When it comes to getting through airport security faster, there are a few options. There's TSA PreCheck, a government-run program, and then there's CLEAR® Plus, a privately operated service. And they serve drastically different purposes.

CLEAR® Plus allows you to cut to the front of the line: On its own, you can skip to the front of the standard security line. In tandem with PreCheck, you can skip to the front of that shorter, faster line – keeping your coat and shoes on and keeping electronics inside your bag, too.

So what's not to love about CLEAR Plus? For one thing, the price: After yet another increase, it now clocks in at a whopping $199 a year – though fortunately there are a handful of ways to cut that cost (or even make it free with some travel credit cards). Even so, that can be a tough price tag to swallow.

And it's gotten even harder for many travelers to see the value lately. As more and more Americans have signed up, long lines have formed in CLEAR kiosks at airports around the country, leading to longer waits than even PreCheck lanes. To make matters worse, CLEAR members are regularly being subjected to random ID checks, negating the service's major selling point of speedy, touchless travel.

From signing up to getting through security, here's our review of using CLEAR® at the airport.

 

 

The Basics on CLEAR (& How it Compares to PreCheck)

CLEAR Plus is a privately run trusted-traveler program that takes both your fingerprints and iris scans to confirm your identity before security screening. Once you've signed up (more on this shortly) and finalized your registration, you simply head to the CLEAR® lane, confirm your identity at a kiosk, and get whisked away to the front of the TSA line by a CLEAR ambassador.

Unless you get stopped for a secondary ID check – a recurring problem with CLEAR these days – you can just flash your boarding pass to the TSA agent and you're on your way. If you've got TSA PreCheck too, you'll head to the front of that line – otherwise, you'll cut to the front of the standard TSA line.

 

clear diagram for TSA lines and clear lanes

 

The one hitch is that it's not available at every airport – but its presence is growing fast. It's available at nearly 60 U.S. airports and counting, with more locations at even small airports added seemingly every other month. Scan through the list and you'll find plenty of Delta and United hubs, thanks to close partnerships between the companies.

 

AirportTerminal(s)
Atlanta (ATL)North & South Domestic Terminals
Austin (AUS)Checkpoints 1 & 2
Baltimore (BWI)Checkpoints A,B,C, D & E
Birmingham (BHM)Main Terminal
Boise (BOI)Main Terminal
Boston (BOS)Terminal A
Buffalo (BUF)Main Terminal
Chicago-Midway (MDW)Main Terminal
Chicago-O'Hare (ORD)Terminal 1 & 2
Cincinnati (CVG)Main Terminal
Cleveland (CLE)
Center & South Checkpoints
Columbus (CMH)Main Terminal
Dallas-Fort Worth (DFW)Terminal E
Dallas-Love Field (DAL)Terminal 1
Denver (DEN)North & South Entrances
Detroit (DTW)North & McNamara Terminals
Fort Lauderdale (FLL)Terminals 1 & 2
Greenville-Spartanburg (GSP)Main Terminal
Hartford (BDL)Terminal A
Houston-Intercontinental (IAH)Terminals A, B, C and E
Houston-Hobby (HOU)Main Terminal
Kansas City (MCI)Main Terminal
Las Vegas (LAS)Terminals 1 & 3
Long Beach (LGB)Main Terminal
Los Angeles (LAX)Terminals 1 - 7
Miami (MIA)Checkpoints E & H
Milwaukee (MKE)Main Terminal
Minneapolis−Saint Paul (MSP)Terminal 1
Nashville (BNA)Central Checkpoint
New Orleans (MSY)Concourse D
New York City-John F. Kennedy (JFK)Terminals 2 & 4
New York-LaGuardia (LGA)Terminals C & D
Newark (EWR)Terminal C
Oakland (OAK)Terminal 2
Oklahoma City (OKC)Main Terminal
Ontario (ONT)Terminal 2 & 4
Orlando (MCO)East & West Security
Palm Beach (PBI)Terminal A/B & C
Palm Springs (PSP)Main Terminal
Phoenix (PHX)Terminals 3 & 4
Pittsburgh (PIT)Main Terminal
Providence (PVD)Main Terminal
Raleigh-Durham (RDU)Terminals 1 & 2
Sacramento (SMF)Terminal A & B
Salt Lake City (SLC)Terminals 1 & 2
San Antonio (SAT)Terminals A & B
San Diego (SAN)Terminal 2
San Francisco (SFO)Terminals 1-3, International Terminals A & G
San Jose (SJC)Terminal A & B
San Juan (SJU(+)Terminals A, B & C
Seattle-Tacoma (SEA)Checkpoints 1-5
St. Louis (STL)Terminal 2
Tulsa (TUL)Main Terminal
Washington, D.C.-Dulles (IAD)
Main Terminal & East Security Checkpoint
Washington, D.C.-Reagan (DCA)
Terminals A, B & C
Westchester County (HPN)Main Terminal

 

There's also a growing list of professional sports venues offering CLEAR®, too, helping you get into the stadium or arena faster.

 

Sports VenueCityWhere to Access
State Farm ArenaAtlanta, GAGate 6
Ball ArenaDenver, COAltitude Authentics Entrance
Comerica ParkDetroit, MIGate A
Allegiant StadiumLas Vegas, NVNorth Entry, Lanes 49 and 50
T-Mobile ArenaLas Vegas, NVHyde Suite VIP Entry
BMO StadiumLos Angeles, CANortheast and Northwest Gate
SoFi StadiumLos Angeles, CASouth Entrance, Entry 9
Kaseya CenterMiami, FLGate 1 & Gate 2
Barclays CenterNew York, NYFlatbush Avenue Entrance
Yankee StadiumNew York, NYBabe Ruth Plaza, Suite Entrance, & Gate 6
Madison Square Garden
New York, NY7th Ave South Entrance
Chase CenterSan Francisco, CAWest Entrance
Oracle ParkSan Francisco, CAWillie Mays Gate & King Street Gates
SAP CenterSan Jose, CASouth Entrance
Lumen FieldSeattle, WAGate 3
Capital One ArenaWashington, D.C.7th & G Street at Gallery Place
Nationals ParkWashington, D.C.Center Field Gate

 

TSA PreCheck works a bit differently. 

For starters, it's run by the federal government. And it's drastically cheaper: Just $78 for a five-year membership compared to the $200 annual price tag for CLEAR® Plus. And the lines for PreCheck are always shorter (and much faster) than the standard security queues.

But it’s not just the shorter line that makes TSA PreCheck so valuable for travelers. You also get to leave your shoes, a belt and a light jacket on. Your laptop and the carry-on approved liquids in your bag can also stay put as you put them through the baggage screeners.
 

TSA PreCheck explainer 

Those advantages make PreCheck and CLEAR a potentially powerful duo – they're not duplicative. When it works well, you can cut to the front of the line with CLEAR, then waltz through security – shoes, belt, and jacket on – with your PreCheck membership.

 

How to Save When You Sign Up 

Signing up for CLEAR Plus at the airport is easy. It's the price tag that's scary.

Head to CLEARme.com to register for your membership. At $199 per year, it's a steep cost – especially considering a TSA PreCheck membership costs less than half that … for a five-year membership. But there are easy ways to cut that cost … by a bit.

 

clear pricing options for delta members

 

For starters, all Delta SkyMiles members can save $10 and enroll in CLEAR® for $189. So even if you're not flying Delta, you can quickly sign up for a free SkyMiles account to save $10 a year. But if you've got status with Delta or hold one of the co-branded Delta SkyMiles American Express, that drops to $159. And the lowest pricing of all is reserved for top-tier Delta Diamond status holders (and invite-only Delta 360), who can select an annual membership as a free perk.

United has also partnered up with CLEAR® to offer similar pricing to its own members. Flyers with Alaska and Hawaiian Airlines can also get discounts.

These discounts don't go nearly as far as they did just a few years ago after CLEAR® raised these “special partner pricing” rates, then raised prices again this year.

Not sold yet? CLEAR® occasionally offers free two- to three-month trials, which allows you to give the program a test-run before ponying up for a full membership. We've also seen some worthwhile promos to sign up for CLEAR® Plus, like an offer to get a $75 Uber gift card when you signed up last fall.

Want to save even more? Or bring friends and family with you for less?

 

Cover the Entire Cost with Travel Credit Cards

*amex platinum card* got a huge overhaul a few years back, with a higher annual fee and a slew of new benefits – some better than others. But one great benefit is the $199 CLEAR® Plus credit that covers the cost of enrollment. 

If you've already got this card, just pay for your membership with it each year and voila: A statement credit will kick in automatically to cover the cost. *biz platinum* also has an identical CLEAR Plus perk.

 

*amex platinum*

 

Learn more about *amex platinum*.

 

But you don't need to pay a $695 annual fee (see rates & fees) for a premium travel credit card to cover the cost of CLEAR Plus. The American Express® Green Card also comes with a CLEAR Plus credit of up to $199 per year. The Green Card charges a much lower annual fee of just $150 (see rates & fees).

All information about the American Express® Green Card has been collected independently by Thrifty Traveler. 

 

American Express Green Card

 

Learn more about the American Express® Green Card (for full disclosure, this is not an affiliate link).

 

After signing up, you'll need to finalize your enrollment at the airport before your flight. Don't worry – it's not hard.

 

CLEAR's Family Plan

The Family Plan is a little-known but excellent feature of CLEAR membership.

CLEAR allows you to add up to three adult “family members” to your account – though there's no requirement that they're actually family (or even share an address). Best of all, members on your Family Plan can use CLEAR anytime they're flying: You don't have to be traveling with them to unlock that benefit. 

Got kids in tow? No need to worry: Children under 18 can always join adult CLEAR members for free.

But the cost of adding other adults to CLEAR has grown, too. After previously charging just $70 per adult less than a year ago, it now costs $119 a year to add each adult to your Family Plan. 

 

clear pricing for adding family members

 

That's significantly cheaper than purchasing a membership outright. But if you (or your travel buddy) has another credit card that comes with CLEAR® Plus credits, that's a much better course than adding them to your Family Plan.

 

Finalizing Your Enrollment at the Airport

After you've signed up and received a confirmation email from CLEAR®, you're all set. Just head for the designated lanes at security checkpoints – with bright neon signs, they're hard to miss – as if you're ready to go through security. Tell an ambassador you need to finalize your enrollment, and they'll guide you toward a kiosk.

You won't need anything but your boarding pass and an ID. A representative will help you finish everything up. That includes getting fingerprints, thumbprints, and an iris scan. They'll take a quick snapshot of your face and scan your driver's license or passport. And that's it. The whole process of finalizing enrollment takes about five minutes.

 

clear kiosk at an airport

 

Using CLEAR at the Airport

Once you've finalized your enrollment – or if that's already taken care of – you're off.

Just head for the CLEAR Plus lane at the security checkpoint with your boarding pass in hand. An agent will once again bring you to a kiosk for a quick scan of your eyes or fingerprints, glance at your boarding pass (or, in some cases, scan it at the kiosk), and then escort you to the front of the TSA line. Most CLEAR Plus members don't currently need to show their ID – that's the point of the service … at least in theory. But even paying CLEAR members are increasingly being subjected to random ID checks.

From there, you're ready to go through TSA security.

 

a row of clear kiosks at the airport

 

Over the course of the last few years, I've used CLEAR Plus about 60 times, maybe more. And it's a mixed bag.

Early in the pandemic, I routinely made it through airport security in five minutes or less thanks to the powerful combo of CLEAR and TSA PreCheck. When it works well, a quick, touchless trip through security is unbeatable.

But as travel demand has grown, lines have grown much longer, too. That's true of the standard security lines, TSA PreCheck queues, and CLEAR Plus too.

Some airports are better than others. Atlanta (ATL), for instance, is notoriously awful with bloated lines that mean heading straight for TSA PreCheck is almost always a better yet. But even at my home airport of Minneapolis-St. Paul (MSP), CLEAR lines that were once short have become lengthy on a regular basis, too.

 

The Growing Problems with CLEAR

Americans are traveling in record numbers. And thanks in part to credit cards that cover the entire cost of CLEAR® Plus, more travelers are flooding into CLEAR lanes than the company can handle. 

As American Express has added money-saving credits to more of its credit cards, CLEAR®'s enrollment has exploded – especially in markets where travelers are more likely to have these cards. As cardholders have signed up for CLEAR in droves – might as well if it's “free,” right? – it has added fuel to the fire, overwhelming the company's capacity to keep queues moving smoothly. 

The service was designed to speed up security by replacing manual ID checks at TSA queues with fingerprint and iris scan verification, yet CLEAR members have been increasingly subjected to random ID checks over the last year. And while a big upgrade to facial recognition technology will supposedly speed things up, that hasn't happened yet … in fact, the looming changeover has arguably made things worse by requiring members to re-verify their identity in line. 

Add it all up, and it feels like a coin flip as to whether you speed through security using CLEAR … or wind up standing in an even longer line, watching travelers with PreCheck alone speed pass you. Those are unacceptable odds for a service that costs close to $200 a year.

The company's CEO, Caryn Seidman-Becker, admitted it herself earlier this year, telling investors: “In 2023, we did not consistently deliver the in-lane experience that our members have come to expect.”

Read more: What Went Wrong with CLEAR (& When Will It Get Better)?

 

Bottom Line

Is CLEAR® Plus worth it for everyone? Hardly. It depends on how much you travel – and how much you'd wind up actually paying for it.

At $199 a year, it's hard to make sense of paying for CLEAR Plus for the occasional traveler. Flying five-plus times a year, you might be able to justify the cost. And of course, signing up using credits from the Amex Platinum or Amex Green Card makes it free/

But the sheer amount of travelers using CLEAR Plus these days combined with looming changes to the program spell trouble for CLEAR®. And that could change the math on whether it's worth signing up or not.

 

Lead image courtesy to Career Employer