SELECT LANGUAGE BELOW

‘Super-commuter’ mom travels to work by plane every day — because it’s cheaper than renting there

She is taking the title “Super Commuter” to new heights.

One woman works on a plane every day. They also claim to reduce commuting costs.

Racheal Kaur, who lives in Malaysia, flies from Penang to Kuala Lumpur for 40 minutes every day of the week, and says the early mornings are worthy of work-life balance.

“I have two children, both of whom are growing up. My oldest is 12 and my daughter is 11,” she said. “As they grow up, they feel that their mothers need to be more frequent.” nx

“This arrangement allows me to go home every day. I can meet my kids in the evening and help with last minute homework,” Kaur told NewsFlash.

“I have two children. Both are growing up. My oldest is 12 years old and my daughter is 11. As they grow up, I need them to have mothers more often. I feel there is.”

She woke up about 4am to 4:15am, took a shower, got dressed, got out the door to catch a 40-minute flight from 5am, and 5:55am I'll board it on

Surprisingly, she arrives at the office by 7:45am each morning.

She wakes up on an early flight every day around 4am and arrives at the office by 7:45am. nx
She argues her commute is cheaper than renting an apartment in another city away from her family. nx

Despite working for AirAsia, she has not benefited from employee perks and is forced to diverge ticket costs, she said.

Kaur claims that commuting via planes is cheaper than renting an apartment in Kuala Lumpur, and she says it costs more than $300 a month. Now she can stay home and pay the mortgage. This is a monthly payment of approximately $223.

And Quar is not the first supercontactor of her kind.

Last year, one woman revealed that her husband regularly commutes from Minneapolis to Manhattan for his job, but NYC hairstylists previously said they would travel every other week to Big Apple from Charlotte. I have posted this.

One employee pays more than $1,000 a month to commute to work from Washington, DC to New York.

“This arrangement allows me to go home every day. I can see my kids in the evening and help with last minute homework,” she said. nx

Meanwhile, New Yorkers who can't stand it to leave Gotham are commuting in the opposite direction.

For example, 23-year-old Caroline Colvin lives in Manhattan, but works in Maryland. However, she admitted to the post that she “undetectedly pays more on bills and rent.”

“I live in New York City, and this is an expensive and expensive city,” she said at the time. “And I work in Baltimore, which is cheap and has a low cost of living.”

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
Telegram
WhatsApp

Related News