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As the Real ID deadline looms, will middle names create complications in a digitized system?

Jake Kring-Schreifels on

Published in Slideshow World

Ivan Marc // Shutterstock 1/3

As the Real ID deadline looms, will middle names create complications in a digitized system?

If you're headed to the airport soon, you might want to double-check your identification. Starting May 7, 2025, every resident (18 years or older) of a U.S. state or territory attempting to board a commercial aircraft will need to present security with a Real ID license or identification card, or another acceptable form of identification such as a passport. If you're not able to present a Real ID-compliant card to a Transportation Security Administration agent, you won't be permitted through the airport's security checkpoint.

Why the sudden change? Actually, this new requirement has been 20 years in the making. In 2005, congress passed the Real ID Act, which enacted the 9/11 Commission's recommendation that the federal government "set standards for the issuance of sources of identification, such as driver's licenses." After numerous delays, the act is a way to raise the minimum national standard of security, preventing access to certain federal facilities, commercial aircraft, and nuclear power plants unless you have an enhanced, state-issued license or identification card.

In a recent interview with Axios, a TSA spokesperson explained that travelers who don't possess a Real ID by the deadline are highly encouraged to bring their passport or another accepted document with them when flying domestically. Still, it's likely some travelers will forget to bring them, and the new requirements will lead to longer lines, which is why "TSA also recommends that these passengers arrive a little earlier than normal to allow time for the identity verification process."

Arriving in an era of enhanced and more scrupulous security—a trend that includes contactless, multimodal (face and fingerprint recognition), and machine-learning biometrics—the Real ID's primary purpose is to decrease fraud. As such, all Real ID licenses and cards are typically marked with a star (or encircled star) in the upper right-hand corner, though some states have slight design variations. The Real ID also requires your full legal name, including your middle name, for the purpose of aiding background checks.

These new requirements, however, can provide challenges for people with varied naming structures, specifically when it comes to middle names. Typically attached to one's ethnicity, culture, or marital status, middle name conventions aren't always consistent across different forms of documentation and have caused problems in an increasingly digital world. 

In anticipation of the May 7 deadline, Spokeo used research and government resources to explore how these different middle name conventions may complicate the process of getting a Real ID.

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