You can renew a U.S. passport whenever you’re ready, and starting early gives you room for processing and mailing time.
If you’re staring at an expiration date and doing the math, you’re in the right spot. Passport renewal isn’t hard, but it can get messy when you start late, use the wrong method, or send a photo that fails the rules. This guide keeps it simple: when renewing now makes sense, which renewal route fits your case, and how to avoid the common slip-ups that slow things down.
Can I Renew My US Passport Now? For Trips This Year
Yes, you can renew now. There’s no “too early” rule for adult renewal. People renew early because travel can demand more validity than you expect. Many destinations and airlines want extra months of passport validity beyond your return date, and visa trips can chew through blank pages faster than you’d guess.
Renewing early also helps with life admin. If you changed your name, want your documents to match your ticket, or your passport is looking rough after years in a backpack, doing the renewal before you book a big trip can save you a headache.
Common reasons travelers renew early
- International travel is coming up and you want buffer time.
- Your passport expires within the next year.
- You want to add a passport card or renew a card you already have.
- Your name changed and you want consistent documents.
- Your passport has tears, water damage, or pages coming loose.
Renewal Options: Online, Mail, Or In Person
Adult renewals usually fall into one of three routes. Pick based on eligibility and timing, not convenience alone.
Online renewal
The State Department has an online renewal option for eligible adults. It’s designed for routine service, so it’s a strong match when your travel date isn’t close. You upload a digital photo, pay online, and check status through your account.
Renewal by mail
Mail renewal uses the renewal form and a printed photo. You mail your application and your most recent passport to the address listed for your service level. Mail renewal can work well for routine timing, and it can also be used with expedited processing when you’re tighter on time.
In-person service at a passport agency
In-person service is built for urgent travel windows. You’ll book an appointment at a passport agency or center and bring proof of travel. If your passport is lost, stolen, or badly damaged, you may also need an in-person application route even if you’d rather renew.
What decides whether you can renew
Eligibility depends on your most recent passport. In many cases, you can renew if your last passport was issued when you were 16 or older, you can submit it with your application, and it’s in usable condition. If your last passport was issued when you were under 16, if it’s missing, or if it’s damaged, you’ll often need an in-person application instead of a renewal.
Name changes can be straightforward when you have the right legal document, but rules vary by situation. If anything about your case feels unusual, check the official rules before you fill out forms. The State Department’s renewal eligibility and mailing rules page is the cleanest starting point.
Passport book vs passport card
A passport book is for international air travel. A passport card works for land and sea crossings in limited regions and can’t be used for international flights. If you only fly, you likely want the book. If you do road trips to border crossings, the card can be handy.
How long renewal takes and how to time it
Processing time is only part of the calendar. Add mailing time to send your packet in and to receive your new passport back, plus extra time if your photo or payment gets rejected.
As of early 2026, routine processing is listed at 4–6 weeks and expedited processing at 2–3 weeks, with mailing time on top of that. Check the State Department’s current passport processing times right before you apply, since the posted window can change.
A simple timing rule: if your trip is under two months away, expedited service is often the safer call. If your trip is only weeks away, an agency appointment route is usually the best bet.
Renewal scenarios at a glance
| Situation | Likely path | What to watch for |
|---|---|---|
| Adult-issued passport and you have it | Online or mail renewal | Photo rules and correct address for your service |
| Passport issued under age 16 | In-person application | Different form and acceptance facility visit |
| Passport lost or stolen | In-person application | Extra reporting steps and identity documents |
| Passport damaged (tears, water, loose cover) | Often in-person application | Bring the damaged passport and follow damage rules |
| Name changed and you have legal proof | Often renewal, sometimes in-person | Send certified documents and match ticket name |
| Travel is soon (weeks, not months) | Expedited or agency appointment | Mailing time can break tight windows |
| You need a visa soon | Agency appointment route | Bring proof of travel and visa timing details |
| Low blank pages for a visa-heavy trip | Renew early | Visa stickers and entry stamps fill pages fast |
Step-by-step renewal prep that saves weeks
Delays usually come from boring mistakes: an incomplete form, a photo that fails requirements, payment errors, or a packet that goes to the wrong address. Tighten those up and most renewals move along normally.
Pick your route first
Choose online, mail, or in-person service based on your travel date. Don’t fill a form until you know which path you’re taking. It’s easy to waste time by prepping the wrong packet.
Check your passport condition
Look at the cover and the ID page. If the page is peeling, ink is smeared, or the book is warped from water, don’t gamble on renewal. Damage can trigger an in-person replacement process.
Get a photo that passes the rules
Use a plain white or off-white background, even light, and a neutral expression. Skip shadows, filters, and heavy glare. If you take your own photo, take a batch and pick the sharpest one.
Gather what the form will ask for
- Your most recent passport (for renewal routes that require it).
- Legal name-change document if your current name differs from your passport.
- Your Social Security number.
- A payment method that matches the instructions for your chosen route.
Mail it like it matters
If you renew by mail, you’re mailing your passport. Use trackable shipping, keep the tracking number, and keep copies of what you send. Use a sturdy envelope so your photo doesn’t bend.
Costs to plan for
Costs depend on whether you’re renewing a book, a card, or both, plus whether you choose expedited processing. People often forget the side costs: the photo fee and the shipping cost for a trackable envelope.
Fast fixes for common delay triggers
These are the tripwires that catch a lot of travelers. A two-minute check can save you weeks.
Match your name across documents
If you’re changing your name on your passport, plan your airline tickets around the name you’ll have when you travel. Airlines can be strict about mismatches. If your renewal is still processing, avoid booking under the old name for a trip that will happen under the new name.
Write legibly and follow the form’s handling rules
Don’t “fix” mistakes with white-out. Don’t sign in the wrong spot. Don’t staple or clip items unless the instructions tell you to. When in doubt, start a fresh form and keep it clean.
Use the correct mailing address for your shipping method
Mail renewal addresses can vary by shipping service and service level. Copy the address directly from the instructions tied to the form or the official renewal page, then check it twice before you send.
Timeline planner
| Travel window | Suggested action | Goal |
|---|---|---|
| 6+ months away | Routine online or mail renewal | Plenty of buffer for mailing and corrections |
| 8–12 weeks away | Start now, consider expedited | Room for demand spikes and shipping time |
| 4–7 weeks away | Expedited service plus trackable shipping | Lower risk of missing your departure date |
| Under 4 weeks away | Check agency appointment options | A route built for short travel windows |
| Under 2 weeks away | Agency appointment with proof of travel | Get a passport in time to fly |
What to do when travel is close
If your travel date is close, act on calendar math. Add the posted processing window plus mailing time and ask if that fits your departure date. If it doesn’t, use expedited service. If it still doesn’t fit, move to an agency appointment route and gather proof of travel.
Also think about visas. Some trips need your passport in hand for a visa process. If a visa is in play, plan the passport renewal so you’re not stuck without your passport when you need it.
After you apply: what to track
Keep your shipping receipts and check status updates for your application. It can take time for a mailed packet to be opened and entered. Once you receive your new passport, review your personal details right away so any correction request starts early.
Pre-mail checklist
Run this before you seal the envelope or hit submit online.
- Every required field is filled in and readable.
- Your photo meets the size and background rules.
- Your name matches your legal documents and your travel booking name.
- Your payment method matches the instructions for your route.
- Your current passport is included if your route requires it.
- The envelope address matches the official instructions for your shipping method.
- You saved copies and tracking numbers.
Renewing now is usually the easiest way to travel with less hassle. Give yourself buffer time, follow the official instructions, and keep your packet clean and trackable. That’s the recipe for getting your new passport in hand before your next trip.
References & Sources
- U.S. Department of State.“Renew Your Passport by Mail.”Lists renewal eligibility rules and the official mailing guidance for renewal packets.
- U.S. Department of State.“Processing Times for U.S. Passports.”Provides current routine and expedited processing windows used for planning renewals.
