KEY POINTS
  • Pandemic restrictions that kept officials from being physically present in passport offices have created a backlog of between 1.5 million and 2 million.
  • Having been vaccinated, many more Americans than usual are applying for passports to travel overseas.
  • Those submitting applications now will not get new passports until "well into the fall," said Rachel Arndt, deputy assistant secretary for Passport Services in the State Department's Bureau of Consular Affairs.
People enter the State Department Building in Washington, D.C.

The U.S. State Department is adding staff to cope with a backlog of as many as 2 million passport applications with the Covid-19 pandemic having forced Americans to wait 12 to 18 weeks for the travel documents, the department said on Wednesday.

Rachel Arndt, deputy assistant secretary for Passport Services in the department's Bureau of Consular Affairs, told reporters that having been vaccinated, many more Americans than usual were applying for passports to travel overseas.