The Numbers Are In: Nearly 1 Million Passengers Transit TSA Checkpoints On Average Daily

Let’s get straight to the point…some of the links on this site pay 1TattedPassport a referral bonus for anyone that is approved. For our complete advertising policy and details about our partners, please click HERE. Although using the links are completely optional, we are eternally grateful when you do.

Over the course of the pandemic, I’ve written several times about the daily number of passengers transiting domestically though TSA check points and compared the numbers to the daily amount of passengers that were traveling domestically the previous year (2019).

In mid-April we saw the number of daily passengers passing through TSA check points bottom out at ~87,534 passengers in a single day. However, we have seen a steady increase in flyers week after week despite increasing COVID cases throughout the United States.

Given the increase in cases domestically, college campuses shuttering, and US states returning to previous restriction levels. Would this affect the number of flying passengers?

THE REAL NUMBERS

TSA’s Public Affairs spokesperson, Lisa Farbstein, updates her Twitter account (@tsamedia_lisaf) every day with a lot of interesting articles and data. But perhaps the most interesting data she shares is on how many people are passing through TSA checkpoints.

Note: TSA also updates these numbers on their website every morning at 9AM. If you don’t have twitter, you can see the numbers HERE.

In addition to the current daily numbers, she provides a comparison of how many people passed through TSA checkpoints during the same date the previous year.

Let’s take a look at the numbers over the past 5 days…

DATE20202019% of passengers
flying (2020 vs 2019)
10/12/20958,4402,616,771~37%
10/11/20984,2342,555,333~39%
10/10/20769,8682,074,718~37%
10/09/20968,5452,688,032~36%
10/08/20936,9152,605,291~36%

FINAL STAMP

Personally, I find the ~1 MILLION daily passengers transiting TSA checkpoints to be fascinating (and surprising)

Although ~1,000,000 is far below the number of passengers that airlines were seeing a year ago, I think it’s fair to say that nearly 40% of passengers have returned. This is despite cases of COVID-19 steadily increasing in every state, several US states adding quarantine lists, many airlines not blocking middle seats, thousands of TSA agents testing positive for the virus, college campuses shuttering, sport games being cancelled, scientific studies proving that reinfection does occur, and several current US administrators having contracting it. Which makes again ask…

How are you determining when it’s the right time to travel?

Are you surprised by these numbers? Do you feel it’s “safe” to travel? Have you flown recently or plan to fly again soon?

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s