CLEAR Makes Cincinnati Its 30th Airport Location

By | June 5, 2019

New CLEAR Check-in Kiosk Deployment

Cincinnati / Northern Kentucky International Airport (CVG) has become the latest airport to receive CLEAR, the biometric identity service that helps speed flyers through airport security lines.

The news that CLEAR is coming to CVG comes less than a week after the service debuted at Boston Logan’s (BOS) Terminal A, home to gates for Delta, Southwest and WestJet.

At Cincinnati, CLEAR kiosks will be available at the airport’s main security checkpoint, enabling CLEAR customers to use the service no matter which airline they are flying.

“Our mission is to make travel through CVG an unforgettably positive experience, and with the added convenience of CLEAR, we’ll be able to continue to deliver on that mission,” CVG airport CEO Candace McGraw said in a statement.

CLEAR members submit fingerprint and iris scans to the company, which uses those biometric scans to confirm a traveler’s identify when he or she arrives to the airport security. CLEAR customers present themselves at a special CLEAR kiosk that’s typically adjacent to the security queues. Once there, CLEAR personal confirm travelers’ identities after a fingerprint or iris scan. Then, members are escorted to the front of the queue to go through security.

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Author: Site Manager

Craig Allen Keefner is a longtime technology publisher, analyst, and industry advocate focused on self-service kiosks, digital signage, retail automation, accessibility, and edge computing. As founder and editor of the Kiosk Industry Group and The Industry Group (TIG) , Keefner has spent more than two decades covering the evolution of self-service technologies across retail, hospitality, healthcare, transportation, government, and financial services. Known for his independent editorial approach, Keefner emphasizes practical deployment realities over marketing hype. His work frequently explores topics such as kiosk lifecycle management, accessibility compliance, Edge AI, payment systems, operating systems, digital signage integration, and enterprise-scale deployment strategy. He is particularly recognized for his analysis of long-lifecycle self-service systems and the operational risks associated with poorly planned hardware refresh cycles. Keefner also serves as a leading voice in accessibility and standards discussions surrounding ADA, EAA, EN 301 549, and HHS Section 504 compliance. Through industry coverage, technical analysis, and association initiatives, he advocates for accessible self-service design that accommodates all users, including blind and low-vision consumers. Under his leadership, Kiosk Industry Group and affiliated platforms including Kiosk Asia , Patient Kiosk , Retail Systems , and Thin Client Computing have become recognized information resources for manufacturers, integrators, operators, software developers, and enterprise buyers worldwide. Keefner is also closely involved with the Kiosk Manufacturer Association (KMA) , supporting industry collaboration around accessibility, standards, interoperability, and emerging technologies such as conversational AI and edge inference platforms.