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Oct 25, 2025

U.S. to Photograph All Departing Non-Citizens Under New Biometric Exit Rule

U.S. to Photograph All Departing Non-Citizens Under New Biometric Exit Rule
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has finalized a regulation that will require border officers to photograph every non-U.S. citizen— including lawful permanent residents—when they leave the country by air, sea or land. The rule, published in the Federal Register on October 24 and publicly reported on October 25, 2025, completes the long-promised biometric entry/exit system first mandated by Congress after the 9/11 attacks. Starting December 26, 2025, cameras will capture travelers’ faces at jet bridges, cruise terminals and land-border booths and automatically match them against passport or visa images held in Department of Homeland Security (DHS) databases.

CBP already collects photographs on arrival at most airports, but exit coverage has remained patchy— limited primarily to select terminals where airlines volunteered gate-area space. By extending the program nationwide and eliminating exemptions for children under 14 and seniors over 79, DHS says it can close longstanding security gaps, better detect identity fraud and more accurately measure visa overstays. Officials estimate the rule will add fewer than 20 seconds to the average departure inspection and will cost carriers little because CBP will supply or finance the camera equipment.

For corporations that routinely move foreign talent in and out of the United States, the change means every non-citizen employee— even green-card holders—will leave a facial record each time they travel. Global mobility managers will need to review assignment agreements and privacy notices, especially for EU employees protected by the General Data Protection Regulation. Companies that stagger rotations through busy holiday periods should also brace for potential congestion during the initial rollout as officers and airlines troubleshoot new scanners.

The privacy community is already signaling litigation. Advocates argue the rule exceeds DHS’s statutory authority over lawful permanent residents and risks racial-bias errors inherent in face-matching algorithms. CBP counters that images will ordinarily be deleted within 12 hours unless flagged for enforcement matches, and says it is pursuing independent accuracy audits. Regardless of court challenges, employers should prepare assignees by updating travel FAQs, reminding staff that refusal to be photographed could trigger secondary inspection, and suggesting extra connection time at land crossings, where infrastructure remains rudimentary.

In the longer run, global companies may see benefits. A consistent exit record will make it easier to prove maintenance of L-1, O-1 or E-2 status and to document brief trips abroad for green-card residence calculations. The data will also feed DHS’s overstays report, which shapes future visa-waiver eligibility— a critical factor for business visitors from Europe, Japan and, newly, Romania.
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