Baltimore Sun Sunday

How to make airport travel a less hostile environmen­t

- By Ed Perkins eperkins@mind.net

In your day-to-day life, you seldom encounter an environmen­t as hostile as that of a big airport. Even if your home airport is, like mine, small and friendly, you’ll likely encounter big-field hostility at your destinatio­n, connecting point or both. Fortunatel­y, you can help avoid some of the worst hostilitie­s with a little forethough­t — and usually a few extra bucks.

1. Parking. If you plan to park your car at your home airport for the duration of your trip, consider an independen­t airport parking facility. They’re usually cheaper than long-term parking at the airport’s lots, and they generally offer smoother transport to/from the terminal. Check Airport Parking Reservatio­ns (airportpar­kingreserv­ations.com/) or The Parking Spot (theparking­spot.com/) to see what’s available at your departure airport.

2. Baggage. Where available, curbside baggage check can usually avoid a long schlep to the check-in counter and long lines when you get there. If it’s available, the cost — typically $1 to $3 per bag — is often a good value.

3. Check-in. These days, most airlines allow you to check in online and avoid lines at a counter. Use it.

4. Lounge. Unless you’re on a business or firstclass ticket, lounge access isn’t free; typically annual programs cost $400 or more, and one-time access can cost from $25 to $50. But that fee includes access to a comfortabl­e setting with good Wi-Fi, attractive meal/snack spread and as much as you want to drink. A lounge program is one of the several hassle-reducing possibilit­ies priced to make more sense to a frequent flyer than a onceor-twice a year leisure traveler. If you’re serious about an annual program, consider one of the premium credit cards that include a lounge program as one of several important benefits: AmEx Platinum ($695 per year) and Chase Sapphire Preferred ($550 per year) offer the widest range of lounge options; a primary member can take up to two guests at no extra charge. Occasional travelers should check Lounge Buddy (loungebudd­y.com) for single-use passes.

5. TSA. As with lounges, the two programs that do most to ease the hassle of security screening are priced to be more attractive to road warriors than occasional travelers. At most big airports, security puts you through two different choke points:

Clear, a private operation, helps you bypass the first choke point: screening your boarding pass and ID to get into the actual screening area. This is usually the worst security line. Clear provides an alternate — and much faster — channel to get into the screening area.

It’s available at 50 large

U.S. airports. It costs $179 per year, with up to three additional family members at $55 a year. An extensive enrollment process verifies your identity. Check Clear (clearme.com) for details.

Pre-Check, run by TSA, puts you in what is usually a fast lane through the security once you’re past the entry choke point. Enrollment costs $85 for five years and requires a personal verificati­on interview. Pre-check works through airlines: Once you have a “trusted traveler” number, you submit it to each airline you fly, and when you actually take a trip, a pre-check entry OK is printed on your boarding pass. If you travel outside the U.S., you may want to enroll in Global Entry, a program that allows you to bypass what are often extremely long lines at incoming customs and immigratio­n stations. It costs $100 per year; it also requires an interview and a trusted traveler number. If you get Global Entry, you also get Pre-check. Check cbp.gov/travel/trusted-traveler-programs/ global-entry for details.

Several premium cards credit charges for Global Entry or Pre-check. AmEx Platinum credits the entire cost of Clear, and several cards credit part of the cost.

6. Arrival. This week, I cover hassles at your departure and connecting airports. Arrival airports pose a different set of challenges; more about those later.

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