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iPhone Driver's Licenses Coming to North Dakota Residents

iPhone users who reside in North Dakota will soon be able to add their driver's licenses and IDs to the Apple Wallet app on the iPhone and Apple Watch. The on-device Digital ID can be used instead of a physical ID at select U.S. airports and for age verification in retail stores, in apps, and on the web.

north dakota id wallet
Apple added North Dakota to its list of states that support driver's licenses in the Wallet app, which means the feature should be launching imminently. Earlier in September, North Dakota's Department of Transportation (DOT) said that mobile IDs would be available to North Dakota drivers "within the next month."

When the feature goes live, North Dakota residents will be able to add a license or state ID to the Apple Wallet app by opening it, tapping on the "+" button, and following the onscreen instructions. Apple's website says that the North Dakota DOT requires residents to pay a $5 fee to obtain a mobile driver's license.

Mobile IDs will be accepted by the TSA at more than 250 airports across the United States. Digital IDs on the ‌iPhone‌ and Apple Watch are not accepted everywhere, and North Dakotans should continue to carry a physical license.

Apple announced digital IDs for the Wallet app back in 2022, and states have been slowly adopting the feature. Arizona, Colorado, Georgia, Maryland, New Mexico, Iowa, California, Hawaii, and Ohio have implemented support, as has Puerto Rico. Mississippi, Illinois, Connecticut, Kentucky, Oklahoma, Utah, and West Virginia are working on support, according to Apple.

Top Rated Comments

27 weeks ago
The 90 people who live there are gonna be so pumped.
Score: 26 Votes (Like | Disagree)
27 weeks ago
More satanic "DIGITAL" ID stuff. No thanks.
Score: 11 Votes (Like | Disagree)
ThunderSkunk Avatar
27 weeks ago
Seems like a great idea, unless you get a cop on a power trip who tells you to hand over your license, then takes your phone back to his car, uses Graykey to open it, rummages through all your data, and fires your 4th amendment right to being secure in your communications & documents on his own personal barbecue. …not that cops abusing their power to stalk, coerce, blackmail or extort citizens has ever been a problem.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
27 weeks ago
These designs are beautiful. I’m curious if Apple has created one for each of the 50 states and U.S. territories to use in pitches with state governments. Too bad we’ll never actually see them unless approved by the individual states.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
kiranmk2 Avatar
27 weeks ago

Seems like a great idea, unless you get a cop on a power trip who tells you to hand over your license, then takes your phone back to his car, uses Graykey to open it, rummages through all your data, and fires your 4th amendment right to being secure in your communications & documents on his own personal barbecue. …not that cops abusing their power to stalk, coerce, blackmail or extort citizens has ever been a problem.

I have the digital ID but will never show it to a police officer. To show it, I have to unlock my phone and voluntarily hand over the phone to the police. Nope.
That's like saying "I don't use Apple Pay because I don't want to unlock my phone and give it to the store clerk" i.e. a complete misunderstadning of how the technology works!
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Bryan MacGuy Avatar
27 weeks ago
I struggle to understand how, on one hand, we have to go through all the expense and effort to get switched over to RealID in order to fly and, on the other hand, flashing a bar/QR code on our phone will be equally secure. Has my cynicism level finally caught up to my age? Isn’t all security now just theater?
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
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