Traveling with my 5 year old daughter (as the father) without the mother from Germany to MexicoIs there an obligation to renew a small child's passport before its expiry date?Mexican visa requirements for US citizensChildren with a different surname to parent - UK citizen - UK passport controlCan I transit through Germany with an unused Schengen-visa issued by Spain?Flying within Mexico with a baby; will a passport be needed?Can my son enter the United States with just his birth abroad certificate?Baby has dual citizenship. I need to know if she needs two passportsOverstayed visa, leaving the USA with children without partner's approvalDoes my infant child need a US passport to fly to Canada and back?Father travelling with child from UK to Canada without Mother
How could indestructible materials be used in power generation?
How to stretch the corners of this image so that it looks like a perfect rectangle?
Should I tell management that I intend to leave due to bad software development practices?
Do creatures with a listed speed of "0 ft., fly 30 ft. (hover)" ever touch the ground?
Why do I get negative height?
Placement of More Information/Help Icon button for Radio Buttons
Using "tail" to follow a file without displaying the most recent lines
Could the museum Saturn V's be refitted for one more flight?
How can a day be of 24 hours?
What is an equivalently powerful replacement spell for the Yuan-Ti's Suggestion spell?
What is required to make GPS signals available indoors?
How seriously should I take size and weight limits of hand luggage?
One verb to replace 'be a member of' a club
Was the old ablative pronoun "med" or "mēd"?
Is it "common practice in Fourier transform spectroscopy to multiply the measured interferogram by an apodizing function"? If so, why?
Why was the shrink from 8″ made only to 5.25″ and not smaller (4″ or less)
What is the fastest integer factorization to break RSA?
Venezuelan girlfriend wants to travel the USA to be with me. What is the process?
Can a virus destroy the BIOS of a modern computer?
Does int main() need a declaration on C++?
Getting extremely large arrows with tikzcd
Why didn't Boeing produce its own regional jet?
Mathematica command that allows it to read my intentions
In the UK, is it possible to get a referendum by a court decision?
Traveling with my 5 year old daughter (as the father) without the mother from Germany to Mexico
Is there an obligation to renew a small child's passport before its expiry date?Mexican visa requirements for US citizensChildren with a different surname to parent - UK citizen - UK passport controlCan I transit through Germany with an unused Schengen-visa issued by Spain?Flying within Mexico with a baby; will a passport be needed?Can my son enter the United States with just his birth abroad certificate?Baby has dual citizenship. I need to know if she needs two passportsOverstayed visa, leaving the USA with children without partner's approvalDoes my infant child need a US passport to fly to Canada and back?Father travelling with child from UK to Canada without Mother
I will be flying with my 5 year old daughter without the mother to Mexico from Germany with transit in the United States. Her grandmother on her mom's side will also be traveling with us.
I was born in Mexico and have acquired German citizenship and kept the Mexican one. I will be traveling with my German passport. I am separated from the mother (she is German; we were never married), but I still have a good relationship with her. My daughter was named according to Mexican law, so her last name is my first last name and her mother's (maiden) last name (to give an example with a fake name: Ana Maria González Müller). Something to note is that the mother has since married someone else and took his name, so her last name is no longer the one on my daughter's last name.
I bought the ticket through Lufthansa but I believe the airline will be United Airlines.
My question is: Is there something I should consider while traveling with my daughter regarding boarding the plane, going through customs or similar? Should I get a signed letter from the mother or something? I will be for sure carrying her birth certificate. What else can I do or take with me?
Edit:
-The mother and I have shared custody.
-To clarify, I will be entering Mexico with with my Mexican passport as it is required by Mexican law. My daughter has never been to the Mexican consulate in Germany and hence has no Mexican passport or birth certificate.
Update: We will be writing a letter of consent in English, German and Spanish, and we will go to the city hall to get the mom's signature notarized
Thank you
legal germany children mexico
New contributor
|
show 7 more comments
I will be flying with my 5 year old daughter without the mother to Mexico from Germany with transit in the United States. Her grandmother on her mom's side will also be traveling with us.
I was born in Mexico and have acquired German citizenship and kept the Mexican one. I will be traveling with my German passport. I am separated from the mother (she is German; we were never married), but I still have a good relationship with her. My daughter was named according to Mexican law, so her last name is my first last name and her mother's (maiden) last name (to give an example with a fake name: Ana Maria González Müller). Something to note is that the mother has since married someone else and took his name, so her last name is no longer the one on my daughter's last name.
I bought the ticket through Lufthansa but I believe the airline will be United Airlines.
My question is: Is there something I should consider while traveling with my daughter regarding boarding the plane, going through customs or similar? Should I get a signed letter from the mother or something? I will be for sure carrying her birth certificate. What else can I do or take with me?
Edit:
-The mother and I have shared custody.
-To clarify, I will be entering Mexico with with my Mexican passport as it is required by Mexican law. My daughter has never been to the Mexican consulate in Germany and hence has no Mexican passport or birth certificate.
Update: We will be writing a letter of consent in English, German and Spanish, and we will go to the city hall to get the mom's signature notarized
Thank you
legal germany children mexico
New contributor
Which airline(s)? It would be worth checking whether they have any specific requirements (although the answer from o.m. below probably covers it)
– Traveller
2 days ago
I bought the tickets through Lufthansa but I believe the operating airline will be United Airlines. I will edit the question with this information.
– awful
2 days ago
Dont forget to make sure she is up to date on her vaccines, bring a bottle of Kaopectate, and a bottle of cipro (just in case)
– aquagremlin
2 days ago
Thanks, vaccines and good health insurance are taken care of. Is there a particular reason you mentioned both of these drugs?
– awful
2 days ago
1
who has legal custody of the child? You, the mother or shared?
– Tom
yesterday
|
show 7 more comments
I will be flying with my 5 year old daughter without the mother to Mexico from Germany with transit in the United States. Her grandmother on her mom's side will also be traveling with us.
I was born in Mexico and have acquired German citizenship and kept the Mexican one. I will be traveling with my German passport. I am separated from the mother (she is German; we were never married), but I still have a good relationship with her. My daughter was named according to Mexican law, so her last name is my first last name and her mother's (maiden) last name (to give an example with a fake name: Ana Maria González Müller). Something to note is that the mother has since married someone else and took his name, so her last name is no longer the one on my daughter's last name.
I bought the ticket through Lufthansa but I believe the airline will be United Airlines.
My question is: Is there something I should consider while traveling with my daughter regarding boarding the plane, going through customs or similar? Should I get a signed letter from the mother or something? I will be for sure carrying her birth certificate. What else can I do or take with me?
Edit:
-The mother and I have shared custody.
-To clarify, I will be entering Mexico with with my Mexican passport as it is required by Mexican law. My daughter has never been to the Mexican consulate in Germany and hence has no Mexican passport or birth certificate.
Update: We will be writing a letter of consent in English, German and Spanish, and we will go to the city hall to get the mom's signature notarized
Thank you
legal germany children mexico
New contributor
I will be flying with my 5 year old daughter without the mother to Mexico from Germany with transit in the United States. Her grandmother on her mom's side will also be traveling with us.
I was born in Mexico and have acquired German citizenship and kept the Mexican one. I will be traveling with my German passport. I am separated from the mother (she is German; we were never married), but I still have a good relationship with her. My daughter was named according to Mexican law, so her last name is my first last name and her mother's (maiden) last name (to give an example with a fake name: Ana Maria González Müller). Something to note is that the mother has since married someone else and took his name, so her last name is no longer the one on my daughter's last name.
I bought the ticket through Lufthansa but I believe the airline will be United Airlines.
My question is: Is there something I should consider while traveling with my daughter regarding boarding the plane, going through customs or similar? Should I get a signed letter from the mother or something? I will be for sure carrying her birth certificate. What else can I do or take with me?
Edit:
-The mother and I have shared custody.
-To clarify, I will be entering Mexico with with my Mexican passport as it is required by Mexican law. My daughter has never been to the Mexican consulate in Germany and hence has no Mexican passport or birth certificate.
Update: We will be writing a letter of consent in English, German and Spanish, and we will go to the city hall to get the mom's signature notarized
Thank you
legal germany children mexico
legal germany children mexico
New contributor
New contributor
edited yesterday
awful
New contributor
asked 2 days ago
awfulawful
14127
14127
New contributor
New contributor
Which airline(s)? It would be worth checking whether they have any specific requirements (although the answer from o.m. below probably covers it)
– Traveller
2 days ago
I bought the tickets through Lufthansa but I believe the operating airline will be United Airlines. I will edit the question with this information.
– awful
2 days ago
Dont forget to make sure she is up to date on her vaccines, bring a bottle of Kaopectate, and a bottle of cipro (just in case)
– aquagremlin
2 days ago
Thanks, vaccines and good health insurance are taken care of. Is there a particular reason you mentioned both of these drugs?
– awful
2 days ago
1
who has legal custody of the child? You, the mother or shared?
– Tom
yesterday
|
show 7 more comments
Which airline(s)? It would be worth checking whether they have any specific requirements (although the answer from o.m. below probably covers it)
– Traveller
2 days ago
I bought the tickets through Lufthansa but I believe the operating airline will be United Airlines. I will edit the question with this information.
– awful
2 days ago
Dont forget to make sure she is up to date on her vaccines, bring a bottle of Kaopectate, and a bottle of cipro (just in case)
– aquagremlin
2 days ago
Thanks, vaccines and good health insurance are taken care of. Is there a particular reason you mentioned both of these drugs?
– awful
2 days ago
1
who has legal custody of the child? You, the mother or shared?
– Tom
yesterday
Which airline(s)? It would be worth checking whether they have any specific requirements (although the answer from o.m. below probably covers it)
– Traveller
2 days ago
Which airline(s)? It would be worth checking whether they have any specific requirements (although the answer from o.m. below probably covers it)
– Traveller
2 days ago
I bought the tickets through Lufthansa but I believe the operating airline will be United Airlines. I will edit the question with this information.
– awful
2 days ago
I bought the tickets through Lufthansa but I believe the operating airline will be United Airlines. I will edit the question with this information.
– awful
2 days ago
Dont forget to make sure she is up to date on her vaccines, bring a bottle of Kaopectate, and a bottle of cipro (just in case)
– aquagremlin
2 days ago
Dont forget to make sure she is up to date on her vaccines, bring a bottle of Kaopectate, and a bottle of cipro (just in case)
– aquagremlin
2 days ago
Thanks, vaccines and good health insurance are taken care of. Is there a particular reason you mentioned both of these drugs?
– awful
2 days ago
Thanks, vaccines and good health insurance are taken care of. Is there a particular reason you mentioned both of these drugs?
– awful
2 days ago
1
1
who has legal custody of the child? You, the mother or shared?
– Tom
yesterday
who has legal custody of the child? You, the mother or shared?
– Tom
yesterday
|
show 7 more comments
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
- If you do not have sole custody, get a letter from the mother stating that she has no objection.
- The child's passport.
- Possibly a transit visa for all concerned.
Follow-Up: As far as Germany is concerned, the letter need not be notarized but it should contain the current contact details of the other legal guardian.
8
I would suggest to add something that would easily prove that the woman traveling with you is the child's maternal grandmother. Her saying "yes, my daughter is aware and OK with this" will certainly be invaluable in case some official gets suspicious.
– Law29
2 days ago
7
I would also recommend that you ask the mother to have her letter notarized, which is basically a legal attestation that the child's mother was positively identified and confirmed to have signed the letter.
– Kyralessa
2 days ago
1
@DJClayworth The mom and I have shared custody. I have all my documents regarding my custody rights.
– awful
2 days ago
1
If he does have sole custody (very unlikely given the grandmother), he should bring the relevant court decree. OP: The notarized letter is essential. I suggest, in fact, that you bring a certified Spanish translation (or a notarized Spanish version), so that you do not have problems being admitted to Mexico.
– Andrew Lazarus
2 days ago
2
@AndrewLazarus I think that the main difficulty will be leaving the Schengen space. Mexico will not mind having a Mexican bring his daughter along; on the contrary, typically the home countries of separated parents support their case even in illegal cases which amount to "child abduction" and don't e.g. extradite upon US parents' request, warrented as they may be.
– Peter A. Schneider
yesterday
|
show 4 more comments
US authorities are generally very aware of potential 'abductions' of children by one parent (against the consent of the other parent); especially for international travel.
Now that should not affect you much, as you are not taking the child out of the US, but simply 'transiting', but it could be they ask you.
The strong recommendation for the US is to have a signed letter from the other parent; if you want to avoid trouble, this would be a good idea to bring.
3
Transiting in the US means that you are admitted temporarily and then leave-- unlike many countries there are no sterile transit areas in US airports, so it's not as special as it might be.
– Spehro Pefhany
2 days ago
2
I am aware of that; but you would have boarding passes from the incoming flight, so it is easy to show that you are not bringing a child out of the US, but through the US. That would make it a lot less probable for US authorities to consider an abduction.
– Aganju
yesterday
add a comment |
I'm surprised no one mentioned it but in addition to the documentation that @o.m. listed, I would also include a copy of the child's birth certificate. Hopefully this document includes the OPs legal name which would be a good document to show their legal relationship to the child.
I have traveled multiple times with my preschool age son (across state lines but always within the US) and per recommendations by the airlines always bring along a copy of this document. I have yet to been asked to provide it by the airlines or security but it gives me comfort in knowing that if ever questioned I could provide legal documentation of my relationship to my child.
Examples of recommendations from airlines:
- https://www.allegiantair.com/traveling-with-children
- https://www.aa.com/i18n/travel-info/special-assistance/traveling-children.jsp
- https://www.lawdepot.com/blog/3-documents-every-parent-needs-when-traveling-with-children/
New contributor
In my experience the airline and border control personnel never ask for a birth certificate to prove a relationship between parents and children.
– Dmitry Grigoryev
22 hours ago
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "273"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);
else
createEditor();
);
function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);
);
awful is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f134893%2ftraveling-with-my-5-year-old-daughter-as-the-father-without-the-mother-from-ge%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
- If you do not have sole custody, get a letter from the mother stating that she has no objection.
- The child's passport.
- Possibly a transit visa for all concerned.
Follow-Up: As far as Germany is concerned, the letter need not be notarized but it should contain the current contact details of the other legal guardian.
8
I would suggest to add something that would easily prove that the woman traveling with you is the child's maternal grandmother. Her saying "yes, my daughter is aware and OK with this" will certainly be invaluable in case some official gets suspicious.
– Law29
2 days ago
7
I would also recommend that you ask the mother to have her letter notarized, which is basically a legal attestation that the child's mother was positively identified and confirmed to have signed the letter.
– Kyralessa
2 days ago
1
@DJClayworth The mom and I have shared custody. I have all my documents regarding my custody rights.
– awful
2 days ago
1
If he does have sole custody (very unlikely given the grandmother), he should bring the relevant court decree. OP: The notarized letter is essential. I suggest, in fact, that you bring a certified Spanish translation (or a notarized Spanish version), so that you do not have problems being admitted to Mexico.
– Andrew Lazarus
2 days ago
2
@AndrewLazarus I think that the main difficulty will be leaving the Schengen space. Mexico will not mind having a Mexican bring his daughter along; on the contrary, typically the home countries of separated parents support their case even in illegal cases which amount to "child abduction" and don't e.g. extradite upon US parents' request, warrented as they may be.
– Peter A. Schneider
yesterday
|
show 4 more comments
- If you do not have sole custody, get a letter from the mother stating that she has no objection.
- The child's passport.
- Possibly a transit visa for all concerned.
Follow-Up: As far as Germany is concerned, the letter need not be notarized but it should contain the current contact details of the other legal guardian.
8
I would suggest to add something that would easily prove that the woman traveling with you is the child's maternal grandmother. Her saying "yes, my daughter is aware and OK with this" will certainly be invaluable in case some official gets suspicious.
– Law29
2 days ago
7
I would also recommend that you ask the mother to have her letter notarized, which is basically a legal attestation that the child's mother was positively identified and confirmed to have signed the letter.
– Kyralessa
2 days ago
1
@DJClayworth The mom and I have shared custody. I have all my documents regarding my custody rights.
– awful
2 days ago
1
If he does have sole custody (very unlikely given the grandmother), he should bring the relevant court decree. OP: The notarized letter is essential. I suggest, in fact, that you bring a certified Spanish translation (or a notarized Spanish version), so that you do not have problems being admitted to Mexico.
– Andrew Lazarus
2 days ago
2
@AndrewLazarus I think that the main difficulty will be leaving the Schengen space. Mexico will not mind having a Mexican bring his daughter along; on the contrary, typically the home countries of separated parents support their case even in illegal cases which amount to "child abduction" and don't e.g. extradite upon US parents' request, warrented as they may be.
– Peter A. Schneider
yesterday
|
show 4 more comments
- If you do not have sole custody, get a letter from the mother stating that she has no objection.
- The child's passport.
- Possibly a transit visa for all concerned.
Follow-Up: As far as Germany is concerned, the letter need not be notarized but it should contain the current contact details of the other legal guardian.
- If you do not have sole custody, get a letter from the mother stating that she has no objection.
- The child's passport.
- Possibly a transit visa for all concerned.
Follow-Up: As far as Germany is concerned, the letter need not be notarized but it should contain the current contact details of the other legal guardian.
edited 2 days ago
answered 2 days ago
o.m.o.m.
24.1k23761
24.1k23761
8
I would suggest to add something that would easily prove that the woman traveling with you is the child's maternal grandmother. Her saying "yes, my daughter is aware and OK with this" will certainly be invaluable in case some official gets suspicious.
– Law29
2 days ago
7
I would also recommend that you ask the mother to have her letter notarized, which is basically a legal attestation that the child's mother was positively identified and confirmed to have signed the letter.
– Kyralessa
2 days ago
1
@DJClayworth The mom and I have shared custody. I have all my documents regarding my custody rights.
– awful
2 days ago
1
If he does have sole custody (very unlikely given the grandmother), he should bring the relevant court decree. OP: The notarized letter is essential. I suggest, in fact, that you bring a certified Spanish translation (or a notarized Spanish version), so that you do not have problems being admitted to Mexico.
– Andrew Lazarus
2 days ago
2
@AndrewLazarus I think that the main difficulty will be leaving the Schengen space. Mexico will not mind having a Mexican bring his daughter along; on the contrary, typically the home countries of separated parents support their case even in illegal cases which amount to "child abduction" and don't e.g. extradite upon US parents' request, warrented as they may be.
– Peter A. Schneider
yesterday
|
show 4 more comments
8
I would suggest to add something that would easily prove that the woman traveling with you is the child's maternal grandmother. Her saying "yes, my daughter is aware and OK with this" will certainly be invaluable in case some official gets suspicious.
– Law29
2 days ago
7
I would also recommend that you ask the mother to have her letter notarized, which is basically a legal attestation that the child's mother was positively identified and confirmed to have signed the letter.
– Kyralessa
2 days ago
1
@DJClayworth The mom and I have shared custody. I have all my documents regarding my custody rights.
– awful
2 days ago
1
If he does have sole custody (very unlikely given the grandmother), he should bring the relevant court decree. OP: The notarized letter is essential. I suggest, in fact, that you bring a certified Spanish translation (or a notarized Spanish version), so that you do not have problems being admitted to Mexico.
– Andrew Lazarus
2 days ago
2
@AndrewLazarus I think that the main difficulty will be leaving the Schengen space. Mexico will not mind having a Mexican bring his daughter along; on the contrary, typically the home countries of separated parents support their case even in illegal cases which amount to "child abduction" and don't e.g. extradite upon US parents' request, warrented as they may be.
– Peter A. Schneider
yesterday
8
8
I would suggest to add something that would easily prove that the woman traveling with you is the child's maternal grandmother. Her saying "yes, my daughter is aware and OK with this" will certainly be invaluable in case some official gets suspicious.
– Law29
2 days ago
I would suggest to add something that would easily prove that the woman traveling with you is the child's maternal grandmother. Her saying "yes, my daughter is aware and OK with this" will certainly be invaluable in case some official gets suspicious.
– Law29
2 days ago
7
7
I would also recommend that you ask the mother to have her letter notarized, which is basically a legal attestation that the child's mother was positively identified and confirmed to have signed the letter.
– Kyralessa
2 days ago
I would also recommend that you ask the mother to have her letter notarized, which is basically a legal attestation that the child's mother was positively identified and confirmed to have signed the letter.
– Kyralessa
2 days ago
1
1
@DJClayworth The mom and I have shared custody. I have all my documents regarding my custody rights.
– awful
2 days ago
@DJClayworth The mom and I have shared custody. I have all my documents regarding my custody rights.
– awful
2 days ago
1
1
If he does have sole custody (very unlikely given the grandmother), he should bring the relevant court decree. OP: The notarized letter is essential. I suggest, in fact, that you bring a certified Spanish translation (or a notarized Spanish version), so that you do not have problems being admitted to Mexico.
– Andrew Lazarus
2 days ago
If he does have sole custody (very unlikely given the grandmother), he should bring the relevant court decree. OP: The notarized letter is essential. I suggest, in fact, that you bring a certified Spanish translation (or a notarized Spanish version), so that you do not have problems being admitted to Mexico.
– Andrew Lazarus
2 days ago
2
2
@AndrewLazarus I think that the main difficulty will be leaving the Schengen space. Mexico will not mind having a Mexican bring his daughter along; on the contrary, typically the home countries of separated parents support their case even in illegal cases which amount to "child abduction" and don't e.g. extradite upon US parents' request, warrented as they may be.
– Peter A. Schneider
yesterday
@AndrewLazarus I think that the main difficulty will be leaving the Schengen space. Mexico will not mind having a Mexican bring his daughter along; on the contrary, typically the home countries of separated parents support their case even in illegal cases which amount to "child abduction" and don't e.g. extradite upon US parents' request, warrented as they may be.
– Peter A. Schneider
yesterday
|
show 4 more comments
US authorities are generally very aware of potential 'abductions' of children by one parent (against the consent of the other parent); especially for international travel.
Now that should not affect you much, as you are not taking the child out of the US, but simply 'transiting', but it could be they ask you.
The strong recommendation for the US is to have a signed letter from the other parent; if you want to avoid trouble, this would be a good idea to bring.
3
Transiting in the US means that you are admitted temporarily and then leave-- unlike many countries there are no sterile transit areas in US airports, so it's not as special as it might be.
– Spehro Pefhany
2 days ago
2
I am aware of that; but you would have boarding passes from the incoming flight, so it is easy to show that you are not bringing a child out of the US, but through the US. That would make it a lot less probable for US authorities to consider an abduction.
– Aganju
yesterday
add a comment |
US authorities are generally very aware of potential 'abductions' of children by one parent (against the consent of the other parent); especially for international travel.
Now that should not affect you much, as you are not taking the child out of the US, but simply 'transiting', but it could be they ask you.
The strong recommendation for the US is to have a signed letter from the other parent; if you want to avoid trouble, this would be a good idea to bring.
3
Transiting in the US means that you are admitted temporarily and then leave-- unlike many countries there are no sterile transit areas in US airports, so it's not as special as it might be.
– Spehro Pefhany
2 days ago
2
I am aware of that; but you would have boarding passes from the incoming flight, so it is easy to show that you are not bringing a child out of the US, but through the US. That would make it a lot less probable for US authorities to consider an abduction.
– Aganju
yesterday
add a comment |
US authorities are generally very aware of potential 'abductions' of children by one parent (against the consent of the other parent); especially for international travel.
Now that should not affect you much, as you are not taking the child out of the US, but simply 'transiting', but it could be they ask you.
The strong recommendation for the US is to have a signed letter from the other parent; if you want to avoid trouble, this would be a good idea to bring.
US authorities are generally very aware of potential 'abductions' of children by one parent (against the consent of the other parent); especially for international travel.
Now that should not affect you much, as you are not taking the child out of the US, but simply 'transiting', but it could be they ask you.
The strong recommendation for the US is to have a signed letter from the other parent; if you want to avoid trouble, this would be a good idea to bring.
edited 2 days ago
answered 2 days ago
AganjuAganju
19.5k54176
19.5k54176
3
Transiting in the US means that you are admitted temporarily and then leave-- unlike many countries there are no sterile transit areas in US airports, so it's not as special as it might be.
– Spehro Pefhany
2 days ago
2
I am aware of that; but you would have boarding passes from the incoming flight, so it is easy to show that you are not bringing a child out of the US, but through the US. That would make it a lot less probable for US authorities to consider an abduction.
– Aganju
yesterday
add a comment |
3
Transiting in the US means that you are admitted temporarily and then leave-- unlike many countries there are no sterile transit areas in US airports, so it's not as special as it might be.
– Spehro Pefhany
2 days ago
2
I am aware of that; but you would have boarding passes from the incoming flight, so it is easy to show that you are not bringing a child out of the US, but through the US. That would make it a lot less probable for US authorities to consider an abduction.
– Aganju
yesterday
3
3
Transiting in the US means that you are admitted temporarily and then leave-- unlike many countries there are no sterile transit areas in US airports, so it's not as special as it might be.
– Spehro Pefhany
2 days ago
Transiting in the US means that you are admitted temporarily and then leave-- unlike many countries there are no sterile transit areas in US airports, so it's not as special as it might be.
– Spehro Pefhany
2 days ago
2
2
I am aware of that; but you would have boarding passes from the incoming flight, so it is easy to show that you are not bringing a child out of the US, but through the US. That would make it a lot less probable for US authorities to consider an abduction.
– Aganju
yesterday
I am aware of that; but you would have boarding passes from the incoming flight, so it is easy to show that you are not bringing a child out of the US, but through the US. That would make it a lot less probable for US authorities to consider an abduction.
– Aganju
yesterday
add a comment |
I'm surprised no one mentioned it but in addition to the documentation that @o.m. listed, I would also include a copy of the child's birth certificate. Hopefully this document includes the OPs legal name which would be a good document to show their legal relationship to the child.
I have traveled multiple times with my preschool age son (across state lines but always within the US) and per recommendations by the airlines always bring along a copy of this document. I have yet to been asked to provide it by the airlines or security but it gives me comfort in knowing that if ever questioned I could provide legal documentation of my relationship to my child.
Examples of recommendations from airlines:
- https://www.allegiantair.com/traveling-with-children
- https://www.aa.com/i18n/travel-info/special-assistance/traveling-children.jsp
- https://www.lawdepot.com/blog/3-documents-every-parent-needs-when-traveling-with-children/
New contributor
In my experience the airline and border control personnel never ask for a birth certificate to prove a relationship between parents and children.
– Dmitry Grigoryev
22 hours ago
add a comment |
I'm surprised no one mentioned it but in addition to the documentation that @o.m. listed, I would also include a copy of the child's birth certificate. Hopefully this document includes the OPs legal name which would be a good document to show their legal relationship to the child.
I have traveled multiple times with my preschool age son (across state lines but always within the US) and per recommendations by the airlines always bring along a copy of this document. I have yet to been asked to provide it by the airlines or security but it gives me comfort in knowing that if ever questioned I could provide legal documentation of my relationship to my child.
Examples of recommendations from airlines:
- https://www.allegiantair.com/traveling-with-children
- https://www.aa.com/i18n/travel-info/special-assistance/traveling-children.jsp
- https://www.lawdepot.com/blog/3-documents-every-parent-needs-when-traveling-with-children/
New contributor
In my experience the airline and border control personnel never ask for a birth certificate to prove a relationship between parents and children.
– Dmitry Grigoryev
22 hours ago
add a comment |
I'm surprised no one mentioned it but in addition to the documentation that @o.m. listed, I would also include a copy of the child's birth certificate. Hopefully this document includes the OPs legal name which would be a good document to show their legal relationship to the child.
I have traveled multiple times with my preschool age son (across state lines but always within the US) and per recommendations by the airlines always bring along a copy of this document. I have yet to been asked to provide it by the airlines or security but it gives me comfort in knowing that if ever questioned I could provide legal documentation of my relationship to my child.
Examples of recommendations from airlines:
- https://www.allegiantair.com/traveling-with-children
- https://www.aa.com/i18n/travel-info/special-assistance/traveling-children.jsp
- https://www.lawdepot.com/blog/3-documents-every-parent-needs-when-traveling-with-children/
New contributor
I'm surprised no one mentioned it but in addition to the documentation that @o.m. listed, I would also include a copy of the child's birth certificate. Hopefully this document includes the OPs legal name which would be a good document to show their legal relationship to the child.
I have traveled multiple times with my preschool age son (across state lines but always within the US) and per recommendations by the airlines always bring along a copy of this document. I have yet to been asked to provide it by the airlines or security but it gives me comfort in knowing that if ever questioned I could provide legal documentation of my relationship to my child.
Examples of recommendations from airlines:
- https://www.allegiantair.com/traveling-with-children
- https://www.aa.com/i18n/travel-info/special-assistance/traveling-children.jsp
- https://www.lawdepot.com/blog/3-documents-every-parent-needs-when-traveling-with-children/
New contributor
New contributor
answered yesterday
DanKDanK
1292
1292
New contributor
New contributor
In my experience the airline and border control personnel never ask for a birth certificate to prove a relationship between parents and children.
– Dmitry Grigoryev
22 hours ago
add a comment |
In my experience the airline and border control personnel never ask for a birth certificate to prove a relationship between parents and children.
– Dmitry Grigoryev
22 hours ago
In my experience the airline and border control personnel never ask for a birth certificate to prove a relationship between parents and children.
– Dmitry Grigoryev
22 hours ago
In my experience the airline and border control personnel never ask for a birth certificate to prove a relationship between parents and children.
– Dmitry Grigoryev
22 hours ago
add a comment |
awful is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
awful is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
awful is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
awful is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Thanks for contributing an answer to Travel Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f134893%2ftraveling-with-my-5-year-old-daughter-as-the-father-without-the-mother-from-ge%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Which airline(s)? It would be worth checking whether they have any specific requirements (although the answer from o.m. below probably covers it)
– Traveller
2 days ago
I bought the tickets through Lufthansa but I believe the operating airline will be United Airlines. I will edit the question with this information.
– awful
2 days ago
Dont forget to make sure she is up to date on her vaccines, bring a bottle of Kaopectate, and a bottle of cipro (just in case)
– aquagremlin
2 days ago
Thanks, vaccines and good health insurance are taken care of. Is there a particular reason you mentioned both of these drugs?
– awful
2 days ago
1
who has legal custody of the child? You, the mother or shared?
– Tom
yesterday