For years, a 1996 law has sat on the books, giving the State Department the power to revoke passports over unpaid child support. For years, enforcement was sporadic. Blocked renewals. Denied applications. But actual revocations of existing passports? Rare.
But that is changing.
The Trump administration is moving to more strictly enforce the 1996 law, announcing it will start revoking the passports of Americans who owe more than $2,500 in child support payments. The move seeks to enforce a decades-old federal law that has largely been used to block new applications — not to take away passports from Americans who already have them.
The question is no longer whether the government can deny you a passport if you owe child support. It can. The question is whether it will revoke the one you already have — and how many Americans will be stranded as a result.

The Law Behind the Move
President Bill Clinton signed the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act in 1996, a law that enacted significant changes to the federal social safety net. Among those changes was a provision that the State Department be notified of people with delinquent child support debts. It said that the Secretary of State “may revoke, restrict, or limit a passport issued previously to such individual.”
The keyword is “may.” Revocation has always been discretionary, not mandatory. Past administrations have used that discretion sparingly, focusing instead on blocking renewals and new applications. The Trump administration is now signaling that it will use the revocation power more aggressively.
In a statement, the State Department said that the agency “is using common sense tools to support American families and strengthen compliance with U.S. laws,” adding that revoking passports “supports the welfare of American children by exacting real consequences for child support delinquency under existing federal law.”
It is unclear how many citizens could have their passports revoked under the policy, or when enforcement would start. The State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The Legal Precedent
The Clinton-era law has not been strictly enforced in the past, and enforcement has usually been focused on blocking those with child support debt from renewing or applying for a new passport. Revoking an existing passport is a more dramatic step — one that has been tested in court.
In the 1998 case of Eudene Eunique, for example, she was denied a passport after the Department of Health and Human Services reported to the State Department that she owed more than $20,000 in child support payments to her ex-husband. Eunique sued in federal court, arguing that the law violated her Fifth Amendment right to travel. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ultimately ruled against her and upheld the law in 2002.
That precedent gives the Trump administration legal cover. The courts have already ruled that the government can restrict travel for those who owe child support. The question is not whether the law is constitutional. It is whether the administration will apply it uniformly and fairly.
The Numbers
The State Department has estimated that the passport rule has led to the collection of more than $382 million in child support payments since its inception. The agency also reported that it was tracking 4.3 million people with outstanding child support debt, and that nearly 100 passport applications are denied every day over child support.
Those numbers are staggering. Four point three million Americans are behind on child support. Nearly 100 passport denials per day. And now, the administration is adding revocation to its toolkit.
There have been several legislative efforts to tighten enforcement of the passport rule. A 2005 law lowered the threshold for enforcement from $5,000 in unpaid child support to $2,500. Another bill in 2007 sought to make passport revocation mandatory rather than discretionary, but that never passed. The Trump administration is now achieving through executive action what Congress would not.
The Real-World Impact
For parents who owe child support, the new policy is a threat to their ability to travel internationally for work, family, or leisure. A passport revocation can disrupt business trips, family emergencies, and even the ability to see children who live abroad.
For the government, the policy is a collection tool. The threat of losing a passport is a powerful incentive to pay. The State Department has already collected $382 million through the program. Revocation could increase that number significantly.
But critics argue that the policy punishes children as much as parents. A parent who cannot travel may lose job opportunities or the ability to visit family. And child support payments, already difficult to collect, may become even harder if delinquent parents face economic hardship as a result of losing their passports.
The Bottom Line
The Trump administration is moving to revoke the passports of Americans who owe more than $2,500 in child support payments, enforcing a 1996 law that has largely been used to block renewals and new applications. The State Department says the policy “exacts real consequences for child support delinquency.” The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the law in 2002 after a challenge claiming it violated the right to travel.
The agency has collected more than $382 million through the passport rule since its inception. It tracks 4.3 million people with outstanding child support debt. Nearly 100 passport applications are denied every day. Now, revocation is on the table.
The question is no longer theoretical: can the government take your passport if you owe child support? The answer is yes. The only question is how many Americans will find out the hard way.




