How does TSA ensure only Pre-Checked passengers go through Pre-Check?

How does TSA ensure only Pre-Checked passengers go through Pre-Check? - Focused woman looking at mirror in car

Something has confused me about boarding passes:

It seems that the Pre-Check checkmark on your boarding pass is what lets TSA officers know that you should be allowed to go in the Pre-Check lane.

Simple enough. Now, pretend you're a "bad guy".
Isn't it trivial for you to just print a fake boarding pass with the checkmark?

When you get your actual boarding pass, you can of course use it everywhere except at the security lane. For the security lane, you just use the fake one so they think you're Pre-Checked.

Do they even try to guard against this? If so, how? I haven't managed to figure it out.
If not... has it not occurred to them? Wouldn't this completely nullify any security benefit of Pre-Check?

(Note: while I realize that if they decide to check you anyway, then you'll be screwed, that's always a risk even if you really do have Pre-Check.)



Best Answer

Maybe it varies between airports, but where I have used PreCheck, it works as follows.

At the entrance to the security checkpoint, there is an agent who I'll call the "greeter". You show your boarding pass to the greeter, and if they see the check mark, they wave you into the PreCheck line.

But when you reach the front of the line, there's another agent at a podium with a barcode scanning terminal. You hand them your ID (driver's license, passport, etc) and scan the barcode on your boarding pass. I do not know for sure, but I would assume that the barcode encodes your name and PreCheck status, along with a cryptographic signature, or at least a link to a database with this information. This information is displayed to the agent on their terminal.

So if you were to take a non-PreCheck boarding pass and forge it by adding a check mark, you would get past the greeter, but all that would achieve is letting you stand in the wrong line. When you got to the ID check, the barcode would show that in fact you do not have PreCheck. Best case, you explain it away as some sort of mistake, and they send you back to the regular security line. Worst case, you get arrested.

Something similar would happen if you tried to take the boarding pass from an actual PreCheck passenger and change the name - they would see the name didn't match your ID.

The greeter is more for efficiency than security - they mostly just keep people from wasting their time by standing in the wrong line by mistake. They are more visible because you see them actually looking for the check mark on a boarding pass, but they are not really the functional part of the process.




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Can guests go through TSA PreCheck?

Passengers who do not meet the necessary requirements are not eligible to participate at this time. However, passengers 12 years old and younger who are accompanied by eligible travelers are allowed through PreCheck lanes as part of the TSA's modified screening procedures.

How does TSA PreCheck line work?

Key Takeaways
  • TSA PreCheck is a U.S. government program that allows air travelers deemed low-risk to enjoy an expedited security screening process at airports.
  • TSA PreCheck passengers wait in special, shorter lines; have to remove less clothing; are subject to less-rigorous scans, and other conveniences.


  • Is TSA PreCheck random?

    through the screening process. Although these passengers are eligible for TSA PreCheck\xae benefits, TSA incorporates random and unpredictable security measures throughout the airport and no individual is guaranteed expedited screening.



    Everything you need to know about TSA Precheck




    Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

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