Yes—Frontier lets you print a paper boarding pass, either from your own printer after online check-in or at the airport.
If you like having something you can hold, you’re not alone. A paper boarding pass can feel calmer than relying on one tiny barcode on a phone screen. It also helps when you’re traveling with a child, flying with an older relative, or heading out on a long day where your battery might not last.
The good news: Frontier doesn’t block paper passes. The part that trips people up is timing and where the print happens. Print at home and you’re set. Print at the airport and you may pay a service fee if you need an agent to do it.
What Printing A Frontier Boarding Pass Really Means
“Printing” can mean two different things:
- Home print: You check in online, pull up your boarding pass, then print the PDF (or the page) on a regular printer.
- Airport print: You print at a kiosk, or you ask an airport agent to print it as part of a paid service.
If your goal is to avoid extra lines and fees, home print is the smoothest path. If you can’t print ahead, a kiosk is usually the next best move. Agent printing is still available, yet it’s treated as a paid add-on at many Frontier counters.
Check-In Timing That Controls Your Print Options
Before you can print, you need to check in. Frontier’s site says check-in opens 24 hours before departure and lists a 60-minute cutoff for domestic flights, with the same cutoff shown for international flights on its check-in page. Frontier’s check-in timing and cutoff rules are the guardrails to plan around.
That timing matters for printing because the boarding pass usually appears only after check-in. If you wait until you’re in the rideshare on the way to the airport, you may still be fine. If you wait until you’re already in line, a small snag can turn into a scramble.
Best time window to print
A practical rhythm for most trips looks like this:
- Check in as soon as the 24-hour window opens.
- Save a copy of the boarding pass on your device.
- Print the pass, or print one backup copy if you’re traveling with a group.
This routine keeps you clear of last-minute password resets, weak Wi-Fi, browser quirks, and printers that run out of ink at the worst time.
How To Print Your Frontier Boarding Pass At Home
You can print from a computer, tablet, or phone. The goal is the same: get a clean barcode that scanners can read fast.
Printing from a computer
- Go to Frontier’s website and open your trip using your last name and confirmation code.
- Complete online check-in when it becomes available.
- Open the boarding pass page or PDF.
- Choose print and pick a standard paper size (Letter in the U.S.).
- Print in black-and-white or color. Either one scans fine when the barcode is crisp.
Printing from a phone or tablet
- Check in in the Frontier app or on the mobile site.
- Open the boarding pass so the barcode is fully visible.
- Use the share option to email it to yourself or save it as a file, then print from a connected printer app.
- If you’re printing from the screen, avoid cropping the barcode. Leave some white space around it.
Print quality tips that prevent scan failures
- Don’t scale the page to “fit” if it shrinks the barcode too much. Keep it close to 100% size when you can.
- Use plain white paper. Glossy paper can glare under some scanner lights.
- If the barcode looks fuzzy, print again with higher quality settings.
- Keep the page flat. A tight fold right through the barcode can slow scanning.
A clean print saves time at security and at the gate. It also keeps your group moving when one person’s phone goes into low-battery mode.
Can I Print My Frontier Boarding Pass? Airport Options
If home printing isn’t an option, you still have choices once you arrive.
Option 1: Self-service kiosk
At many airports, Frontier kiosks let you pull up your booking and print your boarding pass. This is often the simplest airport option since you control the steps. It also helps if you want a paper copy even after you’ve checked in on your phone.
Option 2: Airport agent printing
Frontier’s own FAQ states that printed boarding passes are available at the airport through Airport Agent Assistance for a fee of $25 per passenger, per direction. Frontier’s printed boarding pass FAQ spells out that fee and points travelers to digital options too.
Prices and exemptions can vary by situation, so check what applies to your booking before you arrive. If you know you’ll need agent help, building that cost into your plan avoids a surprise at the counter.
One more thing: even if you plan to use a kiosk, arrive with enough time. A kiosk line can move fast, then slow down when a single machine needs attention.
When A Paper Pass Is Still The Right Move
Mobile boarding passes work well when everything goes smoothly. Paper can still be the safer pick in a few common cases.
- No smartphone: Some travelers prefer a simple printout and skip app setup.
- Low battery risk: Early flights plus long layovers can drain a phone.
- Multiple travelers: One printed set makes it easier to keep track of everyone’s boarding group and seat.
- Spotty service: Some terminals have dead zones where a pass won’t load at the moment you need it.
- Backup mindset: If you’re carrying bags, wrangling kids, or traveling for a wedding, a paper copy reduces screen time.
You don’t have to pick one or the other. Many travelers keep a mobile pass ready and carry a printed copy as a safety net.
Ways To Get Your Boarding Pass And What Each One Costs
The quickest way to avoid a fee is to rely on self-service. The table below shows the common paths Frontier travelers use, along with what to expect.
| Boarding Pass Option | Best Fit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Print at home after online check-in | Anyone who wants paper | Usually free; depends on your own printer |
| Mobile pass in the Frontier app | Carry-on travelers | Skip printing; keep screen brightness up at the scanner |
| Mobile pass on the website | Travelers who don’t want the app | Save a screenshot only after the barcode loads cleanly |
| Email or download a PDF, then print | Families and groups | Easy to share across devices before you leave home |
| Airport kiosk print | No printer at home | Availability varies by airport; arrive early for lines |
| Airport agent prints your pass | Travelers who want in-person help | Frontier lists Airport Agent Assistance at $25 per passenger per direction |
| Printed copy from a travel companion | Older relatives on your booking | One person checks in, then prints copies for the group |
| Carry a second paper backup | Trips with tight timing | Keep it separate from your main pass in case one gets lost |
Small Details That Can Block Printing
Most “can’t print” moments come from one of a few snags. Fixing them is usually simple once you know where to look.
You’re not checked in yet
If the pass isn’t showing, confirm check-in is complete. Sometimes the site shows the itinerary but hasn’t finished the last step that generates the barcode.
Your browser is fighting the boarding pass page
Pop-up blockers, strict privacy settings, or an older browser can stop the pass from opening. Try a different browser, switch devices, or use a private window. If the PDF opens, save it first and print from the saved file.
Your name or trip details don’t match
Check your confirmation code and spelling. One swapped letter can keep the system from pulling the right trip. If you booked through a third party, verify you have Frontier’s record locator for check-in.
You have a special check-in requirement
Some trips need an in-person document check. International travel, certain ID checks, and some special service needs can push you to an airport counter even when online check-in is open. When that happens, plan for extra time and use the kiosk first if it supports your trip details.
Printing When You’re Traveling With Someone Else’s Booking
It’s common to handle check-in for a parent, a teen, or a friend who’s busy. You can usually do that as long as you have the last name and confirmation code. After you check in, print a copy for them and give it to them before you leave for the airport.
If you’re sharing one printed set for a group, keep the papers in order. Stapling can damage barcodes, so use a small folder or an envelope instead. A simple trick: write the traveler’s first name in the top corner with a pen, away from the barcode area.
What To Do If Your Printed Pass Won’t Scan
Scan problems are rare, yet they do happen. When they do, stay calm and switch to a backup fast.
- Try the same barcode again: Hold the paper steady and flat. Move it closer or farther from the reader.
- Use your mobile backup: Pull up the pass in the app or on the site if you have it saved.
- Reprint at a kiosk: If you’re near one, a fresh print can fix a smudged barcode.
- Ask for help early: If you spot a scan issue at security, fix it there instead of waiting until boarding starts.
If you’re flying with only a paper pass, carry it in a place where it won’t crumple. A back pocket can crease it right through the barcode.
Quick Fixes When Your Boarding Pass Won’t Load
This table is a fast checklist you can use before you decide you need agent help.
| Problem | Try This First | Switch To This Next |
|---|---|---|
| Boarding pass page is blank | Refresh and wait 30 seconds | Open the trip in another browser |
| PDF won’t open | Disable pop-up blocking for the site | Use the Frontier app to pull the pass |
| Barcode looks cut off | Zoom out and reload | Save the PDF, then print from the file |
| Printer smears the ink | Print in draft mode on plain paper | Print again at higher quality |
| No printer available | Email the pass to a friend with a printer | Use an airport kiosk when you arrive |
| App won’t sign in | Reset your password before leaving home | Use the website check-in on a browser |
| Trip won’t load by code | Recheck the confirmation code characters | Use the booking email to find the correct code |
| Scanner won’t read your paper pass | Flatten the paper and try again | Reprint at a kiosk, then try the new copy |
One Simple Plan For A Stress-Less Frontier Airport Arrival
If you want the smooth version of this trip, treat your boarding pass like a two-part backup: one digital, one paper.
- Check in right when the 24-hour window opens.
- Save the mobile boarding pass in the app or on the site.
- Print a paper copy at home, then pack it where it stays flat.
- At the airport, head to the bag drop or security with your pass ready.
- If anything feels off, use a kiosk while you still have time.
This setup keeps you out of long counter lines and helps you sidestep paid agent services unless you truly need them.
References & Sources
- Frontier Airlines.“Check-In.”Lists check-in opening time and cutoff times that affect when your boarding pass becomes available.
- Frontier Airlines.“Can I still get a printed boarding pass?”Confirms airport printed boarding passes are available through Airport Agent Assistance and states the per-passenger fee.
