ChatterBank1 min ago
Foreign vacationers drinking in America?
I'm from Ireland. I know someone who is going to America next week. Apparently it is very difficult to get served drink in a bar if you do not have ID. What sort of ID can he get that will mean he won't have to worry about being turned away from pubs? He is only going for two weeks and doesn't want to take his passport out with him every time he goes for a drink. By the way there are 4 men going if that affects matters.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Where did he hear that? I Googled "Garda ID" and it looks pretty official to me. It also seems to indicate that it's mostly for folks between 18-21. He is aware that the legal drinking age here is 21?
I am not aware of any way to get a temporary ID while here. I guess I don't see why showing the passport is such a big deal.
I am not aware of any way to get a temporary ID while here. I guess I don't see why showing the passport is such a big deal.
Panic, I don't want to fuel a sterotype here but yes he most likely does. He's just worried about someone trying to steal the passport as they are worth quite a bit on the black market if you know what to do with it. And also he is worried about possibly losing it.
dr b I don't know the details but he reckons he was told the Garda ID is no good. I know a guy who was in America a few years ago and we always have a laugh about the fact he was asked for ID in a bar. Because he was forty at the time, but he looked fifty.
dr b I don't know the details but he reckons he was told the Garda ID is no good. I know a guy who was in America a few years ago and we always have a laugh about the fact he was asked for ID in a bar. Because he was forty at the time, but he looked fifty.
The only requirement for an establishment to ask for an ID here in the U.S. is to prove age. If you appear to be at or near 18 they may ask for you to provide a "government issued document that has a photo, birthdate, and a date of expiration". A passport certainly fulfills those requirements. One additional ID seen here in the U.S. is a birth certificate, which has only the holder's birthdate... but still acceptable. Most people don't carry their birth certificate around with them, however.
If the imbiber is obviously above the minimum age no request for ID is made...
If the imbiber is obviously above the minimum age no request for ID is made...
Trouble is the bar staff may well only have ever seen an American ID and be suspicious of anything else, valid as it may be. They may even have been told (by their management) US drivers licence only. There isn't any way round it - your friend is not eligible for any US ID and must rely on the good sense of the bar staff. Some (like the ones that didn't like the Garda ID - who I'm sure are a minority) may not have that good sense.
I have been living in the United States for the past 13 months and have always been asked for ID when buying alcohol, whether in a pub, bar or even a supermarket. The countless number of times I have been asked for ID, I have produced my UK driving licence, which has never caused any problems. There is definitely no need to carry your passport with you 24/7.
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