However, nearly a third of the respondents have expressed concerns over privacy of their personal information.
More than 7,000 passengers from 17 countries, including India, were part of the 12th edition of Passenger IT Trends Survey conducted by air transport IT provider SITA and Air Transport World.
In all, 37 per cent of travellers surveyed used automated ID control on their last flight. Of these, 55 per cent said they had used biometrics at departure, 33 per cent for boarding and 12 for international arrivals.
"Passengers who use biometrics are highly satisfied. In fact, (out of 10) they rated the experience 8.4, well above the ratings for face-to-face transactions at passport check (8) and boarding (8.2), demonstrating passengers' acceptance of this secure technology to deliver a seamless journey," the report says.
The overall level of passengers' satisfaction is higher when travellers use self-service technologies. Baggage management is another area where technology is improving the passenger experience.
Nearly half (47 per cent) of all passengers took advantage of a self-service tagging option on their most recent trip, which is up from 31 per cent in 2016.
The study points out that not many airports offer self- service bag drop which may be the reason for its slow adoption. However, 43 per cent passengers said they would avail of this service on their next flight.
The appetite for using new technology is high among travellers as three quarters (or 74 per cent) of passengers say they would use flight and gate alerts on their mobile devices, 57 per cent would use airport wayfinding, and 67 per cent said they would like to receive baggage collection details on their phones or on display screens.
"Airports and airlines can take note that technology solutions can boost passenger satisfaction every step of the way," said IlyaGutlin, President, Air Travel Solutions, SITA.
In India too, the use of unique identification through Aadhaar could soon be mandatory to book air tickets.
The Centre is working on a proposal to enable passengers to zip through the airport if they use biometrics.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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