Facts About Passports
Passports. Millions of people have them, yet many know so little about these secure little booklets chock-full of personal information. As a traveler, you know it’s the key to getting through the immigration area, topped with an adventurous new stamp, but there’s more to these precious documents than meets the eye. Read on below for 5 facts about passports you may not know.
Five Facts You Didn’t Know About Passports
(Image source: Pixabay.)
1. Sweden is the home of the world’s most powerful passport
According to an analysis done by a travel technology company last year, the most desirable passport belongs to the Swedes. Impressively, it costs just $43 and gets you into 174 countries without a visa. Fantastiskt!
2. Secret, fascinating features
Did you know that the Canadian passport has hidden a party in its pages? Slide it under a black light and watch the pages burst into a colorful glow of Canadian brilliance!
Similarly, the latest version of the Norwegian passport dazzles with the design of the northern lights when you put it under a UV light. It is truly a ganske (pretty) sight.
As for the U.S. passport, there are as many as 30 different security features at work, including invisible ink and secure printing. Long story short: you can’t trick the U.S.
3. Pick and choose (if you’re a Japanese citizen)
Once Japanese citizens turn 20, they can apply for two different types of passports: blue, which is valid for five years, or red, which will last for a decade.
4. Selfies?
Passport photos are known to have strict requirements. For example, in the U.S., your photo must measure two inches by two inches, with your head measuring between 1 and 1.375 inches. So no, you can’t snap a picture at home against the refrigerator and print it out at Walgreens.
But the passport expeditor, ItsEasy, is trying to change that. Its passport application app includes a mechanism to take a selfie that the company will use on your passport application.
5. Your passport fights identity theft
If your U.S. passport was issued after August 2007, it features a small integrated chip in the back cover that stores your information along with a biometric identifier based on your photograph. To protect passport holders from high-tech identity theft, there are metallic elements in the cover of the passport, which make it impossible for the passport to be digitally “read,” unless it’s physically open.
Know of more facts about passport? Spill the beans below!
Nicole DiGiose, Sprangled | May 7, 2018
Nicole is a woman of the world with enormous dreams. She believes life’s too short to stay in one place throughout your existence, and plans to continue learning things she never knew she never knew.