(ATLANTA, GEORGIA) U.S. travelers are moving through airport security faster this week as the TSA eGate pilot went live at Hartsfield‑Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL) on August 19, 2025. The program, a public‑private partnership between the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) and CLEAR, brings automated identity checks to the checkpoint using biometric eGates that match a live face scan to a traveler’s ID and boarding pass in seconds.
TSA says the pilot will reach Ronald Reagan National Airport the week of August 25, followed by Seattle‑Tacoma International Airport the week of August 31, as the agency readies for record crowds tied to the 2026 FIFA World Cup and America’s 250th anniversary.

What officials are saying
TSA Acting Deputy Administrator Adam Stahl said the move supports a better checkpoint flow while keeping rigorous screening in place.
“eGates accomplish several objectives toward achieving Secretary Noem’s goal to enhance TSA security and hospitality. This includes creating a seamless, less invasive traveler experience and shorter wait times at TSA security checkpoints.”
CLEAR CEO Caryn Seidman‑Becker called the pilot “frictionless travel,” adding:
“It’s fully integrated. It’s one step. And the total transaction time should be between three and six seconds.”
Who can use the eGate and how much it costs
Under the pilot, CLEAR Plus members can opt in to use the TSA eGate. The company’s paid membership costs $209 per year.
Once enrolled, the process is simple:
- Step into the eGate.
- The device completes a biometric match in 3–6 seconds.
- If verified, the gate opens and the passenger heads straight to bag and body screening.
The eGate replaces the manual ID check at the TSA podium for those who qualify.
TSA control, privacy, and funding
TSA stresses it retains full control of security decisions:
- Officers supervise the lane and keep sole authority over who moves forward to screening.
- CLEAR cannot access government watchlists or override TSA calls.
- The partnership does not draw on public funds—CLEAR is paying for the equipment as part of the Registered Traveler framework.
Officials emphasize a tight privacy posture: the system transmits a limited set of data—live photo, boarding pass details, and the ID image used at enrollment—and does not keep or share sensitive information beyond what is needed for the match.
Why timing matters
According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, timing is central to the plan. The United States expects more than 20 million international visitors around the World Cup, with domestic travel also set to surge during the semiquincentennial.
A scalable, automated ID check can help:
- Absorb peak traffic
- Reduce bottlenecks at the start of the checkpoint
- Improve flow where lines often form
How the biometric eGates work at the checkpoint
The pilot relies on real‑time facial recognition. Key steps and safeguards:
- The traveler’s face is scanned and matched against enrollment data and the boarding pass name.
- TSA says the match is used only to verify identity for that trip.
- The system transmits only the data needed for the match and emphasizes limited retention and sharing.
Travelers who want to try the lane can follow these steps at participating airports:
- Enroll or confirm active CLEAR Plus membership.
- Go to the CLEAR eGate lane at the TSA checkpoint.
- Step into the gate and face the camera.
- Wait for the match; if verified, the gate opens.
- Proceed directly to physical screening, where TSA officers remain in charge and available to help.
The eGate sits inside the normal TSA flow. It does not change bag checks or body scanners, nor does it alter screening rules—rather, it speeds up the identity check so the line moves faster.
Benefits and cautions from aviation security specialists
Benefits:
- Automation can cut human error at the podium.
- Officers gain more time to focus on screening tasks that require judgment.
- Faster ID checks can improve throughput during peak windows, potentially reducing missed connections.
Cautions:
- Facial recognition systems require constant testing to reduce bias and maintain accuracy across all skin tones and ages.
- Civil liberties groups want clear notices, independent audits, and the ability to opt out without penalty.
TSA responds that participation is voluntary for CLEAR Plus members in the pilot and that officers remain available for manual checks. The agency also says it will publish program updates and welcomes public feedback.
Policy rationale and potential impact
From a policy perspective, TSA is betting that small time savings per traveler add up. Example:
- If an ID check drops from 15 seconds to 3–6 seconds for thousands of passengers per hour, lines can shrink and officers can be reassigned to higher‑risk areas.
This matters at hubs like ATL, DCA, and SEA, where a few minutes can determine whether a family makes a tight connection.
Travel groups largely say the timing makes sense: airports are stretched and staffing alone cannot meet the peaks expected over the next 18 months. For families and older passengers, removing the hand‑over of physical IDs can reduce stress at the front of the queue.
Program rollout and measurements
At ATL—the first live site—TSA will track:
- Throughput
- Match rates
- Manual intervention instances
- Traveler feedback
TSA says it will measure performance across speed, accuracy, and customer experience before deciding on a broader rollout ahead of mid‑2026.
Looking ahead:
- TSA and CLEAR plan further expansion to more airports later this year and early next year.
- Results from the first three sites (ATL, DCA, SEA) will inform software tweaks, lane layout, and staffing models.
- If metrics hold, a nationwide presence before the World Cup is likely, with possible links to other trusted traveler programs discussed for future phases.
How travelers can stay informed
Travelers looking for official program updates can check the TSA website at https://www.tsa.gov for press releases, privacy statements, and technology fact sheets.
Early impressions and next steps
For now, travelers at ATL can try the eGate and decide if it helps their trip. Early signs point to:
- Shorter ID checks
- Less fumbling for wallets
- Continued officer oversight
The key test as the pilot expands to DCA and SEA will be whether speed and accuracy scale together across different airports, crowds, and lighting conditions. If they do, the TSA eGate could become a familiar sight at security lines across the country by next summer.
This Article in a Nutshell
TSA launched an eGate pilot at ATL on August 19, 2025, using biometric facial matches. CLEAR Plus members pay $209 yearly. Matches take three to six seconds, preserving TSA control, limiting data transmission, and aiming to reduce checkpoint bottlenecks ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup and semiquincentennial.