President Donald Trump says he plans to sign an order to pay TSA workers amid a DHS shutdown deadlock.
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President Donald Trump says he plans to sign an order to pay TSA workers amid a DHS shutdown deadlock.
TSA agents face another missed paycheck, causing travel chaos and extended wait times at airports.
It is unclear whether Trump has the power to allocate the budget without congressional approval.
President Donald Trump said that he will sign an order "instructing the Secretary of Homeland Security, Markwayne Mullin, to immediately pay our TSA Agents."
Trump made the announcement on Truth Social on Thursday.
"Because the Democrats have recklessly created a true National Crisis, I am using my authorities under the Law to protect our Great Country, as I always will do!" Trump wrote.
It's unclear whether Trump has the power to allocate funds immediately without congressional approval, as the Senate has failed to reach a deal on how to fund DHS. A partial government shutdown began on February 14 due to a stalemate over immigration enforcement, mainly affecting DHS agencies.
The Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday that several Senate Republicans had pressed the White House to consider declaring a national emergency to pay TSA workers.
Trump's comments come as travel chaos intensifies across major national travel hubs. TSA workers are set to miss another paycheck by Friday morning and have begun to call out sick en masse, creating a severe staffing shortage, which is leading to many hours in wait time at TSA checkpoints.
Delta Air Lines suspended travel perks for Congress members and their staff that usually speed up their security checks, citing the government shutdown.
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Transportation security officers don't only screen passengers and luggage, but also ask travelers security questions and look out for suspicious activity.
From the X-ray machine to pat-downs, it takes substantial training to ensure agents can spot prohibited items. Becoming a TSA agent takes four to six months.
And sometimes, what's prohibited might not be as obvious as you think. While there are definite no-nos — like weapons — other banned items are a little more unexpected.
Try it below to see if you know what's allowed and what's not in your carry-on:
TSA issues persist
Staffing shortages are causing enormous lines at airport security checkpoints right now and putting severe pressure on TSA workers.
Large numbers have been calling out since the partial government shutdown began on February 14, which stopped TSA staff from being paid. More than 400 have quit entirely.
The Department of Homeland Security says this leaves "critical gaps in staffing."
"TSA simply cannot afford to lose its screening workforce as it takes four to six months to train new recruits."
That's drawn criticism from many in the aviation industry, including flight attendants' unions, which accused politicians of using workers as "pawns in this dangerous game" in a Sunday statement.
On Tuesday, the Association of Flight Attendants created an online reporting form for its members to flag incidents, like ICE agents "doing work they are not trained to do, such as screening passengers and baggage."
Elon Musk offered to cover the TSA workers' salaries as they go without pay during the partial government shutdown.
Andrew Harnik/Reuters
TSA agents are working without pay amid the partial government shutdown.
Elon Musk on Saturday said on social media that he'd like to cover the workers' salaries.
The White House said that it poses "legal challenges" due to Musk's involvement with federal contracts.
The White House turned down Elon Musk's offer to cover TSA agents' salaries as they continue to work without pay amid the partial government shutdown.
"We greatly appreciate Elon's generous offer," Abigail Jackson, a White House spokesperson, told Business Insider. "This would pose great legal challenges due to his involvement with federal government contracts. The fastest way to ensure TSA employees — and all DHS employees — get paid is for Democrats to fund the Department of Homeland Security."
CBS News first reported the White House's rejection. Musk did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The billionaire CEO on Saturday wrote in a social media post that he'd like to cover the salaries of TSA workers "during this funding impasse that is negatively affecting the lives of so many Americans at airports throughout the country."
As of Wednesday, TSA workers missed at least one paycheck as Congress remains at an impasse over funding for the Department of Homeland Security.
The funding lapse has led to staffing shortages and hourslong lines at airports across the country.
Trump is sending ICE agents to fill a TSA officer shortage during the government shutdown, but a major federal union warns this could create safety risks.
In a House testimony on Wednesday, acting TSA administrator Ha Nguyen McNeill said that so many officers have quit since their pay stopped in mid-February that the agency can't get replacements fast enough to adequately staff airports ahead of the World Cup in June.
She said TSA officers spend four to six months in training before working checkpoints, but the games — which will take place across 16 cities in the US, Canada, and Mexico — start in just 80 days.
"This is a dire situation," she said, adding that more than 480 officers have quit so far. "We are facing a potential perfect storm of severe staffing shortages and an influx of millions of passengers at our airports."
TSA agents haven't been paid for nearly six weeks, yet are deemed "essential" and expected to work during the shutdown, with back pay promised afterward. Their annual pay starts at around $40,000 and averages $60,000 to $75,000 a year with experience.
Still, many live paycheck to paycheck and can't afford to work unpaid for months at a time — quitting and finding another job or doing gig work is often their best option.
Mass TSA agent quits and callouts amid the shutdown, compounded by peak spring break travel, have already created hourslong security lines and stranded travelers. It's a preview of the chaos that could repeat when an estimated 6 million fans descend on potentially understaffed airports for the World Cup.
"If we see any spikes [in attrition], we're going to have to pivot and assess how we are going to staff the FIFA locations adequately," McNeill said.
Passengers traveling to the scheduled World Cup games in San Francisco and Kansas City, however, are likely safe from staffing chaos.
Former Republican Sen. from Oklahoma, Markwayne Mullin — who was confirmed as the new head of the Department of Homeland Security on Monday after Kristi Noem's ousting in early March — said in a Senate hearing last week that the US is "behind" on World Cup preparations and the shutdown is making it worse.
"It'll take four months once funding comes in to start replacing those that we've lost for training before we can get them out in the field; we don't have four months with FIFA," he said. "How do we expect these people to stay on the job and work? We're losing institutional knowledge, we're losing people we've already trained."
A TSA agent surveys the security line at New York LaGuardia airport.
CHARLY TRIBALLEAU / AFP via Getty Images
The mass quits are exacerbating a problem that was already flagged last year.
A February 2025 report from the US Travel Association — long before the shutdown's impact could be factored in — warned that the TSA may not be efficient enough to handle surging travel volumes during the World Cup.
On its busiest days, the agency screened about 3 million passengers. During the games, the organization said that level of traffic would be the norm.
A TSA agent surveys the security line at New York LaGuardia airport.
CHARLY TRIBALLEAU / AFP via Getty Images
TSA workers are unpaid and face another missed check on March 27 during the partial shutdown.
Congress has to allocate funding for TSA workers to get paid, but is scheduled to recess after March 27.
In the meantime, travelers have been stuck in chaos as TSA workers call out or quit.
As lines snake across airports and Transportation Security Administration workers clock in for another day without pay, a major turning point in the ongoing chaos looms on March 27.
Come Friday, around 47,000 TSA workers are set to miss yet another paycheck, according to their union, the American Federation of Government Employees. That's due to the ongoing partial government shutdown, which has left most of the Department of Homeland Security unfunded. TSA workers haven't received full paychecks since February 14. As a result, hundreds of TSA workers have quit, and thousands have called out of work, contributing to ongoing travel snarls for Americans trying to fly.
Friday might mark more than another empty paycheck: March 27 is the final date Congress is scheduled to be in session before a two-week recess, and lawmakers need tocome to a DHS funding deal for TSA workers to getpaid.
Lawmakers have clashed over funding DHS after the fatal shootings of Alex Pretti and Renée Good, with Democrats calling for reforms to ICE and Customers and Border Protection. Ultimately, the rest of the government was fundedwhile leaving DHS in the lurch, even as ICE agents are still paid through separate funding from President Donald Trump's sweeping tax and spending bill last year.
There is some potential for relief. Some lawmakers have signaled that they're ready to move forward on a deal, according to CBS News. If that does move forward, the agency could be funded ahead of the break, and workers would start collecting paychecks again.
"President Trump is using every tool available to help American travelers who are facing hours long lines at airports across the country—especially during this spring break and holiday season that is very important for many American families," Acting Assistant DHS Secretary Lauren Bis said in a statement to Business Insider. "This pointless, reckless shutdown of our homeland security workforce has caused more than 458 TSA officers to quit and thousands to call out from work because they are not able to afford gas, childcare, food, or rent."
The TSA woes are being felt at airports across the country. Some travelers have spent hours waiting in lines and faced harrowing conditions as they attempted to navigate through security. Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport and Houston's George Bush Intercontinental Airport are both warning passengers to expect wait times of 4 or more hours. To try to mitigate the situation, the Trump administration has sent in ICE agents, a move that AFGE slammed over agents lacking aviation security training.
Mike Gayzagian, president of AFGE Local 2617, which represents TSA workers in airports across New England, said Friday could mark a "hard choice" for TSA workers. If they go without pay, but know there's a deal in place for funding, there might not be a major staffing issue, he said. He thinks that, for some workers, the "damage has already been done."
"It's a good-paying job, and good-paying jobs are hard to find, and reliable, good-paying jobs are even harder to find. The federal government was the gold standard for good-paying, reliable jobs," Gayzagian said. "After this, that's no longer the case. I think a lot of discussion will surround that fact later on, after this is over."
I booked a trip to an important work conference to network and meet with potential clients.
When I got to the Hartsfield-Jackson Airport in Atlanta, I saw the long TSA lines and waited hours.
I missed my flight and the conference, which cost me business opportunities.
This wasn't just a missed flight. It was my path to a room full of investors at the Transform conference in Las Vegas. It was the kind of access that matters when you're building a new coaching business, and every connection could change your trajectory.
The night before, there was a moment that now feels like eerie foreshadowing. My husband asked what time to set the alarm for so he could take me to the airport. He thought my flight was at 7:35 a.m., not 7:35 p.m. We laughed it off.
In retrospect, we probably should have gone with his plan. If I had gotten there 12 hours early, I might've made that flight. Instead, I did what most of us do. I planned carefully.
Before leaving, I asked my 17-year-old to check TSA wait times. He said it was 45 minutes. I smiled, thinking that sounded too good to be true. From experience, a posted 45-minute wait usually means closer to two hours. I accounted for that.
What I didn't account for was five.
The TSA line wrapped around baggage carousels
By the time I reached Hartsfield-Jackson Airport on Sunday afternoon, the line was too long to be just 45 minutes. It wrapped around baggage carousels and thickened into a dense, slow maze past carousel nine.
I tried to be patient, but none of us was going anywhere. I kept checking the time on my Fitbit, then on my phone, as if one might offer a different reality. I was trying to make sense of what I couldn't control.
That's when something shifted. I couldn't move the line, but I could choose how I met the moment — whether I spiraled into frustration or grounded myself in what I could still impact.
While still in line, I pulled up the Delta app to rebook. Every flight to Las Vegas on Sunday night was sold out. At the same time, I started texting with Delta customer service. They advised me to go to the baggage help area and request that my luggage be removed from the plane.
They submitted the request. I waited, hoping there was still time. Then the status on my FlyDelta app changed to "On board."
I never made it to the gate, but my bag did. While I was returning home, my bag was in Vegas, living its best life without me.
This wasn't just any trip; it was a room I needed to be in
For someone building a new coaching business, the kind of access I would have gotten at the conference is essential.
Transform is a conference focused on the future of work. This year's theme, centered on the Human + AI equation, brings together founders, investors, and leaders to explore how organizations are evolving in real time.
Through curated meetings, hands-on sessions, and structured networking like FastPass, conference attendees are matched with the right people rather than the casual introductions many conferences offer. That was the part I was most excited about.
I had four pre-planned meetings scheduled. Those were conversations that could have turned into partnerships, clients, or long-term collaborations.
I also invested time and resources into being there. While my conference ticket was covered through a volunteer role and I now have a flight credit with Delta, I am still working through hotel charges and other trip expenses I never completed. I rescheduled existing clients to make space for the trip, which means a delay in guaranteed revenue.
More than that, I can't stop thinking about the potential revenue and relationships that could've come from simply being in the room. As an entrepreneur, those moments matter. They are often where momentum begins.
These TSA delays are affecting all of us in different ways
What I experienced isn't unique. Long security delays are causing people to miss flights and opportunities that may never come back. Those impacts show up in the quiet ways our lives are rerouted: a room we never enter, a conversation that doesn't happen, or a deal that doesn't get made.
We call delays inconveniences, but sometimes they cost access. And in business, access is everything.
Behind every long line is a real cost: time lost, plans disrupted, or opportunities missed. We don't always see those costs. But we feel them.
José, the new humanoid robot at San Josè Mineta International Airport.
San Josè Mineta International Airport
San José airport starts testing an AI robot called José to assist travelers.
The pilot test launched on Tuesday amid travel chaos at many US airports.
Some TSA workers have stopped coming into work due to a government shutdown.
One of Silicon Valley's main airports just made its newest hire, a robot named "José."
San José Mineta International Airport is turning to artificial intelligence to ease the strain of modern air travel, debuting "José," a humanoid robot, as some US airports grapple with staffing shortages and widespread delays.
Developed by Silicon Valley startup IntBot, José is designed to greet passengers, answer questions, and provide real-time updates while autonomously navigating busy terminals.
The robot will be stationed in SJC'sTerminal B as part of a four-month pilot, "singlehandedly running his own gate," according to an email previewing the test that referred to José as the airport's "newest hire."
Airport officials said the launch highlights San José's roleas a testing ground for emerging technologies to improve customer service.
"By piloting IntBot, we're exploring how artificial intelligence can enhance the passenger journey while reinforcing SJC's role as the gateway to Silicon Valley," said SJC Director of Aviation Mookie Patel.
The timing is notable. Airports across the US have been hit by long security lines and travel chaos, driven in part by many Transportation Security Administration workers not reporting to work during a partial government shutdown. With TSA agents going unpaid at the height of the spring break season, some airports have struggled to maintain normal operations.
José the robot represents a broader push to automate parts of the airport experience, from passenger assistance to information delivery.
SJC officials said the pilot will help evaluate how multimodal AI, combining vision, audio, and language, performs in real-world environments.
The future of air travel may include a robotic helping hand — and it can't come fast enough for weary vacationers stuck in long lines.
Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, and Allegiant have issued advisories giving travelers more flexibility during the ongoing travel chaos. Most airlines eliminated most change fees after the COVID pandemic, but many still charge them for changes to basic fares.
Due to a partial government shutdown, TSA agents have been working without pay since February 14. As a result, more of them have been calling out of work.
The shutdown persists as Republicans and Democrats are at loggerheads over funding for the DHS. Republicans want to allocate billions more to ICE, but Democrats want it to be reformed in the wake of January's violence in Minnesota.
Here are the airlines that are offering waivers:
Delta Air Lines
In a travel advisory, Delta said that travel from its main hub, Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International, "may be affected" by longer security wait times. The airport is advising passengers to allow at least 4 hours for domestic and international screenings.
Delta customers flying from Atlanta on Monday or Tuesday can rebook to travel on or before March 30, and the fare difference will be waived.
Within a year of the ticket being issued, passengers could rebook without a change fee but would still need to pay the fare difference. Or, they could apply any unused value of the ticket toward the purchase of a new one.
A Delta spokesperson said this only applies for people on flights originating from Atlanta, not connecting through the hub.
United Airlines
United issued an alert for Houston's George Bush Intercontinental Airport, saying travel "may be affected."
Tickets purchased on or before Sunday, for travel on Monday or Tuesday, can be rescheduled for a United flight until March 31. "Tickets must be in the same cabin and between the same cities as originally booked."
The airline didn't immediately respond to a request for comment on whether this was directly related to TSA staffing shortages. A banner on the airport's website on Tuesday said security wait times could exceed 4 hours.
Allegiant Air
Allegiant announced a "travel with confidence" policy that allows customers with new and existing tickets through the end of the partial government shutdown to change or cancel their flights at no extra charge.
This includes "no change fees for eligible bookings" and the "option to cancel and receive a refund without penalty."
JetBlue
"With the exception of Blue Basic, all JetBlue fares are flexible — meaning no change or cancellation fees for customers who want to adjust their travel plans ahead of time," an airline spokesperson told Business Insider.
Customers who miss their flight due to long security lines will be rebooked on the next available flight, they added.
JetBlue advises customers to arrive earlier than normal, and said that it's working closely with TSA and continues to monitor the situation.
Southwest
Southwest said it is rebooking passengers who miss their flights due to long TSA lines at no cost.
The airline added that customers are also being offered change waivers and that it's "accepting checked bags well in advance of scheduled flights."
It's hitting a workforce that often lives paycheck to paycheck on middle-class salaries and is turning to food banks and community donations to get by.
More than 300 Transportation Security Administration officers (TSOs) have left the agency since mid-February, compounding staffing shortages that have created hourslong lines at airports like Orlando, Houston Hobby, and Philadelphia.
"We know these are not highly paid jobs, and we know that from the last government shutdown that it's difficult for TSA agents to work on a sustained basis without getting any income," Henry Harteveldt, a travel analyst and the president of Atmosphere Research Group, told Business Insider. "The need to find supplementary jobs that will provide some type of income is completely understandable."
These screening officers receive modest pay but collectively have ensured that the US air travel system remains one of the world's safest and busiest in the quarter century since the 9/11 plane hijackings.
Most of the roughly 50,000 agents who interact with passengers daily start around $40,000 annually. They average "anywhere from $60,000 to $75,000" as they gain experience, a Department of Homeland Security spokesperson told Business Insider.
TSOs living in more expensive cities, including Chicago, Houston, and San Francisco, receive a locality-based pay boost that can put them into at least the high five figures before any bonus opportunities.
Beyond frontline officers, senior officials — like regional directors who oversee multiple airports and managers at TSA headquarters who typically don't screen bags — can make six figures.
However, all of that pay is now on hold until Congress reaches a deal to fund DHS, whose funding lapsed on February 14 amid an impasse over the Trump Administration's immigration crackdown. TSOs received their first $0 paycheck in mid-March.
HOUSTON, TEXAS - MARCH 8: Airline passengers wait in long lines to get through the TSA security screening at William P. Hobby Airport in Houston, Sunday, March 8, 2026. The line stretched from the security checkpoint into the lower level baggage claim area to the lower level parking garage.
Brett Coomer/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images
How TSO pay works
According to TSA Careers — a non-government website that the agency directed Business Insider to for information — TSO pay is organized into pay bands D through L, roughly corresponding to the federal government's GS-5 to GS-15 scale for civil servants.
Each band is divided into 10 "steps" that reflect time in service and incremental pay increases, with employees able to reach Step 10 within their given grade in about 3 years. TSOs are promoted to higher pay bands based on seniority and performance and can earn more by working overtime, nights, and Sundays.
At the bottom, brand-new TSOs, classified as Band D (roughly GS-5 equivalent) at Step 1, earn about $35,000 a year before locality or bonus pay, per the table. Most US cities receive an additional 16.8% locality adjustment in 2026, putting the lowest earners at an annual salary of around $40,000.
That works out to roughly $19 per hour for a standard 40-hour workweek — two and a half times the federal minimum wage of $7.25 and greater than any state minimum wage.
According to the global statistics website World Population Review, $40,000 still falls below the cost of living for a single adult with no children in most states; median wages for full-time workers in the US are about $63,000 a year, per Bureau of Labor Statistics data.
Climbing the pay ladder — and living in more expensive cities — leads to higher wages for security screeners. At the top of the D band, for example, a Step 10 TSO in an airport with standard locality pay would earn about $52,300 annually, or about $25 per hour.
The table below shows the full range of what TSOs make across pay bands and steps before locality adjustments.
TSOs in about 50 higher-cost-of-living cities receive additional locality pay, with the largest being in San Francisco, where agents earn 46.3% on top of their base salary.
That would put a Band D Step 1 TSO new hire at about $50,500 a year in the Bay Area, after locality pay but before any extra income. Their Band D base salary caps out at about $65,600; Band E caps out at about $81,000.
A handful of other locations — including Seattle, Boston, Houston, Chicago, New York City, Los Angeles, San Diego, Hartford, Connecticut, Washington, DC, and Alaska — receive locality boosts of at least 30%.
For example, TSOs at the top of the E band in DC, with a 33.9% locality, make about $74,000 annually. New York TSOs with a 38% locality in the same band earn between roughly $59,000 and $76,500.
TSA agents can earn more by working overtime, nights, and Sundays.
ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP
TSOs earn more by climbing the leadership ladder
Experienced TSOs with years on the job and strong performance can advance into higher pay bands associated with management, analytical, and supervisory positions.
For example, moving into the F band — which includes roles like Lead TSO or Security Training Instructor — would place that agent in a salary range of roughly $61,000 to $79,000.
Program analysts, who work behind the scenes to optimize TSA efficiency through strategic planning and coordination, can fall into the G band. In a standard locality, they make between roughly $74,000 and $96,000. Cities like Houston or Hartford would push into the six figures.
The highest earners include top TSA leadership, like Federal Security Directors (FSDs), who oversee operations at their assigned airports and can earn about $162,600 in base pay at the top of the K and L bands.
Locality pay puts this even higher. A Step 1 FSD in San Francisco would make about $183,000 a year, rising to roughly $238,000 at Step 10, per the table. In Los Angeles, the base salary would range from about $170,000 to $222,000.
Passengers wait in a check-in line at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.
REUTERS/Kylie Cooper/File Photo
Delays persist at TSA checkpoints across US airports due to the partial government shutdown.
As of Monday morning, Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Airport is advising travelers to show up 4 hours early.
Here's the latest on TSA delays, and how to check wait times before you travel.
If you're flying in the US, get ready to stand in line.
Airports across the US are continuing to see lengthy waits at security checkpoints as scores of TSA workers call out due to missed paychecks.
A partial government shutdown has left the Department of Homeland Security and its Transportation Security Administration unfunded and their agents unpaid at the height of the spring break travel season.
As many as 10% of all TSA agents called out on several days last week, DHS updates showed, with absence rates averaging as much as 20% in some airports. A DHS spokesperson told Business Insider that some airports, such as William P. Hobby Airport in Houston, had seen absence rates as high at 40.8%.
Security lines in affected airports are spiking unpredictably from day to day, and sometimes even from hour to hour.
"The current unpredictability is being driven by unpredictable staffing levels, basically, how many TSA officers are showing up for work on any given day," Sheldon H. Jacobson, the founder professor of engineering at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and an expert on aviation security and airport security screening, told Business Insider.
"TSA officers have historically been cross-trained to do many different tasks, so the number that show up is the key factor," Jacobson said.
How long are the TSA delays?
Delays at TSA checkpoints across the US have been unpredictable, and some airports are changing how they're communicating with travelers.
As of Monday morning, Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, the world's busiest by passenger numbers, now displays the following message on its website: "Due to current federal conditions, passengers are advised to allow at least 4 hours or more for domestic and international screenings."
Atlanta has been among the worst-affected airports since the shutdown began, with over a third of TSA staff not showing up on some days.
The airport said there had been congestion at the international checkpoint as domestic travelers try to bypass long lines in the domestic terminal. The airport said domestic travelers should use the domestic checkpoints.
Passengers faced lengthy lines at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport on Thursday, March 19.
Taylor Rains/Business Insider
At Houston's George Bush Intercontinental Airport, lines stretched over three hours on Sunday evening. As of Monday morning, the average wait time is 28 minutes.
Lines at checkpoints at JFK, the New York area's biggest airport, are running at 45 minutes on Monday.
JFK said it has "deployed additional customer care staff into terminals to help manage queues, assist passengers, and keep people moving as efficiently as possible."
As of Monday, Newark Liberty International Airport displays a message on its website that says security wait times may be "significantly longer than normal."
"Please allow for significantly more time and check with your airline for the current status of your flight," the message says.
Separate from TSA issues, LaGuardia Airport was closed early Monday after a plane collided with a vehicle. It will remain closed until at least 2 p.m. ET.
Denver, home of the fourth-busiest airport in the US, is experiencing wait times of 45 minutes on Monday. Dallas-Fort Worth lines are at 46 minutes.
At Los Angeles International Airport, the nation's fifth-busiest travel hub, waits were listed as "0" minutes.
Some airports have so far avoided the hourslong lines. Business Insider's Taylor Rains flew out of Las Vegas last week and saw minimal TSA lines.
The general and TSA PreCheck lines at Las Vegas airport were empty on Monday night.
Taylor Rains/Business Insider
The maximum wait time at Philadelphia International Airport was listed as 30 minutes on Monday, although some terminals were quicker.
How to check TSA wait times
The unpredictable delays mean travelers should plan for long waits even if their airport hasn't yet experienced problems.
The easiest way to avoid the stress of missing your flight is to give yourself extra time in the airport. Many airports are advising travelers this week to arrive up to three hours before their flight, even for domestic flights.
Many airports, including major hubs like Atlanta, Houston, JFK, Newark, Philadelphia, Dallas-Fort Worth, and Denver, have been posting TSA wait times live on their websites.
Flying this month? Budget extra time at the airport and consider investing in expedited security lanes.
Brett Coomer/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images
These can also provide more specific insights. For example, DFW's website shows the wait times at each checkpoint.
You can also use the MyTSA mobile app. It provides estimated wait times in 15-minute intervals based on average checkpoint data. The app, however, will use historical data if the live data cannot be retrieved. The TSA also says it is not "actively" managing its sites during the partial shutdown, and so the app may not always be updated.
"As we get into next week and they're about to miss another payment, this is going to look like child's play, what's happening right now," Duffy said on CNBC.
Some airports could be forced to close, both Duffy and Adam Stahl, the TSA's acting deputy administrator, said.
Airports like Denver and Seattle have asked the public for food, gift cards, and basic supplies to support TSA staff working without pay.
John Flynn helping unload meals for TSA agents in Las Vegas.
MGM Resorts International
Some Las Vegas casinos are donating food and care items to local TSA agents working without pay.
An MGM Resorts International executive said its critical TSA staff work to keep tourists flowing.
Las Vegas has already seen a decline in visitors and revenue amid economic uncertainty.
As a government shutdown snarls air travel and stretches security lines, Las Vegas's biggest industry is stepping in to show its support for unpaid TSA agents.
MGM Resorts International — the largest casino company on the Las Vegas Strip with a large portfolio of hotels, including the Bellagio, MGM Grand, and Excalibur — sent meals and care packages to its local TSA agents who have been working without pay for five weeks.
MGM Senior Vice President of Global Security and Aviation John Flynn said the company has so far delivered 1,400 lunches to Harry Reid International Airport, with more planned in the next week. There are more than 1,000 TSA employees at LAS.
An MGM spokesperson said company employees volunteered to help bag hygiene products for TSA agents.
MGM Resorts International
Flynn said it's critical that TSA agents are supported so they continue to show up for work to keep Las Vegas' travel industry moving. If travelers worry about long security lines getting home, they may think twice about booking a trip in the first place — potentially leaving hotel rooms empty and casino floors quieter.
"We're a city built on hospitality; we depend on travel and tourism," Flynn said in a recorded message shared with Business Insider. "To be able to keep the lines low and to be able to keep that tourism engine thriving, it all happens here at the airport. Without [TSA agents], we wouldn't have a seamless experience for our guests."
It appears the donations are helping. I flew through Las Vegas on Monday around 8 p.m. and saw virtually no line in either the general or TSA PreCheck queue. I also cleared PreCheck in less than 2 minutes.
The general and TSA PreCheck lines at Las Vegas airport were empty on Monday night.
Taylor Rains/Business Insider
Luke Nimmo, a Las Vegas airport spokesperson, told Business Insider that donations from MGM and community members "make a difference," and that wait times have been normal since the shutdown began over a month ago.
This is in stark contrast to some cities across the US, where lines have snaked around buildings and into parking garages for up to 3 hours. Airlines have had to delay flights to accommodate the lines; some passengers waited so long that they missed their plane altogether.
The chaos has popped up at seemingly random airports; it's unclear why, though spring break travel has exacerbated the problems at some of them. Hot spots like Houston Hobby, New York-JFK, and New Orleans airports have seen the worst waits.
Nimmo said Las Vegas also saw short lines during last year's shutdown thanks to "generous donations." Among them was MGM, which sent 700 meals and personal items like soap and mouthwash to TSA agents in November 2025.
Las Vegas airport has opened a "food and essentials" pantry stocked with non-perishable snacks, ingredients, toiletries, and baby and paper products for TSA and customs agents affected by the shutdown.
But Nimmo said inventory is low and has asked the community for more donations. Stocking non-food products helps agents save money on other basic necessities.
Las Vegas airport has a food pantry for employees but a spokesperson said its low on stock.
Harry Reid International Airport
TSA agents received their first $0 paycheck over the weekend and won't be paid until Congress reaches a deal to fund the Department of Homeland Security. DHS funding lapsed on February 14 amid a political fight over the Trump administration's immigration tactics.
It's unclear if any other casino companies have participated in TSA donations. The Wynn Las Vegas declined to comment; Caesars Entertainment did not immediately respond.
The timing of the shutdown and its subsequent chaos is especially sensitive for a tourism-driven city already navigating economic uncertainty and shifting travel demand.
Gaming revenue is up, but restaurants, retailers, and bars are suffering from declining visitor numbers. The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority says the area saw a 7.5% decline in tourists — roughly 3 million people — in 2025, the city's largest drop outside the pandemic.
Analysts attribute the decline in part to budget-conscious travelers feeling the pinch amid inflation and the city's growing nickel-and-dime fees and surcharges. The city is also hosting fewer Canadians who have canceled their travel plans due to political tensions with the US.
Several airports are asking for TSA donations
Airports across the US have called on the community to help TSA agents working without pay. Denver International Airport and Seattle-Tacoma International Airport have set up donation boxes for gift cards and household essentials.
Many smaller airports like John Glenn Columbus International Airport in Columbus, Ohio, Eastern Iowa Airport in Cedar Rapids, and North Central West Virginia Airport near Clarksburg have similarly posted on social media asking for donations.
Denver and Columbus airports suggested gift cards for gas and grocery stores, but asked that they be no more than $20 and specified that they cannot accept Visa gift cards.
The gestures of goodwill are reminiscent of when airline pilots, flight attendants, and their respective unions sent pizza and other goodies to air traffic controllers working without pay during the 43-day-long shutdown in October and November last year.
This shutdown has not affected the pay of air traffic controllers, who work for the Federal Aviation Administration under the Department of Transportation, which is funded and open.
A long but largely ignored partial government shutdown
You may not have realized it, but the US has been in a partial government shutdown since February 14. It's already the third-longest shutdown in American history.
A "shutdown" occurs when lawmakers in Washington fail to pass a bill to fund a portion of the government. The longest-ever shutdown occurred in the fall and lasted 43 days.
But this one's different because every department has been funded for the rest of the fiscal year, except one: the Department of Homeland Security.
That department oversees several agencies, including not just TSA, but also the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the Coast Guard, and — most significantly — Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP).
It all goes back to Minneapolis
Just a couple of months ago, none of this seemed like it would happen. Then, Alex Pretti was shot by border patrol officers in Minneapolis on January 24.
Pretti's death, along with the fatal shooting of Renée Good two weeks earlier, led to outrage among Democrats on Capitol Hill, who demanded reforms to both CBP and ICE before they would agree to fund the agencies any further.
While Republicans have a majority in both chambers, the Senate's 60-vote "filibuster" rule means that Democratic votes are needed to pass major funding legislation, given that there are just 53 GOP senators.
The Pretti shooting happened just before a package of government funding bills, including the bill to fund DHS, was set to come up for a vote.
Lawmakers in both parties ultimately agreed to strip DHS funding from the package and pass the rest, and there was only a brief shutdown at the end of January, largely due to timing.
That kicked off negotiations between Democrats and Republicans over DHS funding, which have largely stalled in recent weeks.
Where things stand right now
TSA lines at William P. Hobby Airport in Houston.
Courtesy of Houston Airports
Democrats have laid out a series of demands for ICE and CBP, including ending roving patrols and tightening arrest warrant rules, increasing accountability measures for ICE, including independent investigations, and adding body cameras and removing masks from ICE officers.
Republicans have publicly rejected many of those points, and while the two sides have exchanged proposals, negotiations have largely stalled.
In the meantime, Democrats in both the House and the Senate have begun to press for bills that would fund DHS except for ICE and CBP.
In a letter to colleagues sent on Monday, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries announced that Democrats would try to force a vote on a bill to do just that in the coming weeks.
Meanwhile, Senate Democrats have tried to pass similar legislation, but have also been blocked.
Republicans have largely objected to these efforts out of concern that, should those bills pass, Democrats will have little incentive to continue negotiating on ICE and CBP, potentially leaving those agencies without funding in the long term.
Travelers across the US faced longer than usual security lines this week.
Peter Zay/Anadolu via Getty Images
Airport security checkpoints in the US are under pressure due to the partial government shutdown.
Many now-unpaid TSA agents are skipping work or even quitting, causing long lines and wait times.
Here's the latest on TSA delays, and how to check wait times before you travel.
If there's anything that can bring Americans together to demand government action, it's long lines at airport security.
Those lines persisted at airports across the US this week as a partial government shutdown left the Department of Homeland Security and its Transportation Security Administration unfunded and their agents unpaid at the height of the spring break travel season.
Airports are now telling passengers to arrive up to three hours early to clear security in time for their flights.
The TSA on Sunday called on Congress to resolve the impasse over the immigration enforcement policies that have left the DHS unfunded for a month. The agency said hundreds of unpaid agents have quit.
"3+ hour TSA lines for travelers. 300+ TSA officers who have quit. A $0 paycheck for those continuing to serve. Enough is enough," the agency said in an X post on Saturday.
A group of airline CEOs also sent a letter to Congress on Saturday calling on Republicans and Democrats to figure it out. "Americans —who live in your districts and home states — are tired of long lines at airports, travel delays, and flight cancellations caused by shutdown after shutdown," the letter, which was signed by the CEOs of Delta, United, American, JetBlue, and others, says.
By early Tuesday morning, lengthy lines were still present at several airports, though they had calmed at some locations that had seen long lines over the weekend.
Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, the world's busiest by passenger numbers, had lines as long as 90 minutes at some domestic security checkpoints early on Tuesday morning, having seen waits of up to 2 hours over the weekend.
In a Monday X post, the airport encouraged travelers to allow extra time for screening and to arrive at least 3 hours before their flight. Many flights also faced lengthy delays or cancellations due to a major storm.
Please continue to monitor our official social channels for any additional information. Safe travels. ✈️ pic.twitter.com/OeVL0rMoOP
Lines at some checkpoints in the New York area's two biggest airports, JFK and Newark, were both around 30 minutes long early Tuesday.
At Dallas-Fort Worth, waits varied by checkpoint, ranging from over 20 minutes to as short as 2 minutes.
Austin-Bergstrom International was one of the worst-affected airports over the weekend, due in part to an influx of travelers for the SXSW festival.
The airport's social media channels are posting frequent updates about how busy TSA lines are, showing long lines in the terminal building on Tuesday morning.
Here’s a live look at Checkpoint 1👇
Use this checkpoint for:
✔️General Screening ✔️Known Crew Member ✔️Priority/Premium Screening ✔️ADA Screening ✔️CLEAR for General Screening pic.twitter.com/qUsytBGnmB
— Austin-Bergstrom International Airport (@AustinAirport) March 17, 2026
While busy, Austin appeared to have calmed down compared to the end of last week and the weekend. Photos and videos shared by travelers over the weekend showed lines stretching from the terminal building into the parking lot.
To ensure passengers clear security in plenty of time, many airports are telling passengers to leave longer than usual to get through. Dallas-Fort Worth Airport told travelers to allow at least 2 hours for domestic flights, while Austin advised leaving 2.5 to 3 hours.
How to check wait times
Travelers wait in line at New York's LaGuardia airport.
Cadie Thompson/Business Insider
The easiest way to avoid the stress of missing your flight is to arrive as early as you can. Many airports are advising travelers this week to arrive up to three hours before their flight.
To check TSA wait times, many airports, including major hubs like Atlanta, Houston, JFK, Newark, Philadelphia, Dallas-Fort Worth, and Denver, post them live on their websites.
These can also provide more specific insights. For example, DFW's website shows the wait times at each checkpoint.
While broadly reliable, some airport websites aren't always accurate. On Monday, Atlanta Airport said the feature was "currently unavailable due to a technical issue," although it was later fixed.
You can also use the MyTSA mobile app. It provides estimated wait times in 15-minute intervals based on average checkpoint data. The app, however, will use historical data if the live data cannot be retrieved. The TSA also says it is not "actively" managing its sites during the partial shutdown, and so the app may not always be updated.