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Documents Needed for a U.S. Passport

Most passport delays happen because of missing, inconsistent, or improperly certified documents. This guide explains exactly what the U.S. Department of State requires for first-time and renewal applicants, minors, replacements, name changes, overseas applications, and passport photo rules. Collect originals, prepare clear scans, and follow form instructions carefully.

1) Citizenship & Identity Evidence

U.S. passport applications must prove both U.S. citizenship and identity. The documents you supply depend on whether you’re applying for the first time, renewing by mail, or replacing a lost passport.

For first-time adult applicants you must apply in person with originals — no exceptions for DS-11. Renewals by mail use DS-82 when eligible.

2) Which Forms to Use (DS-11, DS-82, DS-64, DS-3053)

Use the correct form — the Department of State has strict rules.

Always download the current PDF from the State Department website, print it, and follow the instructions — don’t rely on copies from other sites.

3) Passport Photos — U.S. Standards

Passport photo errors are a common rejection cause. Use a compliant photo service or follow the State Department rules exactly for size, background, and appearance.

Digital alterations, filters, or heavy retouching are not permitted — the photo must be a true likeness.

4) Adult First-Time (Applying with DS-11) — Checklist

First-time adult applicants (or those who must appear in person) should prepare originals and submit them at an authorized acceptance facility.

CategoryDocumentsNotes
Citizenship U.S. birth certificate (long form) or naturalization certificate or CRBA Must be original; no photocopies for proof of citizenship
Identity Current driver’s license or government/military ID Bring photocopy of front/back on white paper
Photos One 2x2 passport photo Follow U.S. photo rules
Application DS-11 (unsigned until instructed) Sign in front of acceptance agent
Fees Passport book fee + execution fee Check current fee schedule before payment

5) Adult Renewal — DS-82 by Mail

If eligible, renew by mail using form DS-82 to save time. Typical eligibility: your most recent passport was issued when you were 16 or older, it’s undamaged, and issued within the last 15 years.

If your name changed, include an original or certified copy of the marriage certificate or court order.

6) Child Passport (Under 16) — Parental Requirements

Children under 16 must appear in person with both parents or guardians (or present evidence of sole legal custody). Consent rules are strict.

AreaDocumentsTips
Citizenship Child’s long-form birth certificate or CRBA Shows parent(s) details — essential
Parents’ ID Both parents’ IDs (driver’s licence/passport) If one parent absent, provide DS-3053 notarized consent
Photos One 2x2 passport photo of the child Babies: plain background; no toys visible
Application DS-11, signed by parents/guardian in presence of agent Both parents should attend if possible

7) Name Changes — What to Send

If your name has changed since your last passport, submit legal evidence: marriage certificate, court order, or divorce decree showing the name change. For renewals by mail include the document with DS-82.

If you need to change name and you cannot provide certified evidence, contact the State Department for guidance — do not guess.

8) Lost, Stolen, Damaged — Replacement Steps

Report lost/stolen passports promptly. Use DS-64 to report the loss, and then either DS-11 (if you cannot use DS-82) or DS-82 if eligible.

Do not travel on a damaged passport unless advised by consular officials — airlines and countries may refuse travel.

9) Applying from Outside the United States

U.S. embassies and consulates provide passport services for citizens abroad. Procedures are similar but may require an in-person consular appointment and different fee/payment methods.

Check the embassy website for country-specific instructions (payment, document legalization, appointment system).

10) Naturalized Citizens & Dual Nationals

Naturalized citizens must present their Certificate of Naturalization (original) as proof of U.S. citizenship. Dual nationals should travel on their U.S. passport when entering or leaving the United States.

11) Document Do’s & Don’ts

12) Quick Matrix — Which Documents Fit Your Case?

ScenarioMust-HavesExtras That Help
First-time Adult (DS-11) Long-form birth certificate or naturalization cert; ID; photo; DS-11 Proof of parental citizenship if applicable; Social Security card
Renewal by Mail (DS-82) Most recent passport; DS-82; photo; payment Name-change document if applicable
Child Under 16 Child birth certificate/CRBA; parents’ IDs; DS-11; photo Custody documents; DS-3053 if one parent absent
Lost/Stolen DS-64; proof of citizenship & ID; police report (if abroad) Copies of old passport pages; travel itinerary
Applying Abroad Original documents; embassy appointment; photo Local police report for theft; embassy-specific forms
The Department of State may request additional evidence depending on your situation.

13) Digital Hygiene & File Prep

Organize a folder named US-Passport-Docs with subfolders for Citizenship, ID, Photos, Forms, and Changes. Scan originals in color at 300 DPI, label files clearly, and keep backups.

Useful Sources

15) Pre-Submission Checklist — Avoid Common Delays

  1. I’ve chosen the correct form (DS-11, DS-82, etc.) and read the State Department instructions.
  2. My citizenship and identity proofs are original and match the application.
  3. My photo meets U.S. specifications (2x2 inches, plain background).
  4. I included signed consent for minors (both parents or DS-3053 where applicable).
  5. I’ve prepared required photocopies and payment for fees.
  6. If applying from abroad, I checked embassy appointments and local guidance.
  7. All files are scanned at 300 DPI, clearly named, and backed up.
A tidy, consistent document trail and correct form selection are the fastest way to approval.

Documents – Quick FAQs

You must provide your Social Security number on the form. If you don't have a card, provide the number (if known) and follow the State Department instructions.

As of now, U.S. renewals generally use DS-82 by mail. The State Department pilots online renewals at times — check the official site for current availability.

Processing times change; check the Department of State page. Expedited options are available for an extra fee.

Both parents should appear to provide consent for children under 16. If one parent cannot attend, provide a notarized DS-3053 consent form from the absent parent.

Report it to local police (if safe) and the nearest U.S. embassy/consulate. They can issue an emergency passport to return to the States.

The State Department usually requires original or certified documents for proof of citizenship. Notarized copies are generally insufficient.