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Home » Travel Technology » This New TSA Wait Time Tool Is Better Than The MyTSA App
Travel Technology

This New TSA Wait Time Tool Is Better Than The MyTSA App

Matthew Klint Posted onMarch 23, 2026March 23, 2026 8 Comments

TSA lines have been wildly unpredictable lately, and finding reliable, real-time data has become more important than ever. But a new tool helps to track TSA wait times and is far easier to use than the MyTSA ap.

This New TSA Wait Time Tool Is Better Than The MyTSA App

My friend and colleague Zach Griff, who writes From The Tray Table, has built a very useful new tool that tracks TSA wait times at select airports, including checkpoint-specific data and even PreCheck where available.

Instead of showing airport-wide estimates like the official MyTSA app, Zach’s tool pulls data directly from airports and breaks it down by checkpoint, giving you a much clearer picture of what’s actually happening on the ground.

If you’ve ever arrived at an airport only to find one checkpoint empty and another backed up for an hour, you know exactly why this is a big deal.

The tracker shows:

  • Checkpoint-by-checkpoint wait times (where available)
  • PreCheck and CLEAR lanes at some airports
  • Live data pulled directly from airport feeds
The Takeoff Nap

That’s something the MyTSA app has never done particularly well, especially right now when its data is not always up to date during the current disruption.

For me, this is also just more practical. I have my laptop open most of the day anyway, so being able to keep this in a browser tab is actually more useful than pulling out my phone and opening the TSA app.

There Are Some Limitations…

As good as this tool is, it’s not perfect. And to Zach’s credit, he’s very upfront about that.

First, it only works at airports that actually publish live checkpoint data.

Right now, that includes about 19 airports, including major airports like:

  • New York (JFK, LGA)
  • Los Angeles (LAX)
  • Dallas (DFW)
  • Miami (MIA)

Notably missing are some major airports like Chicago O’Hare (ORD) and Seattle (SEA), which simply do not provide the underlying data needed to power the tool.

Second, not every checkpoint is tracked even at supported airports. If an airport does not publish data for a specific checkpoint, it will show as “unknown” or unavailable. For example, at LAX the checkpoint time for the Tom Bradley International Terminal is published, but not for the other eight terminals.

That’s not a flaw in the tool…it’s a limitation of the data itself.

I appreciate that no login is required (though you should sign up for his email newsletter…and mine!), it’s free, and it gives you a better sense of what you’re walking into at the airport.

Sadly with the ongoing shutdown, the difference between choosing the right checkpoint and the wrong one can be the difference between a five-minute wait and missing your flight.

CONCLUSION

Zach Griff has built a genuinely useful tool here. It’s not perfect, and it’s limited by the data airports choose to share, but it’s still a big improvement over the MyTSA app, especially if you are using a computer and not a phone.

I hope, probably naively, that we can soon reach a point when the TSA is funded and his tool is no longer as relevant, but for now I’m checking it every time I fly…


top image: TSA

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About Author

Matthew Klint

Matthew is an avid traveler who calls Los Angeles home. Each year he travels more than 200,000 miles by air and has visited more than 135 countries. Working both in the aviation industry and as a travel consultant, Matthew has been featured in major media outlets around the world and uses his Live and Let's Fly blog to share the latest news in the airline industry, commentary on frequent flyer programs, and detailed reports of his worldwide travel.

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8 Comments

  1. Güntürk Üstün Reply
    March 23, 2026 at 4:10 pm

    Zach Griff deserves a sincere bravo.

  2. Antwerp Reply
    March 23, 2026 at 4:20 pm

    Great tool! Love it. But wow, IAH is showing currently an over four hour wait!!!!

  3. 1990 Reply
    March 23, 2026 at 4:28 pm

    IAH … 270 minutes… sweet mother of… at that point, stay home. Sheesh.

  4. Dave102 Reply
    March 23, 2026 at 11:29 pm

    Actually, LAX does publish wait times, but not on a specific page that’s easy to link to (or pull data from). You have to go to the interactive terminal map, then, when you click on each checkpoint, it shows the estimated wait time there. I followed it several days ahead of my departure this morning.

  5. Paul Reply
    March 24, 2026 at 10:17 am

    Sounds like TSA needs to update thier app and incoperate Zachs improvements.

    • Frank Doyle Reply
      March 24, 2026 at 1:21 pm

      The problem is the official app wont’ work if the funding is cut…99% of the time the only time I worry about delays is when there is a shutdown making the TSA app irrelevant.

  6. Gene Reply
    March 24, 2026 at 7:39 pm

    @ Matthew — Pretty sad the government can’t do this (or Google). Google has meta cell phone data that is uses to tell you the wait times everywhere except where it matters.

    • 1990 Reply
      March 24, 2026 at 8:26 pm

      Are we sure we want more surveillance? Oh, who are we kidding… they already know, they just aren’t sharing. (And people freak out about China…psh.)

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