Most U.S. passport forms can be printed in black and white, but you still need clean, single-sided pages and black-ink entries where allowed.
Printing a passport form at home feels simple, right up until you wonder if grayscale pages will get tossed. Good news: black-and-white printing is usually fine. The catch is that “black and white” means different things in different parts of a passport packet.
The form itself can be printed in grayscale. Your supporting copies often should be black-and-white. Your handwritten entries should be in black ink. Your passport photo must be a color photo. Mix those up and you can end up reprinting, re-copying, or restarting the form.
This walk-through breaks it down by task: printing, filling, copying, assembling, and doing a final scan before you submit. It’s written for people applying in the U.S. through an acceptance facility or by mail.
What “Black And White” Means In A Passport Packet
When someone asks if a passport application can be black and white, they’re usually asking one of three things:
- Can I print the application in grayscale? Yes, in most cases.
- Can I fill it out using a printer, then sign it? Yes, if you follow the form rules.
- Can my supporting copies be black and white? Often yes, and for some items that’s the standard expectation.
So think of your passport packet as four separate “color rules,” each with its own standard:
- Application pages: Print quality and page format matter more than color.
- Handwritten entries: Black ink only on the lines you’re allowed to handwrite.
- Photocopies of documents: Clear, legible copies, commonly black-and-white on letter paper.
- Passport photo: A recent color photo that meets the State Department photo standard.
Can My Passport Application Be in Black and White? What Actually Counts
Yes, your application pages can usually be printed in black and white. The bigger risk is not the lack of color; it’s low print quality, wrong scaling, or printing in a way the system won’t accept.
Two things tend to cause trouble:
- Cut-off edges or shrink-to-fit settings that clip barcodes or boxes.
- Double-sided printing when single-sided pages are required.
If you used the online form filler, treat the printout like a “generated document.” The barcode and spacing are there for a reason. A grayscale print is fine if it’s sharp, fills the page, and stays readable from corner to corner.
Black Ink Still Matters
Even if your pages are black-and-white, ink rules still apply. Many State Department passport forms tell you to print clearly using black ink only and to start a new form if you make a mistake rather than using correction fluid. You’ll see that stated directly on the form instructions themselves, like the DS-11 instructions.
So, if you’re handwriting any part, stick to black ink. If you’re typing into a PDF and printing, keep it clean and consistent. Then sign only when and where the instructions say to sign.
One-Sided Pages And Page Size Are Non-Negotiable
Most hiccups labeled “printing issue” come from page format. The State Department’s printing reminders call out single-sided printing on letter paper and warn that horizontal printing can slow things down. Those reminders are listed on the Passport Forms printing reminders page.
Before you hit print, check these settings:
- Paper size: 8.5 x 11 inches (letter)
- Orientation: portrait (vertical)
- Pages: single-sided only
- Scale: print at actual size so the form fits correctly
Where People Get Tripped Up With Black-And-White Printing
Grayscale printing itself rarely causes rejection. The trouble usually comes from how black-and-white output is produced.
Home Printers That Create Faint Text
A faded gray print can turn a “valid” form into a “hard-to-read” form. If someone squints at your address line, that’s a delay risk. Swap to a fresh cartridge or raise print quality in the printer dialog. If your printer has “draft mode,” don’t use it.
Phone Screenshots Instead Of A Real PDF Print
Some people open a PDF on a phone, screenshot each page, and print the images. That tends to shrink the form, clip corners, or blur barcodes. Use the original PDF and print it normally.
Wrong Paper Or Mixed Sizes
Mixing letter and A4 can shift margins. Stick to letter paper for a U.S. application packet.
Double-Sided Printing To “Save Paper”
It’s tempting. Don’t do it. If the instructions say single-sided, take that literally. It’s one of the cleanest avoidable mistakes.
How To Fill Out A Printed Form Without Creating A Redo
The safest approach is simple: type what you can, print once, handwrite only the parts the instructions allow, then sign at the right moment.
Type First, Then Print
If you can use the official form filler, do it. It produces consistent spacing and keeps your entries aligned with the boxes. It also reduces “interpretation” issues with handwriting.
Use Black Ink For Any Handwriting
If you do handwrite entries, use black ink and write clearly. Passport forms often instruct applicants to start a new form if they make a mistake and not to use correction fluid. That rule is stated on the DS-11 PDF itself: DS-11 (Application For A U.S. Passport).
Sign Only When You’re Supposed To
Some applications are signed in front of an acceptance agent. Others are signed before mailing. Follow the form’s instruction page for your situation. A premature signature can force a restart.
Document Copies: Black And White Is Often The Right Choice
Many applicants worry about the form pages and forget the copies. Document copies are where “black and white” is most clearly expected.
When you submit proof of citizenship and ID, you often provide photocopies along with the originals. These copies should be legible, full-page, and easy to match to the original. A clean black-and-white copy is often preferred because it prints with strong contrast and scans cleanly.
Two rules that keep people out of trouble:
- Copy the full document side, not a cropped section.
- Use high-contrast settings so seals, numbers, and borders stay readable.
If your ID has information on both sides, copy both sides. If your citizenship evidence has printing on the back, copy that too. Don’t shrink it. Don’t cut it off. If it doesn’t fit on the page, adjust the copier settings, not the document.
Photo Rules Are Different: Color Photo Required
This is where people mix rules. A passport photo is not a “supporting copy.” It’s its own item with its own standards. A black-and-white passport photo is not acceptable for a standard U.S. passport application. The photo needs to be a color photo taken recently, printed on photo-quality paper, with the correct size and a plain background.
If you’re building your packet at home, treat the photo as a separate checklist item. Don’t let “black and white is fine” bleed into the photo requirement.
Table: Black-And-White Checklist For Each Packet Item
Use this table to separate “grayscale is fine” from “black ink only” from “color required.” It’s the fastest way to catch a mismatch before you submit.
| Packet Item | What To Do | Slip-Up That Causes Reprints |
|---|---|---|
| Application Printout | Black-and-white print is fine if sharp, full-page, and properly scaled | Clipped edges or shrunken boxes from “fit to page” |
| Handwritten Entries | Use black ink only for any handwriting that’s allowed | Blue ink, pencil, gel pens that smear, or correction fluid |
| Signature And Date | Sign as directed for your submission method | Signing too early when an agent must witness it |
| Citizenship Evidence Copy | Make a clear, legible copy on letter paper; black-and-white is usually ideal | Cropping borders or copying at low contrast |
| ID Copy | Copy front and back if there’s text on both sides | Only copying the front, or copying too dark to read |
| Passport Photo | Provide a color photo that meets the passport photo standard | Submitting a grayscale photo or wrong size |
| Payment | Follow the accepted payment methods for your submission type | Wrong payee name or missing signature on payment |
| Mailing Packet (If Applying By Mail) | Use a sturdy envelope; keep pages flat | Folding the form or damaging the photo |
| Name Change Document Copy (If Needed) | Send the correct certified copy when required | Sending an unofficial copy when a certified version is required |
Printer Settings That Keep Your Form Clean And Scannable
If you want your black-and-white print to pass without a second thought, aim for clarity. You’re not trying to make it pretty. You’re trying to make it easy to read and easy to process.
Use High Contrast
On a laser printer, standard settings usually work. On an inkjet, pick a “normal” or “high quality” setting. If your printer has a “grayscale” mode, use it. If it has “economy black,” skip it.
Avoid Smudges And Streaks
Streaks running through names, dates, or barcodes can lead to a redo. If you see streaking, clean the printer heads or use a different printer.
Keep Pages Flat And Clean
Passport packets get handled. A wrinkled page that was fine at home can become hard to scan later. Keep pages flat, don’t staple unless your instructions say to, and store the packet in a folder until you submit.
When Black-And-White Printing Is A Bad Idea
There are a few moments when black-and-white output can work against you.
If Your Document Has Light Security Features
Some IDs and certificates have pale patterns that disappear on a cheap copier setting. If your black-and-white copy washes out text, redo the copy with higher contrast. If that still fails, make a color copy. The goal is readability.
If Your Printer Can’t Hold Detail
Thin lines, small fonts, and faint barcodes can blur on older printers. If you’re unsure, print one page and inspect it under good light. If it’s not crisp, use a library printer, office printer, or a print shop.
If You’re Submitting A Photo Copy That Looks “Dirty”
Dust on a scanner glass can create speckles across names and numbers. Wipe the glass and redo the copy. A clean copy looks intentional. A speckled copy looks careless.
Fixing Mistakes Without Blowing Up Your Timeline
Mistakes happen. The trick is knowing which ones need a total restart and which ones are quick fixes.
When To Reprint The Form
Reprint if any of these are true:
- Text is faint, streaked, or hard to read
- Any part of the page is cut off
- The form is printed double-sided when it shouldn’t be
- You wrote on sections that were meant to stay blank
When To Restart The Form
Restart the form if you made a handwriting error and tried to patch it. Passport forms commonly tell you not to use correction fluid. If you scratched out a line, overwrote a date, or used a messy correction trick, start fresh.
When A New Copy Is Enough
If your supporting copy is the issue, you rarely need to restart the whole application. You usually just need a better copy: higher contrast, full borders, both sides, and clean text.
Table: Fast Fixes For Black-And-White Issues
Use this table as a triage list. It tells you what to redo first, so you don’t waste time rebuilding the whole packet.
| Problem You Notice | What To Do Next | When To Restart |
|---|---|---|
| Form text looks gray and faint | Reprint using normal/high quality and fresh black ink/toner | Restart only if handwriting is messy or incorrect |
| Barcode or boxes are cut off | Reprint at actual size and confirm letter paper + portrait | Restart if you already wrote on the misprinted page |
| Form printed on both sides | Reprint single-sided | Restart if you already signed or wrote on the wrong print |
| You used correction fluid on a handwritten entry | Start over with a clean form and black ink | Always restart |
| ID copy is too dark to read | Redo the copy with lower density or better scanner settings | Restart not needed |
| ID copy is too light and loses text | Redo the copy with higher contrast or switch to a color copy | Restart not needed |
| Citizenship evidence copy is cropped | Redo the copy showing full edges and any back printing | Restart not needed |
| Passport photo is black-and-white | Get a new color photo that meets the standard | Restart not needed, but replace the photo |
Final Pre-Submit Scan That Catches Nearly Everything
Before you submit, do a slow, page-by-page check. This takes five minutes and saves days.
Check Print Quality First
- Is every line readable without squinting?
- Do all boxes and borders show fully?
- Are the pages clean, flat, and single-sided?
Check Ink Rules Next
- Any handwriting is in black ink
- No correction fluid, no scratch-outs, no overwritten dates
- Signature is done at the right time for your submission method
Check Copies Last
- Copies show full edges and both sides when needed
- Text and numbers are readable and not washed out
- Nothing is cut off, blurred, or speckled with scanner dust
If all of that looks clean, black-and-white printing won’t be the thing that slows you down. Sharp print, black ink where required, clear copies, and a proper color photo are the real pass/fail factors.
References & Sources
- U.S. Department of State.“Passport Forms: Reminders for Printing Your Application.”Lists print format rules like single-sided letter paper and correct page orientation.
- U.S. Department of State (eForms).“Form DS-11: Application for a U.S. Passport.”States black-ink instructions and warns against correction fluid on the application.
