The Exact Steps to Get Your Kid a Passport
What to do first, what to bring, and how to avoid making five separate trips.
Two years ago, I tried to get my daughter a passport in Houston.
And when I say “tried,” I mean I entered what can only be described as a bureaucratic escape room designed specifically for tired mothers.
The first time, I showed up without an appointment.
Rejected.
The second time, I had the paperwork, or so I thought, but didn’t have a passport photo because I had been told USPS could take one on site. Their machine was broken.
Rejected again.
So I went to Walgreens to get her picture taken. Except that Walgreens’ photo machine was also down that day, because of course it was. So I drove to another Walgreens, got the picture, made another appointment, showed up again, and then realized I was still missing one of the required forms from my husband.
At that point, I gave up.
We didn’t actually need the passport yet, and I was too tired to keep trying to win Passport Olympics.
But now we’re traveling internationally next year, so it was time to try again. (Mind you, now we live in the suburbs, and I’m not kidding when I say everything is 10x faster when you’re 40 minutes removed from a big city.)
And this time? It took 20 minutes. Twenty. Minutes.
The difference was not that I suddenly became more organized as a person. The difference was that I had already learned the hard way exactly where things can go wrong.
So for every mom who has “get child’s passport” sitting on her mental to-do list and feels her nervous system activate just thinking about it, here’s the order I would do it in.
First: Get the passport photo before your appointment
Do not assume the passport office, USPS, or pharmacy will be able to take the picture that day. Call ahead.
Ask:
“Do you take passport photos for children?”
And then ask the very important follow-up question:
“Is your photo machine working today?”
Because apparently this is a real thing.
Once you have the picture in hand, protect it with your life. Put it in the folder with your other documents and do not let your toddler touch it, bend it, snack near it, or lovingly crumple it into a ball.
Second: Make the appointment
Most passport acceptance facilities require or strongly prefer appointments, especially USPS locations.
Do not do what I did and just show up with hope and a diaper bag.
Find a location, make the appointment, and put it on the calendar for both parents if both of you are able to go.
For children under 16, both parents or guardians generally need to appear in person with the child. If one parent can’t go, there is extra paperwork involved, usually a notarized consent form. That is doable, but it is also exactly the kind of thing that can derail your appointment if you realize it too late.
So my recommendation?
If at all possible, bring both parents. It made the whole thing so much easier.
Third: Fill out Form DS-11 ahead of time
For a child’s first passport, you’ll need Form DS-11.
Fill it out before you go, print it single-sided, and do not sign it until they tell you to at the appointment. The State Department specifically says DS-11 should be printed single-sided and signed only when instructed.
This is not the moment to freestyle. In fact, I waited to fill out her height, hair color, and eye color in case they had a specific format they wanted me to use.
Have the form ready, but wait to sign and leave any info you’re unsure of blank until you’re there.
Fourth: Bring a checkbook
Yes, a checkbook.
I know. It feels like packing a relic from 2004, but passport fees can be split between the U.S. Department of State and the acceptance facility, and payment methods may vary by location. For children under 16 applying with DS-11, the State Department says there are two separate fees: one paid to the Department of State and one paid to the facility where you submit the application.
So bring the checkbook. This is not where we take a stand for modern payment systems.
Fifth: Pack your passport folder
Here’s what we brought:
Form DS-11
Our daughter’s real birth certificate
My photo ID
My husband’s photo ID
Passport photo
Checkbook
Photocopies of the documents, just in case
The official guidance says children under 16 need to apply in person, and you’ll need evidence of U.S. citizenship, proof of parental relationship, parent or guardian photo IDs, photocopies, photo, and fees.
I made photocopies of everything because, at that point, I was not interested in being humbled by a copier.
Did they need every single photocopy I brought? No. Did I regret having them? Also no.
The simple order I’d follow
Here’s the mom-friendly version:
Find your child’s real birth certificate.
Fill out DS-11, print it single-sided, and do not sign it yet.
Get the passport photo ahead of time.
Call first to make sure the photo location’s machine is working.
Make the passport appointment.
Put both parents’ IDs in the folder.
Make photocopies of everything.
Bring your child, both parents if possible, the documents, the photo, and a checkbook.
Leave 20 minutes later feeling like you just beat the system.
The real lesson
The first time I tried to get my daughter’s passport, I felt like I kept failing at something that should have been simple.
But looking back, I wasn’t failing. I was tired, I was missing information, I was trying to do a multi-step government errand while also being a mom, which automatically makes every task 40% more complicated.
This time, I wasn’t a different person. I just had a better order of operations. And sometimes that’s what makes motherhood feel lighter.
Not doing more, not becoming more organized overnight, just knowing what comes first, what comes next, and what paperwork absolutely cannot be forgotten on the kitchen counter.
So if getting your kid’s passport is on your list, consider this your little nudge:
Make the appointment.
Get the picture first.
Bring the checkbook.
And may every machine you encounter be working.
Happy travels!



