Business & Tech

How to Retrieve Items Left at National, Dulles Airport Security Checkpoints

Coats, drivers licenses and more are left behind daily at National, Dulles airport security checkpoints. Here's how to get your items back.

ARLINGTON, VA — Jewelry, coats, toys and drivers' licenses are left behind every day by travelers as they scurry from security checkpoints to their flights at Reagan National Airport, Dulles and other airports around the country, federal authorities say.

Passengers can claim their lost items by contacting the TSA lost and found office at the airport where they departed. To get the contact information for the TSA lost and found office at the airport you departed, visit the TSA website’s Lost and Found page. Type in the airport name or code and the contact information will appear.

Contact information for TSA’s lost and found offices in the Washington/Baltimore region are:

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  • Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA): 703-603-2516
  • Washington Dulles International Airport (IAD): 703-662-2234
  • Baltimore Washington International-Thurgood Marshall Airport (BWI): 410-689-3620

Fliers who left behind/lost items at an airport check-in counter, in the gate area, at restaurants, in shops, in restrooms and in other areas of the airport should contact the airport or the airline.

For items left behind at checkpoints, travelers should contact the TSA lost and found office with specifics about the item including the date of the flight, the terminal that the passenger departed from, a very detailed description of the item, and a name and contact information for follow-up. If the item was turned into a TSA lost and found office, travelers can make an appointment to pick it up or arrange for the item to be shipped home or their destination at the customer’s expense.

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The most common items that people leave behind at TSA checkpoints include belts, glasses, keys, their identification (i.e.: driver’s licenses, passports), cell phones, laptops, jewelry, coats, sweaters, hats, scarves, gloves, neck pillows and umbrellas.

This is two of three full racks of coats that have been left at Reagan National Airport recently.

Here are five tips to ensure travelers don’t leave their items at a checkpoint and to help ensure that lost items will be returned:

  1. After showing the TSA officer their ID and boarding pass, travelers should put their driver’s license back in their wallet or their passport back in a carry-on bag so is isn’t left behind in a bin.
  2. As travelers know, they must empty their pockets before they go through the checkpoint screening equipment. When emptying pockets, travelers should put those items into their carry-on bag so they are less likely to leave something in a bin when they leave the checkpoint.
  3. Don’t remove jewelry unless it is very bulky or if, from previous experience, an individual knows it will alarm the scanner. If a traveler does remove jewelry, it is best to place it directly into a carry-on bag instead of in a bin.
  4. Travelers should put an ID tag on their carry-on bags. Regardless of whether it’s a duffle bag, rolling suitcase, knapsack or tote bag, put an ID tag on it.
  5. If someone is traveling with a laptop, it’s a good idea to tape a business card, return address label, or hand-written name/address/contact information directly onto the laptop. TSA will contact the laptop’s owner to return it if contact information is affixed to the laptop.

This Minnie Mouse doll was found at a Reagan National Airport checkpoint recently.

»PHOTO Reagan National Airport courtesy of MWAA; photos of coats, toy left at National Airports courtesy of TSA

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