Is a UK driving permit valid ID for a domestic flight?
#1
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Join Date: Feb 1999
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Is a UK driving permit valid ID for a domestic flight?
Question from a friend who hasn't flown in years. Is a UK drivers permit considered a valid ID to fly domestically in the UK?
It would be Belfast to Aberdeen.
It would be Belfast to Aberdeen.
#2
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#4
Join Date: Aug 2000
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The UK DfT does not specify which forms of ID are acceptable, but requires that individual airlines set and enforce a policy to verify ID of travelers. Hence, the policy can (and does) vary significantly between airlines.
#5
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Anyone know for Flybe? All I can find on their website is this...
All passengers using online check-in must present valid photographic identification or a valid passport for international routes which will be checked at the boarding gate. Any passenger without appropriate identification will be refused travel.
All passengers using online check-in must present valid photographic identification or a valid passport for international routes which will be checked at the boarding gate. Any passenger without appropriate identification will be refused travel.
#6
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: UK
Posts: 7,560
AFAIK it's only Ryanair that insists on passports even for internal flights (and that's a recent change - they used to accept driving licences until about two years ago)
I remember seeing a list of acceptable photo ID documents on FlyBe's web site, and I recall it was quite long and included things like student cards and bus passes and almost definitely driving licences.
Of course we are talking about PHOTO driving licences here - not the old photo-less document that many of us still have.
I remember seeing a list of acceptable photo ID documents on FlyBe's web site, and I recall it was quite long and included things like student cards and bus passes and almost definitely driving licences.
Of course we are talking about PHOTO driving licences here - not the old photo-less document that many of us still have.
#7
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: UK
Posts: 7,560
FlyBe - found it
The list is still there - here we go:
* A valid passport
* An expired passport (can be used on domestic flights for up to two years after expiry)
* Valid photographic EU or Swiss national identity card
* Valid photographic driving licence
* Valid armed forces identity card
* Valid police warrant card/badge
* Valid airport employees security identity pass
* A child on parent’ s passport is an acceptable form of ID
* CitizenCard
* Valid photographic firearm certificate
* Valid Government-issued identity card
* SMART card
* Electoral identity card
* NUS cards photographic (National Union of Students)
* Photographic University/College ID card
* Company ID cards of Nationally recognised companies (photographic)
* Council issued bus pass (Senior Citizens only)
* Pension book (as only acceptable form of non-photographic identification)
* Young Scot Card
* A valid passport
* An expired passport (can be used on domestic flights for up to two years after expiry)
* Valid photographic EU or Swiss national identity card
* Valid photographic driving licence
* Valid armed forces identity card
* Valid police warrant card/badge
* Valid airport employees security identity pass
* A child on parent’ s passport is an acceptable form of ID
* CitizenCard
* Valid photographic firearm certificate
* Valid Government-issued identity card
* SMART card
* Electoral identity card
* NUS cards photographic (National Union of Students)
* Photographic University/College ID card
* Company ID cards of Nationally recognised companies (photographic)
* Council issued bus pass (Senior Citizens only)
* Pension book (as only acceptable form of non-photographic identification)
* Young Scot Card
#8
Join Date: Jun 2006
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And of course anyone having stood behind UK driving licence holders who expected the checkin staff to accept a non-photo driving licence as proof of id and wouldn't move away know why that was,
#9
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: UK
Posts: 7,560
AFAIR they got rid of the whole list at the same time that they got rid of check-in desks.
#10
Join Date: Jun 2006
Programs: BD,Skyteam,QF
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No, that wasn't the reason. They decided to stop accepting EVERYTHING except passports (and national identity cards in those countries that have them). Just like other airlines they used to have a list of acceptable documents (though theirs was always shorter than those of their competitors, and had some weird exceptions - like "photo driving licence accepted only if your place of birth is in the EU").
AFAIR they got rid of the whole list at the same time that they got rid of check-in desks.
AFAIR they got rid of the whole list at the same time that they got rid of check-in desks.
When I wasn't in a hurry, I found it amusing to watch the performance with the non-photo driving licences on a friday evening in the days when stag groups regularly travelled to Dublin.