengers may no longer have to take their shoes off for screenings. NJ airports haven't publicly stated their positions.