You can replace an expired, lost, stolen, or damaged U.S. passport by renewing it or filing a fresh application, based on eligibility.
Passports don’t just “go bad.” They expire, get lost in a move, take a spin through the washer, or stop matching your legal name. When that happens, the fix is straightforward once you pick the right route.
This article shows when you can renew, when you must apply in person, what to gather before you start, and how to time everything so your passport arrives before your trip.
Getting A New Passport In The U.S.: Which Route Fits
In U.S. passport terms, “new” usually means one of two tracks:
- Renewal: You’re extending an eligible adult passport.
- New in-person application: You apply on the DS-11, even if you’ve held a passport before.
The fastest way to choose is to ask three questions: Was the passport issued when you were 16 or older? Do you still have it? Is it in good condition? If you can’t answer “yes” to all three, plan on the in-person route.
Situations That Trigger A Replacement
Most replacement requests fit these scenarios, each with its own rules.
Expired passport
Many expired adult passports can be renewed. Passports issued before age 16 can’t be renewed, even if they expired last week.
Lost or stolen passport
A valid passport that goes missing must be reported and replaced. Once it’s reported, it’s canceled and can’t be used for travel again.
Damaged passport
Normal wear is fine. A passport that’s soaked, torn, missing pages, or has a loose cover is treated as damaged and is replaced through an in-person application.
Name change
If your passport name doesn’t match your current legal name, you’ll submit a certified name-change document with your renewal or in-person application, based on eligibility.
Child passport expiring
Children’s passports (under 16) can’t be renewed. Each replacement is a fresh, in-person application with parent/guardian involvement.
What You Need Before You Start
Most delays come from missing pieces, not from hard cases. Gather your items first, then fill out the form.
Citizenship evidence
For in-person DS-11 applications, bring evidence such as a U.S. birth certificate, Consular Report of Birth Abroad, naturalization certificate, or a prior U.S. passport that meets acceptance rules. For renewals, your most recent passport is typically the core proof.
Photo that passes on the first try
Use a plain, light background and a recent photo. Skip heavy shadows and odd cropping. If you use a store photo counter, check the print before you leave.
ID and clean copies
For DS-11, you’ll show an acceptable ID and submit photocopies (front and back) on plain white paper. Cropped copies are a common rejection point.
Fees and payment
Fees depend on age and whether you want a book, card, or both. In-person applications also add an acceptance facility fee. Match your payment method to the submission route so it won’t be refused at the counter or in the mail.
How Renewal Works When You Qualify
If you meet the renewal rules, you avoid the acceptance-facility appointment. The State Department’s page lists current eligibility rules and submission options, including mail and online renewal where available. See Renew Your Passport for the official criteria and steps.
Renewal packet checklist
- Correct renewal form
- Most recent passport, when required
- One compliant photo
- Correct fees
- Certified name-change document, if your name changed
When renewal fails
Renewal won’t work if your passport is missing, damaged, or was issued when you were under 16. If you’re unsure, read the eligibility list first. It’s faster than mailing a packet that gets rejected.
When You Must Apply In Person
Use the DS-11 in person for first-time applicants, minors, adults who don’t qualify to renew, and anyone replacing a lost, stolen, or damaged passport.
What the appointment looks like
You bring your application, citizenship evidence, photo, ID, and copies to an acceptance facility (often a post office, clerk’s office, or library). Don’t sign the form at home. The agent must witness your signature.
Small details that save time
- Use a black-ink printout that’s easy to read.
- Bring both the originals and the copies.
- Make sure your name and date of birth match across documents, or bring the document that connects them.
Replacement Rules For Lost Or Stolen Passports
If a valid passport is missing, reporting it is part of the replacement process. You can report it online, by mail, or in person while applying for the replacement. The State Department’s instructions are on Report Your Passport Lost or Stolen.
What to do right away
- Search carefully first: bags, drawers, car, hotel safe, coat pockets.
- If it’s truly missing, report it promptly so it’s canceled.
- Start the DS-11 in-person application for the replacement.
If you find it later
A reported passport is no longer valid for travel. Keep it for your records, then use the replacement passport.
Table: Common “New Passport” Scenarios And The Right Path
Match your situation to the route that usually works.
| Situation | Best route | Notes that change the outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Adult passport expired, issued at age 16+ | Renewal (mail or online if eligible) | Works only if you have the passport and it’s in good condition |
| Adult passport expired, issued under age 16 | In-person DS-11 | Child passports can’t be renewed |
| First-time applicant age 16+ | In-person DS-11 | Bring citizenship evidence, photo, ID, and copies |
| Child under 16 needing a replacement | In-person DS-11 | Parent/guardian presence and consent rules apply |
| Lost or stolen valid passport | Report + in-person DS-11 | Reported passports are canceled and can’t be used again |
| Damaged passport (water, torn pages, loose cover) | In-person DS-11 | Bring the damaged passport; it may still serve as proof |
| Name change since passport was issued | Renewal or DS-11 | Depends on renewal eligibility and your certified document |
| Limited-validity passport | Often DS-11 or agency instructions | Follow the letter that came with the passport |
Choosing Processing Speed Without Guesswork
Your form can be perfect and you can still miss your trip if you start too late. Build your plan around two clocks: agency processing time and mailing time.
Routine
Routine service fits travelers who are renewing well ahead of a trip or applying for next season with plenty of room.
Expedited
Expedited service costs extra and is meant for tighter timelines. It’s a solid pick when your travel date is closer and you want fewer surprises.
Urgent travel appointments
If international travel is soon, an in-person agency appointment may be the right move. Appointments can be scarce, and you’ll need proof of travel, so start checking availability as soon as your timeline drops into that range.
Shipping choices
Faster return shipping can shave days off the end of the process. That’s separate from expedited service, which affects the agency processing clock.
How To Avoid Delays That Cost Weeks
Most delays trace back to a handful of mistakes. Run this list before you submit.
Photo issues
Glare, shadows, and the wrong crop are common rejects. If your photo looks odd, retake it before you mail anything.
Name mismatches
If your ID and citizenship proof don’t match, include the certified document that links them. Don’t send a photocopy if the instructions call for a certified copy.
Missing copies for DS-11
Bring the copies with you. Many facilities can’t copy on site, or the line is long and the copier is out of order.
Travel while your passport is in the mail
If you renew by mail, you may need to send your current passport. That means you won’t have it for ID use during that window. If you rely on it for domestic flights, line up another acceptable ID before you ship.
Table: Replacement Planning Checklist By Timeline
Pick the row that matches your travel date and follow the actions.
| Time until travel | Smart move | What to watch for |
|---|---|---|
| 6+ months | Routine renewal or DS-11 with routine service | Clean photo and clean copies prevent rework |
| 3–6 months | Expedited if you want more buffer | Mailing time can add days on each end |
| 6–12 weeks | Expedited plus faster return shipping | Wrong route choice can burn the whole window |
| Under 6 weeks | Check urgent travel appointment options | Proof of travel and limited appointment slots |
| Already abroad | Apply at a U.S. embassy or consulate | Bring any ID and citizenship documents you still have |
Special Cases Worth Checking Before You Apply
These cases aren’t rare, and the rules can add steps.
Minors under 16
Kids must apply in person every time. Both parents often need to appear, or one parent must provide the required consent documentation. If custody paperwork is involved, gather it before you schedule the appointment.
Limited-validity passports
If your passport was issued for a shorter validity period, the replacement steps can depend on why it was limited. Follow any letter that came with it and include it when asked.
Replacing a passport while abroad
Outside the U.S., you’ll replace your passport through an embassy or consulate. If you can, bring a passport photo and any backup ID you have. A local police report can be useful for your records if theft is involved.
Can I Get A New Passport If Mine Is Expiring Soon?
Yes. Replacing it early is normal. Many countries want at least six months of validity past your arrival date, and airlines can check that before boarding. Renewing early avoids the surprise of a “valid” passport that still doesn’t meet entry rules.
Final Packet Check Before You Submit
- Choose the right route: renewal or DS-11 in person.
- Use a photo that meets the requirements and looks like you now.
- For DS-11, bring originals plus clean copies of ID and citizenship evidence.
- Pick a processing speed that matches your travel date plus mailing time.
- Keep a complete copy of what you submit.
When you match the route to your situation and submit a clean packet, getting a new passport is paperwork, not panic. Start early and keep your documents tidy, and you’ll be ready to travel when the time comes.
References & Sources
- U.S. Department of State.“Renew Your Passport.”Eligibility rules and steps for renewing a U.S. passport by mail or online.
- U.S. Department of State.“Report Your Passport Lost or Stolen.”Instructions for reporting a valid passport lost or stolen and applying for a replacement.
