Members unicorn Posted 17 hours ago Members Posted 17 hours ago 11 minutes ago, Keithambrose said: That's bad, but i nearly always have to go through security again when I change planes, wherever I've been. No, most countries don't make you do that when just changing planes. The US does make you go through customs and immigration on arrival from most countries (except Canada, Aruba, Bahamas, Bermuda, Ireland, and UAE), and to go through security again. However, one does not need to go through security again with domestic travel (or travel from those 6 countries). Quote
Keithambrose Posted 16 hours ago Posted 16 hours ago 1 hour ago, unicorn said: No, most countries don't make you do that when just changing planes. The US does make you go through customs and immigration on arrival from most countries (except Canada, Aruba, Bahamas, Bermuda, Ireland, and UAE), and to go through security again. However, one does not need to go through security again with domestic travel (or travel from those 6 countries). Thanks. To be fair, I try to fly direct these days, but I'm sure that on some occasions when I had an international change, Helsinki? Kuala Lumpur? I had to go through security again. I know that memory plays tricks, but I have a memory of wandering around, looking for the way to connections, and going through security again, and wondering why, since i had been through security in London! Maybe Hong Kong, where I sometimes changed for Tokyo or Bangkok. Any airport where you have to change terminals is going to be difficult. Quote
vinapu Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago 2 hours ago, unicorn said: No, most countries don't make you do that when just changing planes. I'm not so sure, my impression is that NOT going through security when just changing planes is more exception than rule. I think we are so used to it that we simply go through it without even giving it second thought unless we have tight connection , when nail biting starts Quote
xpaulo Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago On 4/15/2025 at 2:13 PM, fedssocr said: CDG is one of my least favorites. Me too. The first airport official to look at the my boarding pass told me it was unlikely I would make my connection home to Canada. I don't know if he misread the boarding pass or was a jerk, but I actually had lots of time. I panicked instead of the checking the time. There was a really long shuttle trip, I of course was at the last one. And it wasn't until I got there until I realized I still had three hours. Gatwick is the worse I've ever been to. Crowded, WIFI doesn't work even if you pay for it, a woman working at the security check was screaming at people. I figured she was in the army at some point. unicorn 1 Quote
PeterRS Posted 10 hours ago Author Posted 10 hours ago 7 hours ago, unicorn said: No, most countries don't make you do that when just changing planes. The US does make you go through customs and immigration on arrival from most countries (except Canada, Aruba, Bahamas, Bermuda, Ireland, and UAE), and to go through security again. However, one does not need to go through security again with domestic travel (or travel from those 6 countries). I always wonder why the US makes passengers do this. I once planned an RTW trip. To maximise miles, I took Tokyo to DFW on AA and then AA to Vancouver. I had no idea i'd actually have to enter the USA and then exit again at DFW. For transit passengers, that just seems ridiculous. Why the airline had not red-flagged this to me when I booked I totally fail to understand. With long queues to enter DFW, I assumed I'd miss my connection. I just made it. Quote
Members unicorn Posted 6 hours ago Members Posted 6 hours ago 3 hours ago, PeterRS said: ...With long queues to enter DFW, I assumed I'd miss my connection. I just made it. It's a stupid pain in the ass, no doubt. Always allow for 3 hours for international connections when arriving in the US. Quote
PeterRS Posted 39 minutes ago Author Posted 39 minutes ago 5 hours ago, unicorn said: It's a stupid pain in the ass, no doubt. Always allow for 3 hours for international connections when arriving in the US. Good advice. Is there a reason why US airports do not permit international to international connecting flights like almost every other nation? Quote