FROM THEORY TO REALITY: IATA proves digital travel future is near

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) and its partners report that they have successfully demonstrated that the industry is ready to deliver a fully digital air travel experience. This was achieved in a recent proof-of-concept (PoC) involving two passengers using different digital wallets and travel credentials on a round-trip between Hong Kong and Tokyo.

IATA partnered with Cathay Pacific, Hong Kong International Airport, Narita International Airport, and others in late October for a live test flight, building on an initial PoC carried out in a test environment in 2023.

In the PoC, two travellers used digital wallets containing their digital passport, company ID, and frequent flyer credentials to obtain personalized offers, book a flight, obtain a visa, check their travel documentation, check-in and receive boarding passes. The travellers used biometric identification to manage airport processes in a live environment without repeatedly showing their travel documents.

The successful journey integrated seven verifiable credentials (ePassport copy, live biometric image, visa copy, company ID, frequent flyer membership, order, and boarding pass), two digital wallets and a trust registry to verify issuers.

“A seamless fully digital travel experience powered by digital identity and biometrics has moved from theory to proven reality,” said Nick Careen, IATA’s Sr. VP for Operations, Safety, and Security.

He added, “The challenge now is to make this more efficient travel experience available to all travellers. There is good reason for optimism. With One ID standards already in place and the expansion of Modern Airline Retailing to support digital identity with the highest levels of data privacy and protection, the industry could be ready for this in the very near future.

“Government efforts to adopt digital travel credentials based on ICAO standards are picking up pace. Europe is already planning to issue Digital Identity Wallets to citizens and residents by 2027.”

Details

This successful pilot is a key step towards a seamless digital travel experience, allowing airlines to offer more personalized, secure, and efficient journeys for passengers using digital identity, while ensuring traditional manual processing remains available for those who prefer it or in case backup systems are needed.

IATA says the PoC demonstrated that its Modern Airline Retailing vision and IATA’s One ID Standards can seamlessly improve the customer  experience, from shopping to travel, in harmonization with existing airline/airport processes.

With a traveller’s identity document securely stored in a digital wallet, the traveller can consent to share their biometrics to pass through various airport checkpoints – such as bag drop, security, immigration, and boarding – without needing to show physical documents.

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