18 miles is roughly a half an hour commute. That is average.
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The exact answer depends on the various speed limits and traffic on the 20-mile route in question. But for the most part, driving 20 miles tends to take anywhere from 20 to 40 minutes. Interstates and expressways with higher speed limits, like 55 or 60, always help to speed the journey along.
Commuting from home to work should be less than 50 miles and within 30 minutes, and the surrounding area of your workplace should be within 50 miles of your home. It is ideal for commuters to take at least 5 minutes to commute to work, and the one-way commute should take more than 16 minutes.
Reasonable Commuting Distance means a distance that is fewer than 50 straight-line miles from the Business Employee's principal residence. In addition, a distance that does not increase a Business Employee's commute by more than five straight-line miles shall also be a Reasonable Commuting Distance.
Generally speaking, it is best to keep your commute under an hour each way. This allows for enough time in the day for other activities such as spending time with family or pursuing hobbies without feeling overly exhausted from a long journey.
Just how bad is a commute on job satisfaction? A study by the University of West England found that adding 20 minutes to your daily commute has the same negative effect on job satisfaction as receiving a 19 percent pay cut. In fact, every extra minute commuting lowered satisfaction with their job and leisure time.
45 minutes is very standard, the shortest of my coworkers is 30 minutes. Many folks are up near 1.5 hours. You and your husband are extremely likely to change jobs, so the commute may not always be the same. That being said, 45 minutes is not that bad.
A 2-hour commute each way means a 15-hour day plus one hour to get up and ready and one hour to relax and eat dinner. That leaves barely 6 hours to sleep which is below the recommended number of hours. After only 3 days this sleep deficiency will deplete yourbgut health and increase your blood pressure.
Sometimes, even reasons related to daily commutation, like spending too much time commuting from your place of work to your place of residence, as well as less time spent with family can be considered to be the reason/one of the reasons for leaving a job.
Data from the US showed that more time spent on the daily commute was related to higher levels of fatigue and stress during commuting [12]. Clark et al. [9] found that longer commute times were associated with lower job and leisure time satisfaction, increased strain, and poorer mental health.
It's not too long. Probably about average. You need to have 2 or 3 different ways to get to work because of rush hour wrecks. I averaged 46 miles a day, to work and to home.