Passengers at some U.S. airports no longer have to remove shoes, sources say

Authored by cbsnews.com and submitted by NewSlinger
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Passengers at some U.S. airports will no longer have to remove their shoes, sources say

Passengers at some airports across the U.S. no longer have to remove their shoes during regular preflight security checks, two sources familiar with the change confirmed to CBS News on Monday.

The change appears to be a phased approach, sources said, and the first airports where the no-shoes requirement is expiring include Baltimore/Washington International Airport, Fort Lauderdale International Airport, Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport, Portland International Airport, Philadelphia International Airport and Piedmont Triad International Airport in North Carolina.

However, CBS News correspondents at Los Angeles International Airport and New York City's LaGuardia Airport reported Monday night that they and other passengers didn't have to take off their shoes.

Travelers with TSA PreCheck already didn't have to remove their footwear. In order to have PreCheck, travelers must submit an application and go through a clearance process with the Transportation Security Administration.

The change comes amid reports that the TSA has let the security rule expire for fliers going through the standard TSA screening lines.

In a statement to CBS News on Monday, TSA said the agency and the Department of Homeland Security "are always exploring new and innovative ways to enhance the passenger experience and our strong security posture."

The no-shoes rule was implemented by TSA nationwide in 2006. The official adoption of the rule came several years after Richard Reid, a British man who would come to be known as the "shoe bomber," attempted to blow up an American Airlines flight from Paris to Miami with explosives hidden in his shoe in December 2001. Reid failed to detonate the explosives, and the plane landed safely in Boston after passengers helped subdue him.

Following that incident, airlines and TSA began asking passengers to voluntarily remove their shoes when going through security.

wxrman on July 8th, 2025 at 02:22 UTC »

Used to travel a LOT for work. It was hit or miss but when they were telling you not to remove your shoes, it was because it was busy. The annoying part is that they would act like "why are you taking your shoes off?" as if we had decided to do that on our own.

Oh TSA how I don't miss you.

Beer_before_Friends on July 8th, 2025 at 02:22 UTC »

We flew from Canada to Florida in February. We got laughed at for taking our shoes off in Canada and yelled at for not taking them off in America. I hate air travel lol

loyola-atherton on July 8th, 2025 at 02:02 UTC »

Good thing, because the hygiene levels on some airports need reporting.