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As of Tuesday, passengers at U.S. airports are no longer required to remove their shoes during the TSA screening process.
The Transportation Security Administration will now allow passengers to leave their shoes on, but security screening is still in place at airports.
The shoes-off/shoes-on dance at TSA checkpoints will end soon. But there's a catch you need to know about. Here's what we know.
Archaeologists in northern Britain discovered 13-inch shoes at the ancient Roman Magna Fort, raising questions about the towering soldiers who defended the empire.
Citing unnamed sources, several outlets report that TSA is no longer requiring the general public to remove shoes for screening at some airports.
The 25 best back-to-school shoes of 2025 for kids, teens, college students, and teachers have been tested and ranked.
Most passengers had been required to remove their footwear at checkpoints since 2006, a policy later eased only for members of trusted traveler programs.
TSA will allow passengers to keep their shoes on when they go through the general security line at many major airports across the country.
TSA has announced plans to do away with its shoe removal policy as passengers are going through security. Here's the reason why we needed to remove our shoes at the airport in the first place ...
TSA to phase out shoes-off policy during airport security screenings: Sources TSA began its policy of requiring airline passengers to take shoes off during security screenings in 2006, five years ...
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