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How I successfully applied for Global Entry to get fast track US immigration

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If you have ever been stuck in the queue at immigration at the US border and wondered if there is a better way, there is.

Called Global Entry, it is a Customs and Border Protection program that allows low-risk travellers to gain pre-approval and enjoy expedited clearance.

Instead of queueing to be seen by a border officer, you use special kiosks (see photo below) to scan your passport and fingerprints, or do facial recognition. You receive a receipt that you hand to an officer as you proceed to the baggage hall.

how to get global entry

As everyone using Global Entry is pre-approved you can generally get through within five minutes or less; you’re not stuck behind someone getting grilled for fifteen minutes. The program’s apt strapline is “What are you waiting for?”

Who is eligible for Global Entry?

The good news is that citizens of 14 countries outside the US, including the UK, are allowed to apply for Global Entry.

I had been meaning to enrol in Global Entry since I joined Head for Points. Unfortunately, by the time I’d settled in the pandemic meant that there was little point until I could travel to the US again. Once the borders reopened in November last year I submitted my application.

I thought it would be interesting to document my experience applying for Global Entry from the UK.

Step 1: UK background check for Global Entry

Before you can apply to US Customs and Border Protection you need a UK police report. You can get this from the gov.uk website here.

The UK background check takes about five minutes to complete. There are nine sections online, most with just a couple of questions. In addition to your passport and identity details, you’ll be asked:

  • Whether you have a criminal record
  • If you’ve ever been restricted on travel to or from the UK
  • If you’ve broken UK customs law or regulations

You have to pay a £42 fee. Fortunately the Government takes Amex!

I submitted my background check on a Friday evening and was surprised to find that I had passed it when I woke the next morning. The official guidance is that it can take up to ten days.

If you are successful you are given a nine-digit check code so that you can register for the next stage with the US authorities. It is impossible to proceed without this code.

US CBP customs border protection

Step 2: US customs check for Global Entry

The US customs check is slightly more involved but should still only take around 15 minutes if you’ve got all the details to hand. The CBP Trusted Traveler website is here. You’ll be asked:

  • Your employment history for the past five years
  • Your address history for the past five years
  • All the countries you’ve visited in the past five years
  • Your citizenship status and how many passports you have, as well as your driving licence

For your address and employment history you need to give an uninterrupted history. I was able to enter ‘student’ for part of the time.

I was prepared for a full-on deep dive but the travel history is surprisingly basic – I was only asked which countries I had travelled to. I didn’t need to give specific dates for travel, unlike for my student visa application a few years back.

You’ll be charged a $100 fee when you submit your application. You will find out if you’ve passed within two weeks.

Step 3: Be patient and wait ….

Don’t expect to get conditional approval within the two week turnaround promised, however. Applications seem to be taking 2+ months. In my case I received conditional approval 104 days after submitting my application.

You should receive an email stating that your application has had a change in status. When you log back into the CBP portal you can check if you have been approved or denied (hopefully approved!).

You will now be able to schedule your interview.

US CBP customs border protection

Step 4: Schedule your interview

Once you have conditional approval you are able to schedule an interview for the next time you arrive in the United States. The CBP has enrollment centres all over the US, including in the arrivals halls at major airports.

You must enrol within 730 days of conditional approval, which gives you plenty of time.

However, trying to schedule an interview isn’t particularly easy. Appointments are booked months in advance – and some airports like New York JFK are fully booked for the foreseeable future.

The good news is that you don’t need an appointment. The CBP offers a service called ‘Enrolment on Arrival’ that lets you walk-in for an interview when arriving at an international terminal or airport.

“Enrollment on Arrival (EoA) is CBP program that allows Global Entry applicants who are conditionally approved to complete their interviews upon arrival into the United States. The EoA program eliminates the need for a Global Entry applicant to schedule an interview at an enrollment center to complete the application process.

When landing in an international terminal follow the signage directing you to CBP officers who can complete your Global Entry interview during your admissibility inspection.”

A full list of Enrolment on Arrival locations is on the CBP website here. It includes a number of international locations with their own US immigration facilities, such as Dublin and Shannon, plus some Canadian, Caribbean and Middle Eastern airports. All of the major US airports are listed.

Step 5: The interview

I chose to enrol on arrival given that scheduled interviews were booked out 6+ months in advance.

My first attempt was at Austin Bergstrom International Airport, on the Virgin Atlantic inaugural flight. There was just one problem: Austin is not set up for international arrivals. There is just one luggage carousel and just a handful of immigration officers.

With British Airways, Virgin Atlantic, Lufthansa, and KLM all arriving within hours of each other it is predictably busy, to the extent that the officers won’t do any Global Entry interviews until they have processed all passengers. Frankly, I didn’t have the time or the inclination to wait an hour or two for all the European flights after ours to arrive and disembark ….

My next opportunity was at New York JFK, arriving from the Norse Atlantic’s inaugural flight from Gatwick. This proved to be much easier.

For your enrolment interview you still have to clear the normal immigration channels first. The good news is that this is hopefully the last time you’ll be stuck in a queue to enter the United States!

Once you are called up by the immigration officer, make sure to tell them you would like to complete your ‘enrolment on arrival’ interview. They will direct you to the right place – in this case, a small office just behind the immigration desks.

They took my passport and told me to sit down. This room also appears to be where they do any further questioning. I saw one guy get an extremely thorough grilling.

After ten minutes or so I was called up by an officer who double checked my application – name, email address and main home address. I had moved since I lodged the application but this wasn’t an issue as he simply updated it. This is important because they send you a physical card for land border crossings in the post – you don’t need the card at airports.

I was given a leaflet outlining my responsibilities as a Global Entry holder, how long it would be valid and a reminder that, since my passport expires before the end of the 5-year validity date, I could come back in 2026 with my new passport. He also handed me my ‘Known Traveler Number’ that I need if I want to use TSA PreCheck domestically.

And that was it. Less of an interview and more of a rubber stamping exercise. I got an email confirmation a couple of hours later and logged in to the portal to see it approved:

Global Entry approved

Conclusion

Now that my Global Entry has been approved I’ll be able to waltz through immigration on future trips to the US. Having spent 2+ hours in queues there before I’m looking forward to a smoother experience.

At approximately £120 in total for a five year duration Global Entry seems well worth it for anyone who travels to the United States on a semi regular basis.

For anyone considering applying, there are a few other details that are worth knowing:

  • If you Global Entry application is rejected, you become ineligible for the ESTA visa waiver scheme. This means you would have to apply for a ‘proper’ visa. This is the biggest risk with the scheme.
  • Travel to certain countries automatically prevents you from getting Global Entry. This includes Iran, Iraq, North Korea, Sudan, Syria, Libya, Somalia and Yemen
  • Children are also eligible to get Global Entry, but have to go through the exact same process as adults.
  • Global Entry comes with TSA PreCheck benefits, which means you get expedited security at US airports when flying with participating airlines – virtually all the major ones.

If you have any questions, please ask in the comments below.

Comments (214)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • DoubleA says:

    Has anyone applied with a period of unemployment in their 5 year employment history – just wondered if this proves problematic?

    & our next US flight lands at 10:30pm in BOS and the website says they’re only open til 8pm so may have to wait until next time!

    • Brit living in Boston says:

      If you land after closing, try getting an appointment at the Tip O’ Neill building. There are two options in Boston – airport and this city centre building, which is where my interview was completed. Good luck.

  • Matty says:

    When I arrived in LAX a few years ago, I went to a kiosk and scanned my passport, did my biometrics etc. and received a receipt, which I handed to an officer. That wasn’t Global Entry but I was through in 5 minutes. Why bother with GE?

    • wolf says:

      Because you happened to be there at a quiet time. Another day that queue would’ve been 3 hours long. You’re mostly paying for a queue jump, and for a non US person it’s the only way to get TSA Pre which is a game changer

    • Rhys says:

      I queued 2 hours in 2019.

      The real difficulty with US immigration is that it’s really hard to predict how it will be. Will you breeze through, or will there be queues? Global Entry avoids the gamble.

      • lumma says:

        There must be a sweet spot where it becomes worth jumping through all these hoops to get Global Entry.

        However, like a lot of comments, I think entering Miami in 2014 was the last time I waited more than even 30 minutes to enter the USA. I did have to deal with s strange line of questioning entering Boston a few years back when it was the first time entering on a new passport – I think you’re basically treat as a first time visitor – when the officer couldn’t get why I’d visit Boston alone and not knowing anyone in the city.

        • JerrySignfield says:

          Yes I got this before about travelling alone, I think its more a case of their script rather than singling out anyone individually

    • SamG says:

      You guys are lucky. I queued for over an hour in January at Houston (off of an absolutely empty flight and I was on an INT-INT connection so even more frustrating!) and I hate to think how many hours I spent when I was travelling for work in the past pre-GE. I usually took late afternoon flights and there is nothing worse than standing in a queue when it’s late there, well midnight in the UK so you’re tired and you’ve got an early start in the morning and just want to be in your hotel

      • Brit living in Boston says:

        Ah yes, reminds me of time landing into a packed Boston airport a few years ago.

        “Americans to the left, immigrant to the right” screamed the customs officer before taking all the Americans through first and leaving us immigrants standing for hours. Happy days!

    • wolf says:

      May 2022 I went straight through GE in 10 seconds at JFK, an acquaintance on the same flight went through the regular line, took him over 2 hours. I was long checked in to my hotel and exploring NY

  • Ian says:

    Just before the pandemic I was being pushed in a wheelchair.

    The passport went in, yet the photo was of the pusher and not me.

    Went through with no issues.

    So the camera couldn’t be checking the person!

  • Matt says:

    I usually get pulled in for questions when trying to enter the US even though I have no criminal record at all or anything like that. Any idea why? Is it because my name may match someone who is on a wanted list or something like that? I assume due to this I won’t get approved for fast track!

    • lumma says:

      Could be a lot of things, travel history, appearance, one way bookings, solo travel

    • Numpty says:

      this happened to a colleague of mine a few years ago, 3 of us doing Jersey – LGW – EDI, and he got stopped and searched at every security. We put it down to him wearing a leather jacket 😉

      But i had a similar experience for a flight to Orlando, stopped and searched at every stage, even the security that was before and then after the monorail between terminals. On that occasion i was technically a solo traveller, and it was a 48 hr trip (was travelling with a crew friend who was working the flight).

  • Paul says:

    I don’t go often enough to justify this and in any event even with a wife and two kids I havn’t spent more than 10 minutes at their machine scanning my passport and taking finger prints. Its around 15 years since I have a horrific wait of over 90 minutes, which would have been much longer but for my daughter’s helpful intervention and throwing up in the queue!!

  • Just Nick says:

    I have just enrolled for the first time last week. Did all the online bits and had an interview on arrival in Portland. Was made to wait 20 minutes while they processed the remainder of the BA flight and then interviewed. This took 10 minutes and was really easy. Interview on arrival seems to be the only viable option now as interview centres are booked up forever it seems.

  • Gareth says:

    Just got back from a trip to Orlando. We did the interview on arrival after being conditionally approved for the last 6 months (bailed on the interview at LAX in April as there was a 2 hour wait after we had already waited 90mins for immigration)

    Interview took 10 mins and was painless. Used it yesterday for the first time when we got to use Tsa pre and it was worth the £100 just to bypass the 40min customs and security queue.

  • Bob Khan says:

    Great programme. But be patient. Took a day to do the UK background check then a week for the US prelim processing notification. Then over four months for the US to process and grant conditional status. I then had to wait nearly two hours at Miami arrivals as they only had one person doing the interviews and four people ahead of me all with something wrong with their paperwork. But was worth it as I sailed through a few days later on my way to Mexico.

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