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Machine-readable passport

A machine-readable passport (MRP) is a machine-readable travel document (MRTD) with the data on the identity page encoded in optical character recognition format. Many countries began to issue machine-readable travel documents in the 1980s.

Most travel passports worldwide are MRPs. They are standardized by the ICAO Document 9303 (endorsed by the International Organization for Standardization and the International Electrotechnical Commission as ISO/IEC 7501-1) and have a special machine-readable zone (MRZ), which is usually at the bottom of the identity page at the beginning of a passport. The ICAO 9303 describes three types of documents corresponding to the ISO/IEC 7810 sizes:

  • "Type 3" is typical of passport booklets. The MRZ consists of 2 lines × 44 characters.
  • "Type 2" is relatively rare with 2 lines × 36 characters.
  • "Type 1" is of a credit card-size with 3 lines × 30 characters.

The fixed format allows specification of document type, name, document number, nationality, date of birth, sex, and document expiration date. All these fields are required on a passport. There is room for optional, often country-dependent, supplementary information. There are also two sizes of machine-readable visas similarly defined.

Computers with a camera and suitable software can directly read the information on machine-readable passports. This enables faster processing of arriving passengers by immigration officials, and greater accuracy than manually-read passports, as well as faster data entry, more data to be read and better data matching against immigration databases and watchlists.

Apart from optically readable information, many passports contain an RFID chip which enables computers to read a higher amount of information, for example a photo of the bearer. These passports are called biometric passports and are also described by ICAO 9303.

Format edit

Passport booklets edit

 
Page of a passport with machine-readable zone in the red oval (US passport pictured)

Passport booklets have an identity page containing the identity data. This page is in the TD3 size of 125 × 88 mm (4.92 × 3.46 in).

The data of the machine-readable zone consists of two rows of 44 characters each. The only characters used are A–Z, 0–9 and the filler character <.

First row
Positions Length Characters Meaning
1 1 alpha P, indicating a passport
2 1 alpha+< Type (for countries that distinguish between different types of passports)
3–5 3 alpha Issuing country or organization (ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 code with modifications)
6–44 39 alpha+< Surname, followed by two filler characters, followed by given names. Given names are separated by single filler characters. Some countries do not differentiate between surname and given name (i.e. no two filler characters), such as the Malaysian Passport

In the name field, spaces, hyphens and other punctuation are represented by <, except apostrophes, which are skipped. If the names are too long, names are abbreviated to their most significant parts. In that case, the last position must contain an alphabetic character to indicate possible truncation, and if there is a given name, the two fillers and at least one character of it must be included.

Second row
Positions Length Characters Meaning
1–9 9 alpha+num+< Passport number
10 1 numeric Check digit over digits 1–9
11–13 3 alpha+< Nationality or Citizenship (ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 code with modifications)
14–19 6 numeric Date of birth (YYMMDD)
20 1 numeric Check digit over digits 14–19
21 1 alpha+< Sex (M, F or < for male, female or unspecified)
22–27 6 numeric Expiration date of passport (YYMMDD)
28 1 numeric Check digit over digits 22–27
29–42 14 alpha+num+< Personal number (may be used by the issuing country as it desires)
43 1 numeric+< Check digit over digits 29–42 (may be < if all characters are <)
44 1 numeric Check digit over digits 1–10, 14–20, and 22–43

Official travel documents edit

 
Hungarian identity card (2016)

Smaller documents such as identity and passport cards are usually in the TD1 size, which is 85.6 × 54.0 mm (3.37 × 2.13 in), the same size as credit cards. The data of the machine-readable zone in a TD1 size card consists of three rows of 30 characters each. The only characters used are A–Z, 0–9 and the filler character <.

Some official travel documents are in the larger TD2 size, 105.0 × 74.0 (4.13 × 2.91 in). They have a layout of the MRZ with two rows of 36 characters each, similar to the TD3 format, but with 31 characters for the name, 7 for the personal number and one less check digit. Yet some official travel documents are in the booklet format with a TD3 identity page.

The format of the first row for TD1 (credit card size) documents is:

Positions Length Chars Meaning
1 1 alpha I, A or C
2 1 alpha+< Type, This is at the discretion of the issuing state or authority, but 1–2 should be AC for Crew Member Certificates and V is not allowed as 2nd character. ID or I< are typically used for nationally issued ID cards and IP for passport cards.
3–5 3 alpha+< Issuing country or organization (ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 code with modifications)
6–14 9 alpha+num+< Document number
15 1 num+< Check digit over digits 6–14
16–30 15 alpha+num+< Optional

The format of the second row is:

Positions Length Chars Meaning
1–6 6 num Date of birth (YYMMDD)
7 1 num Check digit over digits 1–6
8 1 alpha+< Sex (M, F or < for male, female or unspecified)
9-14 6 num Expiration date of document (YYMMDD)
15 1 num Check digit over digits 9–14
16–18 3 alpha+< Nationality
19–29 11 alpha+num+< Optional1
30 1 num Check digit over digits 6–30 (upper line), 1–7, 9–15, 19–29 (middle line)[1]

1: United States Passport Cards, as of 2011, use this field for the application number that produced the card.[citation needed]

The format of the third row is:

Positions Length Chars Meaning
1–30 30 alpha+< Surname, followed by two filler characters, followed by given names

The format of the first row for TD2[2] (medium size) documents is:

Positions Length Chars Meaning
1 1 alpha I, P, A or C
2 1 alpha+< Type, This is at the discretion of the issuing state or authority, but 1–2 should be AC for Crew Member Certificates and V is not allowed as 2nd character. ID or I< are typically used for nationally issued ID cards and IP for passport cards.
3–5 3 alpha+< Issuing country or organization (ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 code with modifications)
6–36 30 alpha+< Name and surname. If there is more than one name they are separated by single filler. Double filler indicates the end of the primary identifier.

The format of the second row is:

Positions Length Chars Meaning
1–9 9 num Document, ID number
10 1 num Check digit over document number
11-13 3 alpha+< Nationality
14-19 6 num Birthday (YYMMDD)
20 1 num Check digit for birthday
21 1 M or F Gender
22-27 6 num Expiration date (YYMMDD)
28 1 num Check digit for expiration
29-35 7 alpha+num+< Optional data
35 1 num Check digit over optional data
36 1 num Check digit over lower line

Machine-readable visas edit

 
MRV-B Visa MRZ Construction
 
Chinese visa (2019)

The ICAO Document 9303 part 7 describes machine-readable visas. They come in two different formats:

  • MRV-A - 80 mm × 120 mm (3.15 in × 4.72 in), 2 × 44 chars
  • MRV-B - 74 mm × 105 mm (2.91 in × 4.13 in), 2 × 36 chars

The format of the first row of the machine-readable zone is:

Positions Length Chars Meaning
1 1 alpha "V"
2 1 alpha+< Type, this is at the discretion of the issuing state or authority
3–5 3 alpha+< Issuing country or organization (ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 code with modifications)
6–44 39 alpha+< Name in MRV-A
6–36 31 alpha+< Name in MRV-B

The format of the second row is:

Positions Length Chars Meaning
1-9 9 alpha+num+< Passport or Visa number
10 1 num Check digit
11–13 3 alpha+< Nationality
14–19 6 num Date of birth (YYMMDD)
20 1 num Check digit
21 1 alpha+< Sex
22-27 6 num Valid until (YYMMDD)
28 1 num Check digit
29–44 16 alpha+num+< Optional data in MRV-A
29–36 8 alpha+num+< Optional data in MRV-B

Specifications common to all formats edit

The ICAO document 9303 part 3 describes specifications common to all Machine Readable Travel Documents.

The dimensions of the effective reading zone (ERZ) is standardized at 17.0 mm (0.67 in) in height with a margin of 3 mm at the document edges and 3.2 mm at the edge against the visual readable part. This is in order to allow use of a single machine reader.

Only characters A to Z (upper case), 0–9, and left angle bracket (<) are allowed. The typeface is OCR-B.[3]

Nationality / Citizenship codes edit

The nationality codes shall contain the ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 code with modifications for all formats. The check digit calculation method is also the same for all formats.

Some values that are different from ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 are used for the issuing country and nationality field:[4]

Other values, which do not have broad acceptance internationally, include:

Checksum calculation edit

The check digit calculation is as follows: each position is assigned a value; for the digits 0 to 9 this is the value of the digits, for the letters A to Z this is 10 to 35, for the filler < this is 0. The value of each position is then multiplied by its weight; the weight of the first position is 7, of the second it is 3, and of the third it is 1, and after that the weights repeat 7, 3, 1, and so on. All values are added together and the remainder of the final value divided by 10 is the check digit.

Names edit

Due to technical limits, characters inside the Machine Readable Zone (MRZ) need to be restricted to the 10 Arabic numerals, the 26 capital Latin letters A through Z, and the filler character <.

Apostrophes and similar punctuation marks have to be omitted, but hyphens and spaces should be replaced by an opening angle bracket. Diacritical marks are not permitted in the MRZ. Even though they may be useful to distinguish names, the use of diacritical marks in the MRZ could confuse machine-reading equipment.

Section 6 of the 9303 part 3 document specifies transliteration of letters outside the A–Z range. It recommends that diacritical marks on Latin letters A-Z are simply omitted (ç → C, ð → D, ê → E, ñ → N etc.), but it allows the following transliterations:

  • åAA
  • äAE
  • ðDH
  • ij (Dutch letter; capital form: IJ, the J as part of the ligature being capitalized, too)→ IJ
  • öOE
  • üUE or UXX
  • ñNXX (allowed[5] but Spanish uses U and N for ü and ñ)

The following transliterations are mandatory:

In Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Hungary and Scandinavia it is standard to use the Å→AA, Ä or Æ→AE, Ö or Ø→OE, Ü→UE, and ß→SS mappings, so Müller becomes MUELLER, Gößmann becomes GOESSMANN, and Hämäläinen becomes HAEMAELAEINEN. ð, ñ and ü occur in Iceland and Spain, but they write them as D, N and U.

Austrian passports may (but do not always) contain a trilingual (in German, English, and French) explanation of the German umlauts and ß, e.g. 'ß' entspricht / is equal to / correspond à 'SS'.

There are also tables for the transliteration of names written using Cyrillic and Arabic scripts, mainly based on transliteration rules into English. For example, the Russian surname Горбачёв ("Gorbatschow" in German, "Gorbatchov" in French, "Gorbachov" in Spanish, "Gorbaczow" in Polish) is transcribed "Gorbachev" in both English and according to the ICAO 9303 rules.

Russian visas (and Russian internal passports since 2011) have a different transliteration of Cyrillic into the machine-readable zone. As an example, the letter "ч" is usually transcribed as "ch" in Russian travel documents, however, Russian visas and internal passports use "3" in the machine-readable zone instead. Another example is "Alexei" (travel passport) → "Алексей" (Cyrillic version) → "ALEKSEQ" (machine readable version in an internal document). This makes it easier to transliterate the name back to Cyrillic.

First and given names edit

For airline tickets, visas and more, the advice is to only use the first name written in the passport. This is a problem for people who use their second name (as defined by the order in the passport) as their main name in daily speech. It is common, for example in Scandinavia, that the second or even third name is the one defined for daily usage: for example, the actor Hugh Laurie, whose full name is James Hugh Calum Laurie. Swedish travel agents usually book people using the first and daily name if the first one is not their main name, despite advice to use only the first name. If this is too long, the spelling in the MRZ could be used.

For people using a variant of their first name in daily speech, for example the former US president Bill Clinton whose full name is William Jefferson Clinton, the advice is to spell their name as in the passport.

In Scandinavian legislation, middle name is a name placed between given and surname, and is usually a family name. Such names are written as extra surname in the passports. People have been stranded at airports since they entered this extra family name in the "middle name" field in airline booking form, which in English speaking tradition is a given name.

Chinese, Japanese, Korean and Hungarian names might pose a challenge too, since the family name is normally written first. Tickets should use given name and surname as indicated in passports.

This name issue is also an issue for post-Brexit EU women under the Brexit settled status (they have two family names, a birth and marriage name, but only the birth name was used by the passport MRZ and therefore used in the settlement application, although they have been using the married name in UK population register).[further explanation needed][6]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Doc 9303: Machine Readable Travel Documents, Part 3: Specifications Common to all MRTDs (PDF) (Eighth ed.). International Civil Aviation Organization. 2015. ISBN 978-92-9249-792-7. Retrieved 2016-03-03.
  2. ^ "MRZ formats — ultimateMRZ 2.9.0 documentation".
  3. ^ Doc 9303: Machine Readable Travel Documents, Part 3: Specifications Common to all MRTDs (PDF) (Seventh ed.). International Civil Aviation Organization. 2015. p. 25. ISBN 978-92-9249-792-7. Retrieved 2016-03-03.
  4. ^ Doc9303 Machine Readable Travel Documents Part3 Seventh Edition, 2015
  5. ^ https://www.icao.int/Meetings/TAG-MRTD/TagMrtd22/TAG-MRTD-22_WP03-rev.pdf
  6. ^ "Brexit: EU women fear losing jobs and housing over UK computer glitch". the Guardian. 2021-06-26. Retrieved 2021-08-15.

External links edit

  • A description of the Machine Readable Passport Zone
  • ICAO Standards for e-Passports: Machine Readable Travel Documents

machine, readable, passport, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, machine, readable, passport, machine, readable, travel, document, mrtd, with, data, identity, page, encoded, optical, character, recognition, format, many, countries, began, issue, mach. MRZ redirects here For other uses see MRZ disambiguation A machine readable passport MRP is a machine readable travel document MRTD with the data on the identity page encoded in optical character recognition format Many countries began to issue machine readable travel documents in the 1980s Most travel passports worldwide are MRPs They are standardized by the ICAO Document 9303 endorsed by the International Organization for Standardization and the International Electrotechnical Commission as ISO IEC 7501 1 and have a special machine readable zone MRZ which is usually at the bottom of the identity page at the beginning of a passport The ICAO 9303 describes three types of documents corresponding to the ISO IEC 7810 sizes Type 3 is typical of passport booklets The MRZ consists of 2 lines 44 characters Type 2 is relatively rare with 2 lines 36 characters Type 1 is of a credit card size with 3 lines 30 characters The fixed format allows specification of document type name document number nationality date of birth sex and document expiration date All these fields are required on a passport There is room for optional often country dependent supplementary information There are also two sizes of machine readable visas similarly defined Computers with a camera and suitable software can directly read the information on machine readable passports This enables faster processing of arriving passengers by immigration officials and greater accuracy than manually read passports as well as faster data entry more data to be read and better data matching against immigration databases and watchlists Apart from optically readable information many passports contain an RFID chip which enables computers to read a higher amount of information for example a photo of the bearer These passports are called biometric passports and are also described by ICAO 9303 Contents 1 Format 1 1 Passport booklets 1 2 Official travel documents 1 3 Machine readable visas 2 Specifications common to all formats 2 1 Nationality Citizenship codes 2 2 Checksum calculation 2 3 Names 2 4 First and given names 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksFormat editPassport booklets edit nbsp Page of a passport with machine readable zone in the red oval US passport pictured Passport booklets have an identity page containing the identity data This page is in the TD3 size of 125 88 mm 4 92 3 46 in The data of the machine readable zone consists of two rows of 44 characters each The only characters used are A Z 0 9 and the filler character lt First row Positions Length Characters Meaning1 1 alpha P indicating a passport2 1 alpha lt Type for countries that distinguish between different types of passports 3 5 3 alpha Issuing country or organization ISO 3166 1 alpha 3 code with modifications 6 44 39 alpha lt Surname followed by two filler characters followed by given names Given names are separated by single filler characters Some countries do not differentiate between surname and given name i e no two filler characters such as the Malaysian PassportIn the name field spaces hyphens and other punctuation are represented by lt except apostrophes which are skipped If the names are too long names are abbreviated to their most significant parts In that case the last position must contain an alphabetic character to indicate possible truncation and if there is a given name the two fillers and at least one character of it must be included Second row Positions Length Characters Meaning1 9 9 alpha num lt Passport number10 1 numeric Check digit over digits 1 911 13 3 alpha lt Nationality or Citizenship ISO 3166 1 alpha 3 code with modifications 14 19 6 numeric Date of birth YYMMDD 20 1 numeric Check digit over digits 14 1921 1 alpha lt Sex M F or lt for male female or unspecified 22 27 6 numeric Expiration date of passport YYMMDD 28 1 numeric Check digit over digits 22 2729 42 14 alpha num lt Personal number may be used by the issuing country as it desires 43 1 numeric lt Check digit over digits 29 42 may be lt if all characters are lt 44 1 numeric Check digit over digits 1 10 14 20 and 22 43Official travel documents edit nbsp Hungarian identity card 2016 Smaller documents such as identity and passport cards are usually in the TD1 size which is 85 6 54 0 mm 3 37 2 13 in the same size as credit cards The data of the machine readable zone in a TD1 size card consists of three rows of 30 characters each The only characters used are A Z 0 9 and the filler character lt Some official travel documents are in the larger TD2 size 105 0 74 0 4 13 2 91 in They have a layout of the MRZ with two rows of 36 characters each similar to the TD3 format but with 31 characters for the name 7 for the personal number and one less check digit Yet some official travel documents are in the booklet format with a TD3 identity page The format of the first row for TD1 credit card size documents is Positions Length Chars Meaning1 1 alpha I A or C2 1 alpha lt Type This is at the discretion of the issuing state or authority but 1 2 should be AC for Crew Member Certificates and V is not allowed as 2nd character ID or I lt are typically used for nationally issued ID cards and IP for passport cards 3 5 3 alpha lt Issuing country or organization ISO 3166 1 alpha 3 code with modifications 6 14 9 alpha num lt Document number15 1 num lt Check digit over digits 6 1416 30 15 alpha num lt OptionalThe format of the second row is Positions Length Chars Meaning1 6 6 num Date of birth YYMMDD 7 1 num Check digit over digits 1 68 1 alpha lt Sex M F or lt for male female or unspecified 9 14 6 num Expiration date of document YYMMDD 15 1 num Check digit over digits 9 1416 18 3 alpha lt Nationality19 29 11 alpha num lt Optional130 1 num Check digit over digits 6 30 upper line 1 7 9 15 19 29 middle line 1 1 United States Passport Cards as of 2011 use this field for the application number that produced the card citation needed The format of the third row is Positions Length Chars Meaning1 30 30 alpha lt Surname followed by two filler characters followed by given namesThe format of the first row for TD2 2 medium size documents is Positions Length Chars Meaning1 1 alpha I P A or C2 1 alpha lt Type This is at the discretion of the issuing state or authority but 1 2 should be AC for Crew Member Certificates and V is not allowed as 2nd character ID or I lt are typically used for nationally issued ID cards and IP for passport cards 3 5 3 alpha lt Issuing country or organization ISO 3166 1 alpha 3 code with modifications 6 36 30 alpha lt Name and surname If there is more than one name they are separated by single filler Double filler indicates the end of the primary identifier The format of the second row is Positions Length Chars Meaning1 9 9 num Document ID number10 1 num Check digit over document number11 13 3 alpha lt Nationality14 19 6 num Birthday YYMMDD 20 1 num Check digit for birthday21 1 M or F Gender22 27 6 num Expiration date YYMMDD 28 1 num Check digit for expiration29 35 7 alpha num lt Optional data35 1 num Check digit over optional data36 1 num Check digit over lower lineMachine readable visas edit nbsp MRV B Visa MRZ Construction nbsp Chinese visa 2019 The ICAO Document 9303 part 7 describes machine readable visas They come in two different formats MRV A 80 mm 120 mm 3 15 in 4 72 in 2 44 chars MRV B 74 mm 105 mm 2 91 in 4 13 in 2 36 charsThe format of the first row of the machine readable zone is Positions Length Chars Meaning1 1 alpha V 2 1 alpha lt Type this is at the discretion of the issuing state or authority3 5 3 alpha lt Issuing country or organization ISO 3166 1 alpha 3 code with modifications 6 44 39 alpha lt Name in MRV A6 36 31 alpha lt Name in MRV BThe format of the second row is Positions Length Chars Meaning1 9 9 alpha num lt Passport or Visa number10 1 num Check digit11 13 3 alpha lt Nationality14 19 6 num Date of birth YYMMDD 20 1 num Check digit21 1 alpha lt Sex22 27 6 num Valid until YYMMDD 28 1 num Check digit29 44 16 alpha num lt Optional data in MRV A29 36 8 alpha num lt Optional data in MRV BSpecifications common to all formats editThe ICAO document 9303 part 3 describes specifications common to all Machine Readable Travel Documents The dimensions of the effective reading zone ERZ is standardized at 17 0 mm 0 67 in in height with a margin of 3 mm at the document edges and 3 2 mm at the edge against the visual readable part This is in order to allow use of a single machine reader Only characters A to Z upper case 0 9 and left angle bracket lt are allowed The typeface is OCR B 3 Nationality Citizenship codes edit The nationality codes shall contain the ISO 3166 1 alpha 3 code with modifications for all formats The check digit calculation method is also the same for all formats Some values that are different from ISO 3166 1 alpha 3 are used for the issuing country and nationality field 4 BAH Bahamas erroneously used in some early Bahamian passports corrected to BHS D Germany EUE European Union GBD British Overseas Territories Citizen BOTC note the country code of the overseas territory is used to indicate issuing authority and nationality of BOTC formerly British Dependent Territories Citizen BDTC GBN British National Overseas GBO British Overseas Citizen GBP British Protected Person GBS British Subject UNA specialized agency of the United Nations UNK Resident of Kosovo to whom a travel document has been issued by the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo UNMIK UNO United Nations organization XBA African Development Bank XIM African Export Import Bank XCC Caribbean Community or one of its emissaries XCO Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa XEC Economic Community of West African States XPO International Criminal Police Organization XOM Sovereign Military Order of Malta XXA Stateless person as per the 1954 Convention Relating to the Status of Stateless Persons XXB Refugee as per the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees XXC Refugee other than defined above XXX Unspecified nationality ZIM Zimbabwe erroneously used in some early Zimbabwean passports corrected to ZWE Other values which do not have broad acceptance internationally include NSK Neue Slowenische Kunst passport basically not accepted at all as passport RKS Kosovo WSA World Service Authority World Passport basically not accepted at all as passport XCT Turkish Republic of Northern CyprusChecksum calculation edit The check digit calculation is as follows each position is assigned a value for the digits 0 to 9 this is the value of the digits for the letters A to Z this is 10 to 35 for the filler lt this is 0 The value of each position is then multiplied by its weight the weight of the first position is 7 of the second it is 3 and of the third it is 1 and after that the weights repeat 7 3 1 and so on All values are added together and the remainder of the final value divided by 10 is the check digit Names edit Due to technical limits characters inside the Machine Readable Zone MRZ need to be restricted to the 10 Arabic numerals the 26 capital Latin letters A through Z and the filler character lt Apostrophes and similar punctuation marks have to be omitted but hyphens and spaces should be replaced by an opening angle bracket Diacritical marks are not permitted in the MRZ Even though they may be useful to distinguish names the use of diacritical marks in the MRZ could confuse machine reading equipment Section 6 of the 9303 part 3 document specifies transliteration of letters outside the A Z range It recommends that diacritical marks on Latin letters A Z are simply omitted c C d D e E n N etc but it allows the following transliterations a AA a AE d DH ij Dutch letter capital form IJ the J as part of the ligature being capitalized too IJ o OE u UE or UXX n NXX allowed 5 but Spanish uses U and N for u and n The following transliterations are mandatory ae AE o œ OE ss SS th THIn Germany Austria Switzerland Hungary and Scandinavia it is standard to use the A AA A or AE AE O or O OE U UE and ss SS mappings so Muller becomes MUELLER Gossmann becomes GOESSMANN and Hamalainen becomes HAEMAELAEINEN d n and u occur in Iceland and Spain but they write them as D N and U Austrian passports may but do not always contain a trilingual in German English and French explanation of the German umlauts and ss e g ss entspricht is equal to correspond a SS There are also tables for the transliteration of names written using Cyrillic and Arabic scripts mainly based on transliteration rules into English For example the Russian surname Gorbachyov Gorbatschow in German Gorbatchov in French Gorbachov in Spanish Gorbaczow in Polish is transcribed Gorbachev in both English and according to the ICAO 9303 rules Russian visas and Russian internal passports since 2011 have a different transliteration of Cyrillic into the machine readable zone As an example the letter ch is usually transcribed as ch in Russian travel documents however Russian visas and internal passports use 3 in the machine readable zone instead Another example is Alexei travel passport Aleksej Cyrillic version ALEKSEQ machine readable version in an internal document This makes it easier to transliterate the name back to Cyrillic First and given names edit For airline tickets visas and more the advice is to only use the first name written in the passport This is a problem for people who use their second name as defined by the order in the passport as their main name in daily speech It is common for example in Scandinavia that the second or even third name is the one defined for daily usage for example the actor Hugh Laurie whose full name is James Hugh Calum Laurie Swedish travel agents usually book people using the first and daily name if the first one is not their main name despite advice to use only the first name If this is too long the spelling in the MRZ could be used For people using a variant of their first name in daily speech for example the former US president Bill Clinton whose full name is William Jefferson Clinton the advice is to spell their name as in the passport In Scandinavian legislation middle name is a name placed between given and surname and is usually a family name Such names are written as extra surname in the passports People have been stranded at airports since they entered this extra family name in the middle name field in airline booking form which in English speaking tradition is a given name Chinese Japanese Korean and Hungarian names might pose a challenge too since the family name is normally written first Tickets should use given name and surname as indicated in passports This name issue is also an issue for post Brexit EU women under the Brexit settled status they have two family names a birth and marriage name but only the birth name was used by the passport MRZ and therefore used in the settlement application although they have been using the married name in UK population register further explanation needed 6 See also editBasic Access Control Biometric passport Card standards ISO IEC 14443 Proximity card standard List of national identity card policies by country Identity document Identity Cards Act 2006 of the United Kingdom Universal Electronic CardReferences edit Doc 9303 Machine Readable Travel Documents Part 3 Specifications Common to all MRTDs PDF Eighth ed International Civil Aviation Organization 2015 ISBN 978 92 9249 792 7 Retrieved 2016 03 03 MRZ formats ultimateMRZ 2 9 0 documentation Doc 9303 Machine Readable Travel Documents Part 3 Specifications Common to all MRTDs PDF Seventh ed International Civil Aviation Organization 2015 p 25 ISBN 978 92 9249 792 7 Retrieved 2016 03 03 Doc9303 Machine Readable Travel Documents Part3 Seventh Edition 2015 https www icao int Meetings TAG MRTD TagMrtd22 TAG MRTD 22 WP03 rev pdf Brexit EU women fear losing jobs and housing over UK computer glitch the Guardian 2021 06 26 Retrieved 2021 08 15 External links editA description of the Machine Readable Passport Zone MRTD Machine Readable Travel Document Home ICAO ICAO Standards for e Passports Machine Readable Travel Documents Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Machine readable passport amp oldid 1180937175, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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