Yes, two adult renewals can go in one mailed package when each person’s packet is complete, signed, and paid, and both are eligible to renew by mail.
You’ve got two passports expiring, two forms on the table, and one simple question: do you need two separate mailings?
In most households, the goal is the same. Fewer trips to the post office, one tracking receipt, and less hassle. You can do that. The trick is packaging it like two separate renewals that just happen to ride in the same outer envelope.
This walkthrough shows the safest way to bundle two renewal-by-mail applications so nothing gets mixed up, delayed, or kicked back for a small detail.
Mailing Two Passport Renewals Together Without Mix-Ups
You can mail two renewal applications together as long as each one stands on its own. Think “two complete packets,” not “one big pile of paperwork.” The processing center needs to match each form to the correct passport, photo, and payment.
If you package it cleanly, it’s straightforward. If you toss everything loose in one envelope, it’s easy for photos, checks, or old passports to slide apart. That’s where delays start.
Start With This Eligibility Check
Bundling only works when both people are eligible to renew by mail. If one person isn’t eligible, you’re dealing with two different processes, two different forms, and often an in-person visit for the non-eligible applicant.
For a mail renewal, the State Department’s baseline expectations include a recent passport that can be submitted, not reported lost or stolen, issued within the last 15 years, issued at age 16 or older, and issued in the current name (or the applicant has certified name-change paperwork). Those are the kinds of conditions that decide if DS-82 fits. (These criteria are summarized on the State Department renewal page and mirrored in DS-82 instructions.)
When Bundling Makes Sense
Bundling is handy when both applications are routine service, or both are expedited, and both are going to the same mailing address. It’s also nice when you want one trackable mailing record for your files.
Bundling is still fine when the two applicants choose different products (book vs. card), as long as each person’s packet is complete.
When To Separate Them
Use separate mailings when the two applications must go to different addresses. That can happen when one is expedited and the other is routine, or when one applicant lives in a state group that uses a different routine-service P.O. box than the other applicant. DS-82 instructions list different mailing addresses based on location and service speed.
Split them when one packet has extra moving parts, like a name change document, and you want extra control over where originals sit in the envelope. You can still bundle, but a separate mailing can feel calmer when one packet includes irreplaceable originals.
Build Two “Self-Contained” Renewal Packets
Before you even touch an outer envelope, build each person’s renewal as its own stack. Keep each stack clipped together so nothing drifts.
Packet A And Packet B
Label them in pencil on a sticky note (not on the form itself). “Packet A: Alex” and “Packet B: Jordan” works. The goal is simple: you should be able to pick up one packet and see every piece that belongs to that applicant.
What Each Packet Needs
- Printed DS-82 pages (signed and dated where required)
- One passport photo that meets State Department rules (attached as the DS-82 instructs)
- The applicant’s most recent passport book and/or card that they are renewing
- Any required supporting documents, like certified proof of a legal name change (only if needed)
- Payment in an accepted form (personal check or money order, payable to the U.S. Department of State, no cash)
Payment Details That Keep Things Moving
The State Department’s renewal-by-mail page says to pay by personal check or money order, payable to the U.S. Department of State, and not to send cash. It also instructs applicants to write the applicant’s full name and date of birth on the front of the check or money order.
For two renewals, the cleanest approach is one payment per person, clearly marked with that person’s name and date of birth. That keeps accounting tied to the right application even if packets get separated inside the mailroom.
Packaging Rules That Reduce Risk
Here’s the practical setup that tends to work best: put each person’s packet into its own inner envelope, then put both inner envelopes into one trackable outer envelope. It’s a simple way to keep two applications from blending together.
Inner Envelope Setup
Use two plain letter-sized envelopes. On the front, write the applicant’s last name and “DS-82 renewal” in the top-left corner. Don’t write passport numbers or any sensitive data on the outside.
Inside each inner envelope, keep documents flat. Don’t fold photos. Don’t bend the old passport. If the packet feels bulky, use a larger flat mailer as the outer envelope so nothing gets crimped.
Outer Envelope Setup
Use a sturdy outer envelope or flat mailer. Add both inner envelopes. Seal it well.
Pick a trackable service. DS-82 instructions say the Department recommends using a trackable mailing service when submitting your application. That’s the single best “sleep at night” move you can make when you’re mailing original passports.
Common Mix-Ups That Trigger Delays
Most renewal delays come from tiny issues, not big ones. When you’re bundling two renewals, the tiny issues double. Do a quick check for these before you seal the outer mailer.
Photo Problems
Two common hiccups: the photo isn’t attached the way the form requests, or it doesn’t match current photo rules. The State Department’s renewal page points applicants to the passport photo requirements page and reminds applicants to staple the photo to the application as instructed.
Signatures And Printing
DS-82 packets should be complete and signed. The renewal page also notes that printed forms must be single-sided; double-sided printouts can be rejected. Check both packets before they go into inner envelopes.
Wrong Mailing Address
DS-82 instructions list different P.O. boxes for routine service based on where you live, plus a separate address for expedited service. If the two applicants live at the same address, you’ll use the same destination. If they live in different states, confirm the correct destination for the address each applicant is using on the form.
Checklist Table For Mailing Two Renewals In One Package
Use this table as a final “hands on paper” scan before sealing the outer envelope.
| Item To Verify | Packet A / Packet B | What To Look For |
|---|---|---|
| Correct form | Both | Each applicant uses DS-82 and meets renew-by-mail eligibility |
| Signature present | Both | Signed and dated where required, no blank signature blocks |
| Single-sided print | Both | Each page printed on one side only |
| Photo attached | Both | One 2×2 photo attached per DS-82 instructions, not loose in the envelope |
| Old passport included | Both | Most recent passport book/card placed in the correct packet |
| Name change proof | As needed | Certified legal document included only when the new name differs from the old passport |
| Payment method | Both | Personal check or money order, payable to U.S. Department of State, no cash |
| Payment labeling | Both | Applicant’s full name and date of birth written on the payment instrument |
| Correct mailing address | Both | Routine vs expedited address matches what each applicant chose |
| Tracking chosen | Outer envelope | Trackable service selected; tracking number saved in a notes app or email draft |
Where To Mail Two Renewals In One Envelope
Once both inner packets are complete, the outer envelope goes to one destination address. The right address depends on service speed and the applicant’s location. DS-82 instructions spell out the current P.O. box options and note that the Department recommends trackable mailing.
If you want to double-check the latest renewal steps, the State Department’s official page lays out the renewal-by-mail process and fee basics in one place. Use this link right before you mail so you’re working from the most current instructions: Renew Your Passport by Mail.
Routine vs Expedited When You’re Bundling
Bundling works best when both applicants choose the same service speed. If one person chooses expedited service and the other doesn’t, you can still mail them together only if you pick the mailing address that matches what you’re paying for and what you wrote on each packet’s payment.
When service speeds differ, many families split into two outer envelopes. It’s not required by a rule on the form, but it reduces the chance that one person’s packet gets handled under the wrong workflow after arrival.
Fees And Add-Ons That Change The Math
Fees depend on what each applicant is renewing (book, card, or both) and whether they add expedited service. The State Department’s passport fees page stays current with the official amounts and acceptable payment types: Passport Fees.
When you’re bundling two renewals, plan fees per person, then write each payment clearly. If one person adds expedited service or 1–2 day delivery for a book return, keep those add-ons tied to the right applicant’s payment.
Second Table: Best Bundling Setup By Scenario
This table is a fast way to match your situation to the safest mailing setup.
| Scenario | Best Outer Mailing Setup | Why This Setup Fits |
|---|---|---|
| Two adults, both routine | One outer envelope, two labeled inner envelopes | Keeps packets separate while sharing one tracking number |
| Two adults, both expedited | One outer envelope to the expedited address, two inner envelopes | Same workflow for both packets after delivery |
| One routine, one expedited | Two separate outer envelopes | Reduces sorting risk between routine and expedited handling |
| One applicant adds 1–2 day return delivery | Two inner envelopes with clearly labeled payments | Keeps add-on fees tied to the right applicant |
| One applicant includes a certified name-change document | One outer envelope, inner envelopes, name-change doc clipped inside that packet | Stops originals from drifting into the wrong packet |
| Applicants live at different addresses | Confirm mailing address rules; split if destinations differ | DS-82 address choice can vary by residence and service speed |
| One packet feels bulky (book + card + extra documents) | Flat mailer as the outer envelope | Prevents bending passports, photos, or certified papers |
A Step-By-Step Packing Routine You Can Follow In Ten Minutes
If you want a simple flow that keeps you from second-guessing, use this routine.
Step 1: Finish Each Form All The Way
Complete DS-82 for each person, then sign and date it. Print single-sided. Do a quick pass for typos in names, dates, and contact details.
Step 2: Attach Photos And Match Them To The Right Form
Attach each photo to its own application as the form directs. Then place the form face-up on that person’s stack so the photo can’t fall out and swap sides.
Step 3: Add The Old Passport To The Same Stack
Place each applicant’s current passport on top of their own application packet. This is the pairing that matters most. Don’t set passports aside “for later.” That’s how the wrong passport ends up with the wrong form.
Step 4: Write And Label Payments
Prepare a check or money order for each applicant. Write the applicant’s full name and date of birth on the front of each one, as the State Department renewal page instructs. Then clip each payment to the correct packet.
Step 5: Use Two Inner Envelopes
Slip each packet into its own inner envelope. Label the envelope with the applicant’s last name and “DS-82 renewal.” Keep labels simple.
Step 6: Choose One Outer Envelope And A Trackable Service
Put both inner envelopes into one sturdy outer envelope or flat mailer. Use a trackable mailing option and save the tracking number. Take a quick photo of the addressed outer envelope for your records.
After You Mail: What To Expect
Once the package is on the way, use the tracking number to confirm delivery. After the processing center receives the package, each applicant can track their status online through the State Department’s status tool (the DS-82 instructions mention tracking status online).
Expect separate mailings back. The State Department renewal page notes that your most recent passport may be returned in a separate mailing and can arrive later than the new passport.
Two Final Tips That Save Headaches
Use Clear Records
Save a photo of each completed application page, front and back of each payment instrument, and the tracking receipt. If something gets delayed, you’ll have the details ready without digging through a drawer.
Don’t Overstuff The Envelope
When a mailer gets bulky, it can crease forms, bend photos, or stress the passport book spine. A flat mailer costs a bit more than a thin envelope, yet it keeps everything straight and clean.
References & Sources
- U.S. Department of State.“Renew Your Passport by Mail.”Official renewal steps, accepted payment types, and key submission reminders for DS-82 renewals.
- U.S. Department of State.“Passport Fees.”Current official fee amounts and payment guidance for passport books, cards, and add-on services.
