Getting and renewing your passport might get just a little bit easier, according to Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
On July 2, Rubio said the State Department is developing a more streamlined system that would allow Americans to take and upload passport photos using their phones or computers.
Americans can already upload passport photos taken from their phones and computers; however, they must meet the Department of State’s strict requirements. Rubio said the new system will use real-time, built-in facial recognition technology to make the process even quicker.
“You should be able to take that picture on that device as opposed to going somewhere. Now, the CVS people, of course, hate this, and the Walgreens and all those other places,” Rubio said. “But you’ll be able to take your picture from that device and be able to have it in real time, through our security system, verify the facial ID.”
Online Applications Coming Too
In addition to easing the process of taking and submitting passport photos from home, Rubio outlined plans to allow passport applicants to complete nearly the entire process online.
“Now, beyond that, I would say that we are also looking at some technological changes, which we’ll be more fully able to announce over the coming months, where it’s going to be a lot easier to get a passport in terms of the dynamics of it. You’ll actually be able to go online,” Rubio said.
Rubio’s comments came during a reception launching a commemorative passport marking the nation’s 250th anniversary. Only 25,000 of the limited-edition passports are being released starting July 6, according to the State Department.
Controversy Around New Passports
The new commemorative passports have been shadowed by controversy after President Donald Trump unveiled a rendering of them in late June.
The new passport shared by Trump featured an image of him standing over the Resolute Desk with the text of the original Declaration of Independence in the background and his signature at the bottom of one of the pages. Meanwhile, the other page shows the “The Declaration of Independence” painting by John Trumbull.
“The U.S.A.’s New Passport, which says, ‘Welcome, but be good!’” Trump wrote alongside the designs in a June 26 post on Truth Social.
The new design drew pushback from Democrats in Washington, with Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine sending a letter to Rubio saying that featuring Trump’s face on the document would turn “a unifying national milestone into a vehicle for personal promotion.”
“To our knowledge, no country places the portrait of a sitting leader in its passport. Even the most authoritarian and autocratic governments have avoided equating national identity to the sitting president in such a way,” Kaine said.
USA TODAY’s Saman Shafiq contributed to this report.
Fernando Cervantes Jr. is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Reach him at [email protected] and follow him on X @fern_cerv_.












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