Did You Know There’s a Way to Check TSA Lines Before You Go to the Airport?

ALEXANDRIA, VA – If you’ve been through Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, Washington Dulles International Airport or Baltimore/Washington International Airport lately, you don’t need an explanation—TSA lines have been long, and patience has been required.
“The TSA line at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport Terminal 1 is absolutely insane right now,” posted John D. Winnett on his Facebook account on March 30. “It’s literally snaking out the door and down the hallway.”
What you may not know is that there’s a simple way to check those wait times before you even leave the house.
“I wish I had known about it sooner,” said one frequent traveler from Alexandria. “Now it’s the first thing I look at before heading to the airport.”
The site, TSA Wait Times, lets travelers search airports across the country and see estimated security wait times. The numbers are largely based on recent, crowd-sourced reports, offering a real-time snapshot of what people are experiencing in line.

“It’s not perfect, but it gives you a sense of what you’re walking into,” the traveler said. “That alone helps.”
With wait times stretching well beyond the norm in recent weeks, travelers are getting creative—and sometimes desperate—to avoid missing flights.
“We’ve even heard stories—more rumor than anything—of people paying someone to stand in line for them when waits hit a couple of hours,” said a local travel consultant. “That’s not something we’re seeing here, but it tells you how frustrated people are getting.”
Most travelers, of course, are sticking to more practical solutions: leaving earlier, packing lighter, and now, checking ahead.
The Transportation Security Administration also offers its own MyTSA app, and some airports provide general guidance online, but many travelers say having multiple sources helps paint a clearer picture.
“I’ll check a couple of places,” said a Dulles traveler. “If they all look bad, I just assume I need extra time.”
And that’s really the takeaway.
The tools won’t shorten the line—but they might help you plan for it.
Or at the very least, know what you’re in for before you get there.


