how doirenew my passport
You can usually renew a U.S. passport either online , by mail , or in person , depending on your situation and eligibility.
Quick Scoop: Basic Idea
- If your last passport was a 10‑year adult passport, not badly damaged, and issued in your current name, you can often renew online or by mail using form DS‑82.
- If you are not eligible for that (first passport, big name change without documents, very old or damaged passport, etc.), you generally must apply in person using form DS‑11 at an acceptance facility like a post office.
- Standard service can take several weeks, but you can pay extra for expedited processing if you’re traveling soon.
Step 1: Check If You Can Renew Online
The U.S. State Department now allows many adults to renew their passports online through a secure account system.
Typical requirements include:
- You are 25 or older , and your current passport was valid for 10 years.
- Your passport expires within about 1 year or expired less than 5 years ago.
- You don’t need to change key data (name, date of birth, place of birth, gender).
- Your passport is not reported lost or stolen and is not badly damaged.
- You are doing a routine renewal, not emergency travel in just a few weeks.
If you qualify, the general flow is:
- Create/sign in to an online account (such as a MyTravelGov/linked login system).
- Start a “Renew Your Passport” application.
- Enter your current passport details and travel plans.
- Upload a digital passport photo that meets the official photo standards.
- Pay the fee by credit/debit card.
- Submit and then track status online.
Step 2: Renewing By Mail (DS‑82)
If you’re not eligible for online renewal but do qualify to renew by mail, you generally use Form DS‑82.
You usually qualify to renew by mail if:
- Your most recent passport is undamaged.
- It was issued when you were 16 or older.
- It was issued within the last 15 years.
- It has your current name (or you can enclose legal proof of name change such as a marriage certificate).
You’ll typically need:
- Completed Form DS‑82 (printed single‑sided if you use the PDF).
- Your most recent passport.
- Name‑change document (marriage certificate, court order) if relevant.
- One recent passport photo (taken in the last 6 months, correct size/background).
- Payment (check or money order) for the appropriate fee, payable to the U.S. Department of State.
Then:
- Place the DS‑82, old passport, photo, and payment in an envelope.
- Mail it to the National Passport Processing Center address specified on the official instructions.
- Wait for processing; you can add expedited service and faster shipping for extra cost.
Step 3: If You Must Apply In Person (DS‑11)
You must apply in person if you don’t meet the renewal‑by‑mail/online rules, for example:
- Your previous passport was issued when you were under 16.
- It was issued more than about 15 years ago.
- It is heavily damaged, or lost/stolen.
- You’re applying for your first U.S. passport.
In that case, you use Form DS‑11 and go to a passport acceptance facility (post offices, some government offices, etc.).
You’ll generally bring:
- Completed DS‑11 (but unsigned until requested by the agent).
- Proof of U.S. citizenship (like a birth certificate, naturalization certificate).
- Government‑issued photo ID (like a driver’s license).
- Photocopies of those documents as required.
- One compliant passport photo.
- Payment for fees.
The staff will review your documents, witness your signature, and send everything to the processing center.
Fees, Timing, and Tips
Typical fee structure for adults includes a base fee for a passport book and optional card , plus an extra charge if you choose expedited service.
Useful points:
- Use the official fee calculator on the government site to get an exact total for your situation.
- Standard processing can take several weeks; expedited processing (extra fee) is faster but still not immediate.
- Start early if you plan international travel within the next year; many travelers report delays during busy periods.
- Make sure your photo meets all rules (plain background, correct size, no filters), since bad photos are a common cause of delays.
Online vs. Mail vs. In Person (Quick View)
| Option | Who it’s for | What you do | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Online renewal | Adults with recent 10‑year passports, limited changes allowed | [3][8][5]Fill form online, upload photo, pay digitally | [3][7][5]Fast, no mail or in‑person visit | [7][3][5]Not available for all cases or urgent travel | [8][3][7]
| Mail (DS‑82) | Most adults with undamaged passports issued in last 15 years | [9][1][8]Mail DS‑82, old passport, photo, payment | [2][1][8]Simple, no appointment needed | [1][2]Must mail original passport; postal and processing delays possible | [10][1]
| In person (DS‑11) | First‑timers, minors, very old/damaged or lost passports | [6][8][1]Visit an acceptance facility with documents and photo | [8][9][1]Staff verifies documents and helps you submit correctly | [9][1][8]Requires an appointment/trip; can be busy | [10][6]
Where to Look Next
- Official “renew or replace passport” information and links to forms and instructions are on the main U.S. government passport site.
- Many post offices have detailed pages about renewing passports and when you must come in person versus mail/online.
- Travel and consumer sites sometimes publish updated guides and 2026‑specific notes on online renewal and processing trends.
TL;DR:
Check if you qualify for online renewal; if not, see whether DS‑82 by mail
fits your situation; if neither applies, plan for an in‑person DS‑11
appointment, and start as early as you can.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.