HomeTechnologyPassport on iPhone: How Zimbabwe Should Plan to Rollout Smarter Travel

Passport on iPhone: How Zimbabwe Should Plan to Rollout Smarter Travel

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As digital identity solutions gain traction worldwide, Apple’s move to allow iPhone users to store U.S. passport information in their digital wallets offers valuable insight into how Zimbabwe can strategically plan its own digital identity and travel modernisation agenda.

Apple’s Digital ID allows travellers to verify their identity at airport security checkpoints without immediately presenting a physical document. Importantly, it does not replace the passport itself nor enable international border crossings. For Zimbabwe, this phased approach is instructive. Digital identity should initially complement existing systems rather than attempt to replace them, reducing risk while improving efficiency in domestic travel and public services.

In the US, Apple’s system is first being used for domestic air travel, where identity verification can be tightly controlled. Zimbabwe could similarly begin by introducing digital identity verification for domestic flights and selected government services. This would ease congestion at airports, improve passenger experience, and allow authorities to test system resilience before broader deployment.

A core feature of Apple’s Digital ID is its emphasis on security. Passport data is encrypted, stored on the device, and released only after biometric verification by the user. For Zimbabwe, public trust will hinge on adopting comparable safeguards. Citizens must be assured that their data is protected, not centrally exposed, and used strictly within clear legal boundaries.

Apple’s rollout relies on close coordination with government agencies and the availability of compatible airport infrastructure. Zimbabwe’s planning would require similar alignment across civil registration authorities, aviation regulators, border agencies and ICT institutions. Successful digital identity systems depend as much on governance and interoperability as on technology itself.

By limiting its Digital ID to domestic use, Apple is allowing standards and public confidence to mature before expanding functionality. Zimbabwe could follow this path, starting domestically and later aligning its systems with regional frameworks in Southern Africa. Over time, this could support smoother regional travel, trade and tourism integration.

Apple’s passport-in-wallet initiative illustrates how digital identity can be introduced incrementally, securely and with clear benefits to users. For Zimbabwe, adopting a similar mindset would support broader goals in e-government, mobility and economic modernisation, while positioning the country to participate more effectively in Africa’s emerging digital public infrastructure ecosystem.

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