The aviation industry is becoming a victim of its own success: As travel numbers rise, airports are coming under severe pressure to process an increasing number of people.

The solution is more investments in technology, says air transportation tech firm SITA, and airports are increasingly heeding that advice. More than half of the world’s top-10 airports have already started digital journeys to improve efficiencies, compensate for resource shortages and gain an advantage over competitors – including with biometric technologies.

Airlines, airports, and governments are piloting digital identity programs (using different forms of digital ID) and biometric journeys built around the principles of consent and minimal data use.

Here is what’s new at U.S. airports when it comes to technological advances.

Hawaii’s largest airport is introducing Enhanced Passenger Processing (EPP), a U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) project that uses biometric technology from iProov to take auto-capture photos of arriving U.S. citizens, expediting their screening. The technology has reduced wait times for U.S. citizens by an average of 25 percent and processing time by 74 percent.

The Hawaiian Daniel K. Inouye International Airport (HNL) is joining 14 other airports offering EPP. The airport has also signed an agreement to allow Japanese tourists to use easy entry options like Mobile Passport Control and Global Entry.

Alaska Airlines is introducing an option for passengers to verify their identity at its automated bag drop units in Seattle and Portland.

Travelers can use their boarding pass QR code to print out their bag tags at the firm’s self-service Bag Tag Station or Kiosk. After that, passengers can proceed to the Automated Bag Drop Unit, which scans the bag tag as well as the traveler’s photo ID and face. Photos taken for ID verification are deleted after the biometric matching process is completed.

Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport (ORD) is also investing in new technology. The airport is preparing 110 new concession contracts aimed at easing frustrating passenger experiences. Some of these will be used to increase comfort with dedicated sleeping zones and technology-driven retail, while others will introduce speedier biometric scanning.

Chicago is also planning to build a satellite concourse during the construction of a global terminal that would replace what is now Terminal 2, according to the Chicago Sun Times.

Earlier this month, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) launched a biometric gates pilot with an identity verification system developed through a public-private partnership with Clear. The testing will be conducted at three U.S. airports.

Article Topics

ABC gates  |  airport biometrics  |  biometrics  |  digital travel  |  Enhanced Passenger Processing  |  face biometrics  |  passenger processing  |  United States

Latest Biometrics News


 

Aug 29, 2025, 1:30 pm EDT

AI chatbots are turning out to be dubious companions, but automated systems for monitoring drivers’ alertness could turn out to…


 

Aug 29, 2025, 1:12 pm EDT

Businesses in regulated industries that have undertaken digital transformation are now catching up on identity verification. The downside of doing…


 

Aug 29, 2025, 1:04 pm EDT

The latest Evaluation of Latent Fingerprint Technologies (ELFT) by NIST shows further gains in the accuracy and speed of the…


 

Aug 29, 2025, 12:23 pm EDT

Want AI agents to work for you? You’ll need to manage them. Amazon has introduced Bedrock AgentCore Identity, a “comprehensive…


 

Aug 29, 2025, 12:10 pm EDT

Pakistan is seeking a consultancy to help it develop a unified platform for federal and provincial government services. A new…


 

Aug 29, 2025, 11:50 am EDT

The collaboration between Singaporean technology firm Trident and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) on implementing the DRC’s national digital…