What do I travel with on a dual citizenship situation when names are different?

What do I travel with on a dual citizenship situation when names are different? - Crop unrecognizable person demonstrating British passport

I am US citizen by birth. I have lived in Australia my whole life. I became a naturalised citizen so now hold dual citizenship. Ever since I have only ever travelled on my Australian passport.

Early this year on a trip to the US I married my life partner and as such changed my last name.

When returning home I applied for a US passport under my married name.

I am now looking to travel to the US later this year but have a predicament as I have the Australian passport in my maiden name and the US passport in the married name.

The challenge I have is that when booking the flight I have to have the correct name, but this is different for entering/exiting the US.

I can't work out what to do and getting a name change in Australia is complicated as they require documents I don't have, eg my original US birth certificate or even my Australian citizenship certificate (lost in moves).



Best Answer

If I were you, I would probably book the ticket in the married name since that is the name you plan to use from now on. But whichever name you book the ticket in, you should be fine:

  1. When checking in for the flight to the country whose passport shows the name you booked the ticket in, because you will show that country's passport, and the names match.

  2. When checking in to fly to the other country, if you show the passport for the first country, with the matching name, and then say "I don't need ETA (or ESTA, as the case may be) because I am a dual citizen," whereupon you produce your other passport to prove that, along with a copy of your marriage certificate to show the name change. It's better if the copy is an original certified copy.

When faced with immigration officers (or indeed any kind of officer) from either country, show the passport of that country. In the event that they ask about your name or your authorization to enter the other country (both of which I suspect to be very unlikely), show the other passport and the marriage certificate.




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What is the impact of having two different names for dual passport holders?

Answer: As a U.S. citizen, you are required to depart and re-enter the United States using your U.S. passport. As long as the name on your tickets match that on your U.S. passport, there should be no issue.

Do dual citizens need to travel with both passports?

U.S. nationals, including dual nationals, must use a U.S. passport to enter and leave the United States. Dual nationals may also be required by the foreign country to use its passport to enter and leave that country.

How do you travel with two passports?

Travelling with two passports: which passport to use when dual citizen is at an airline counter. You need to show your second passport, for example a Maltese one. Usually, along with the ticket, the passenger must present a visa allowing entry to the European Union.

Can I enter with one passport and leave with another?

You can use whichever passport is more convenient for leaving country A, and whichever passport is more convenient for arriving in country B. They do not have to be the same passport. But you must enter and leave a country on the same passport.



Traveling with two passports - I almost got arrested | Jure Sanguinis Italian Dual Citizenship




More answers regarding what do I travel with on a dual citizenship situation when names are different?

Answer 2

I have dual citizenship under 2 names as well. I book under the US name, as they're usually the most tiresome with that sort of verification. I show the passport corresponding to that name to the airline. When I show up at custom of the other country, I go into the citizen line and pull out my other passport. On return, I do the same with my US passport. Nobody's ever questioned anything (even in the currently internationally paranoid climate) because everyone assumes the other country will do the checking for themselves. And nobody's ever thought to check my passport against the ticket.

But note that I'm white, so your mileage may well vary if you're not. And it's a wise precaution to travel with a copy of the document that establishes that you are indeed the same person, even if you don't expect to have to use it. Note also that many if not most countries assume women will change last name like hyperactive squirrels, multiple times even, and won't bat an eyelash, while a man might have much more difficulty with the same situation.

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