What a Door Supervisor actually does in Airports
In airports, a Door Supervisor runs a specific pattern: x-ray interpretation, screening, AVSEC compliance. The assignment instructions vary by client but the operating principles do not.
The environment: Airports
These are terminals and airside operations under DfT regulation. The pace, footfall and threat profile is materially different from generic guarding — trained officers spot risks non-specialists miss.
Legal and compliance framework
Beyond the SIA framework, airports sites typically bring their own compliance layer (safeguarding, GDPR, sector regulator). Read the site induction pack, not just the SIA workbook.
The five most common incidents and how to run them
The recurring incidents in airports are prohibited items, behavioural detection, insider threat. Each has a standard playbook — rehearse them, do not improvise.
Career progression from Airports into wider security
Officers who master airports routinely progress into supervisory, ops-manager or sector-specialist consultant roles. The specialism, not the badge, unlocks the higher band.