Politics & Government
REAL ID Deadline Extended Again: What It Means For WI Residents
Here's what people in Wisconsin should know about getting a document that will eventually become required for domestic flights.

WISCONSIN — Wisconsinites have 24 more months to obtain their REAL IDs, a document that will become necessary to board domestic flights and enter some federal buildings.
The Department of Homeland Security extended the enforcement deadline Monday, pushing it back to May 7, 2025. The extension came in part because of lingering backlogs in state drivers license agencies caused in part by COVID-19, officials said.
Some precautions in many states included automatically extending expiration dates of driver’s licenses and identification cards, and shifting to appointment-only schedules.
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When coronavirus was hitting Wisconsin in May 2020, the state DMV waived road tests for teen drivers after a backlog into the thousands, according to a Patch report.
The compliance deadline has been extended multiple times beyond the original date — April 27, 2020 — because of the pandemic. It was extended to October 2021, but in May of that year, DHS extended it again to May 3, 2023.
Find out what's happening in Across Wisconsinfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Past the new enforcement date of May 7, 2025, federal agencies, including the TSA, will not be able to accept identification that does not meet REAL ID standards.
The REAL ID Act of 2005 was passed by Congress after the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Four pieces of identification are required to obtain a REAL ID: a passport or birth certificate, a Social Security card or tax return, and two documents proving proof of residence, such as a mortgage or rental receipt and a utility bill.
In addition to the stars on REAL ID driver's licenses, the cards themselves will be built with new technology, making them much more difficult to forge, according to the Department of Homeland Security.
If you don't plan to fly domestically or visit a federal office, no worries. You don't need a REAL ID to get a driver's license. Also, the TSA won't require children under 18 to provide identification when they're traveling with an adult companion within the United States, but the companion must have acceptable identification.
The REAL ID isn't a substitute for a passport required for international travel, and it also doesn't affect the ability to vote or register to vote, applications for federal benefits, enter federal facilities that don't require identification, obtain medical care, or participate in police proceedings or investigations.
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