Need a passport in a hurry? It’ll soon be easier if you live in one of these US cities.

Globe Aware volunteers in a rush to get a passport will soon have more options. The U.S. State Department will open six new passport agencies to assist those with “urgent travel needs. Find out in which following cities the facilities will be located in. 


Need a passport in a hurry? It’ll soon be easier if you live in one of these US cities.

Nathan Diller
USA TODAY
June 21, 2024

Story Summary

  • The State Department will open six new passport agencies to assist those with “urgent travel needs.”
  • The new agencies will bring the total number to 35.
  • The State Department did not share addresses or opening dates for the new facilities.
  • Travelers in a rush to get a passport will soon have more options.

The State Department will open six new passport agencies to assist those with “urgent travel needs,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced Tuesday. The new facilities will be in these cities:

  • Salt Lake City
  • Kansas City, Missouri
  • Orlando, Florida
  • Charlotte, North Carolina
  • San Antonio, Texas
  • Cincinnati

Passport agencies and centers serve “customers by appointment only who have urgent travel to a foreign country in the next 14 calendar days, or need a foreign visa in the next 28 calendar days,” according to the State Department’s website. The new agencies will bring the total number to 35.

“While we undertake steps to establish these new agencies, we are issuing more passports than ever before while maintaining our passport processing times at our pre-pandemic levels,” Blinken said in a news release. “We thank Congress for its partnership and support, and we look forward to working with our congressional partners and other stakeholders to open these new facilities.”

The State Department did not share addresses or opening dates for the new facilities. “We are in the initial stages of planning for these additional facilities and will provide updates in the future about specific locations and timelines for these new agencies,” a spokesperson told USA TODAY in an emailed statement.

Comments

Leave a Reply

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>

Archives