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NRT fly through
I am posting this here to try and get the quickest response...
My girlfriend may need to travel to Guam from work. The two options of getting there is flying through HNL or NRT. If she flies through NRT does she need to go through Japanese customs and thus need a passport with her even though she is just passing through with her final destination being US soil? |
Originally Posted by djp98374
(Post 19763639)
I am posting this here to try and get the quickest response...
My girlfriend may need to travel to Guam from work. The two options of getting there is flying through HNL or NRT. If she flies through NRT does she need to go through Japanese customs and thus need a passport with her even though she is just passing through with her final destination being US soil? She will need to have her passport with her. As, she will "re-enter" the USA in Guam and go through US Immigration and clear customs upon landing in GUM. Same with her return flight via NRT. Just transit security in NRT and then clear US Immigration and Customs upon return to the US Mainland. If she goes via HNL, she will need to clear Guam Customs upon entry into GUM. There is no immigration check in GUM. I believe that no passport is necessary. On the return, upon landing in HNL, she will need to clear US Customs in HNL. There is no immigration check in HNL. |
Does transit security allow laptops to stay inside "checkpoint friendly" bags?
I FINALLY bought one and I can't recall seeing someone use one there. |
Originally Posted by warreng24
(Post 19763680)
There is no immigration check in GUM. I believe that no passport is necessary.
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Originally Posted by TomA
(Post 19763700)
Does transit security allow laptops to stay inside "checkpoint friendly" bags?
I FINALLY bought one and I can't recall seeing someone use one there. |
Originally Posted by TomA
(Post 19763700)
Does transit security allow laptops to stay inside "checkpoint friendly" bags?
I FINALLY bought one and I can't recall seeing someone use one there. |
OP, even if possible I think it is luducrous to try this w/o a passport. Will they even allow her to board the NRT flight both ways? Do they check the passport at the NRT gate? IROPS?
Way to many chances for a travel disaster. It takes 5 (or less) days to expedite a passport. Do so and charge the expedite fee to the company travel. |
Originally Posted by warreng24
(Post 19763680)
On the return, upon landing in HNL, she will need to clear US Customs in HNL. There is no immigration check in HNL.
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IIRC transit security in NRT checks to see if you have a passport as well and good luck trying to talk your way out of that one.
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I go to Guam every year, usually through HNL. I went through NRT once and had to show my passport to board SFO-NRT and NRT-GUM. I also had to show it when I arrived in Guam and when I departed Guam. There have been other posts on FT stating you only need a birth certificate if you're just transferring through NRT. YMMV
Personally I wouldn't go through NRT without a passport. |
Originally Posted by exwannabe
(Post 19763815)
OP, even if possible I think it is luducrous to try this w/o a passport. Will they even allow her to board the NRT flight both ways? Do they check the passport at the NRT gate? IROPS?
Way to many chances for a travel disaster. It takes 5 (or less) days to expedite a passport. Do so and charge the expedite fee to the company travel. |
she would not be let on a flight to Japan without a passport, transit or not
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I fly to Guam from LAX 5-6 times a year. LAX-HNL-GUM is the most efficient way for me. However, if there are IRROPs involving LAX-HNL, then LAX-NRT-GUM is an alternative that will get you into GUM at 1am as opposed to 6-7 pm.
In order To be rerouted through NRT you need a passport. Otherwise you can be stuck in HNL for a day. Similarly, if the GUM-HNL flight is canceled, a passport would be needed to go back via NRT. |
The airlines will not allow her onto a flight to NRT without a passport. How do they know that she's really going to transit to Guam?
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Originally Posted by ksandness
(Post 19768575)
The airlines will not allow her onto a flight to NRT without a passport. How do they know that she's really going to transit to Guam?
I think the bigger issues, at least theoretically, are that (a) the immigration people in Guam would not know where she had come from, and (b) if anything happened along the way, she might be forced to enter Japan for lodging, medical treatment, etc. BTW, this website seems to say that if you are in the military, you are allowed to transit NRT to get to GUM without a passport. Note that it seems dated (it refers to flying NW) but does note that civilians need passports: http://usmilitary.about.com/od/airfo...Andersen_2.htm |
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