Baby Passport Photo Requirements (US)
The US State Department has specific rules for baby and infant passport photos. The good news: some rules are relaxed for very young children.
| Requirement | Infants | 1–15 Years |
|---|---|---|
| Eyes open | Try your best | Required |
| Looking at camera | Preferred | Required |
| Neutral expression | Not required | Required |
| Alone in photo | Always required — no parents, siblings, or hands visible | |
| No toys/dummies | Always required — nothing in or near the face | |
| Background | Plain white — same as adults | |
| Photo size | 2x2 inches (51mm x 51mm) — same as adults | |
| Recency | Taken within 6 months | |
Photo Rules by Age
Newborns (0–3 Months)
Newborn photos are the hardest passport photos to get right. The State Department is understanding but still expects a usable photo.
- Eyes don't need to be open (but try)
- A supporting hand is allowed — but must not be visible in the photo
- Lay baby on a plain white sheet and photograph from above
- No neutral expression required — any natural expression is fine
Infants (3–12 Months)
By this age, babies can hold their head up and are more alert, making photos slightly easier. The same relaxed rules apply as for newborns.
- Best time: right after a nap and feed, when they're calm and alert
- Sitting up: if they can sit with support, you can photograph them in a car seat or bouncer (but the seat must not be visible)
- Attention: use a rattle or toy held just above the camera to get them to look up
Toddlers (1–3 Years)
Toddlers are mobile and easily distracted, which brings its own challenges. The rules get slightly stricter:
- Eyes must be open and visible
- Should look at the camera — get their attention with a toy or sound
- Neutral expression preferred — a natural look is fine, avoid big grins
- Must be alone in the photo — no parent holding them
Young Children (3–5 Years)
By age 3, most children can follow simple instructions like "look at the phone" and "keep still." The main challenge is keeping them patient long enough.
- Sit them on a chair in front of a plain wall
- Make it a game — "let's take a funny picture" then ask for a "serious face"
- Have a favourite show or toy ready as a reward for cooperation
- A natural, relaxed expression is fine — just avoid exaggerated smiles or silly faces
How to Take a Baby Passport Photo: Step by Step
Prepare the background
Lay a plain white or off-white sheet or blanket on a bed or the floor. Smooth out all wrinkles — creases show up in photos and can cause rejection. For toddlers who can sit, use a plain wall behind a chair.
Set up the lighting
Position near a large window for natural daylight. The light should fall evenly on the baby's face with no shadows. Cloudy days are ideal — diffused light is more even than direct sunlight.
Undress or simplify clothing
Remove bibs, hats, and bulky clothing. A simple onesie or vest works best. Nothing should be near the baby's face or casting shadows on it.
Position your baby
Lay the baby on their back, face up, centred on the sheet. For older babies who can sit, seat them upright with the plain background behind them.
Get the camera ready
Use your phone camera in standard Photo mode (not Portrait). Position the camera directly above the baby's face, pointing straight down. Use 1x zoom, flash off.
Get their attention
Hold a toy or rattle just behind/above the camera. Make sounds or faces to get the baby to look towards the lens. Have a helper do this while you operate the camera.
Take LOTS of photos
This is the key: take 20-30 photos in quick succession. Babies' expressions change constantly. Use burst mode (hold the shutter button) to capture multiple frames per second.
Review and select
Scroll through your photos and pick the best one: face centred, eyes as open as possible, no dummy or toys visible, even lighting, no shadows. Don't worry about exact cropping — EasyPassportPhoto handles that.
Techniques That Actually Work
We've processed thousands of baby passport photos. Here are the techniques that consistently produce the best results:
The White Sheet Method (Best for Newborns)
- Lay a plain white cotton sheet on a bed or the floor, pulling it taut
- Position near a window so natural light falls on the sheet
- Lay the baby on their back in the centre of the sheet
- Stand directly above and photograph straight down
- The sheet becomes the background — our AI handles the rest
Pro tip: Use a car seat
For babies 3+ months who can hold their head up, placing them in a car seat gives a slight recline that naturally faces them towards the camera. Drape the white sheet over the seat to create a uniform background, then photograph from the front. This is often easier than the lying-down method.
The Two-Person Method
Having a helper makes everything easier:
- Person 1: Operates the camera and takes the photos
- Person 2: Gently positions the baby, supports their head (keeping hands hidden), and holds a toy just above the camera to attract attention
This division of labour means you can focus entirely on getting the shot right, while your helper keeps the baby calm and looking in the right direction.
Timing Is Everything
Best Times
- • After a nap — baby is rested and calm
- • After a feed — baby is content
- • Mid-morning — natural light is ideal
- • When baby is in a "quiet alert" state
Worst Times
- • When hungry or due a feed
- • When tired or fighting sleep
- • After vaccinations or when unwell
- • Evening — tired baby + bad lighting
Don't force it
If the baby is crying, distressed, or won't cooperate, stop and try again later. A stressed baby makes for bad photos and a bad experience. You can always try again tomorrow — it costs nothing to take more photos.
Common Mistakes With Baby Passport Photos
Dummy or bottle visible
Fix: Remove all dummies, bottles, and toys from the baby's face and hands before taking the photo. Even a partially visible dummy will get the photo rejected.
Parent's hand or body visible
Fix: No other person should appear in the photo at all. Lay the baby on a white sheet and photograph from above to avoid this entirely.
Patterned or wrinkled background
Fix: Use a plain white sheet pulled taut. Patterns, wrinkles, and folds in the fabric show up clearly in photos. Iron the sheet first if needed.
Shadow on face
Fix: Face the baby towards a window for even, natural light. Don't photograph directly under a ceiling light — it creates shadows under the eyes and nose.
Camera angle wrong
Fix: For lying babies, point the camera straight down from directly above. Taking the photo at an angle distorts the face and creates an unnatural perspective that may be rejected.
Only taking 2-3 photos
Fix: Take at least 20 photos. Babies' expressions change every second. Use burst mode (hold the shutter button) to capture multiple frames quickly. You only need one good shot.
Using Portrait mode
Fix: Portrait mode blurs the background, which causes rejection. Use standard Photo mode on your phone camera. The background must be in focus.
Got a photo of your baby? Make it passport-ready.
Upload your baby's photo and our AI will handle the background, cropping to 2x2 inches (51mm x 51mm), and State Department compliance. Works with any phone photo. $9.99, money-back guarantee.
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Processing Your Baby's Photo
Once you have a good raw photo, it needs to be processed to meet State Department specifications. For baby photos, processing is especially important because perfect backgrounds and positioning are nearly impossible to achieve at home with a squirming baby.
What EasyPassportPhoto Does
Background replacement
Replaces the sheet, blanket, or whatever background you used with a perfectly uniform white background. Wrinkles, shadows, and patterns are all removed.
Precise cropping
Crops to exactly 2x2 inches (51mm x 51mm) with the baby's face correctly positioned within the frame.
Lighting correction
Evens out shadows and adjusts exposure so the baby's face is clearly visible and well-lit.
Compliance verification
Checks the photo meets all State Department requirements before you pay. Preview your baby's passport photo for free.
What About Photo Booths?
Photo booths (Boots, Tesco, etc.) are not recommended for babies. Here's why:
- The booth environment is enclosed and unfamiliar — babies often cry
- The camera is at adult height — impossible to position for a baby
- Limited retakes — if the photo doesn't work, you've wasted your money
- The flash can startle babies and cause them to close their eyes
- Most booth staff aren't trained to help with baby photos
Taking the photo at home where the baby is comfortable, with natural light and unlimited retakes, consistently produces better results.
Frequently Asked Questions
Official Sources
This guide is based on official US government guidance for passport photos. For the most current requirements: