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What is considered heavy travel?

Usually, in my experience, a trip was 3 to 4 nights. Though for some people, 50% could mean every week for 6 months, then none for 6 months. Just sorta depends on how you want to measure it. every week for 6 months is still pretty heavy travel even when you go 6 months for none.



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That means you would spend 75% of your time going to different locations meeting with clients and 25% of your time working from an office. Many fields involve some travel, including: Tourism and hospitality.

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Travel percentage. That 20% is an average, and what it represents can vary dramatically by career, so make sure you ask your hiring manager to tell you exactly what the travel percentage means for the position you're applying for.

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People who take work trips two weeks or more a month report more symptoms of anxiety and depression and are more likely to smoke and have difficulty sleeping, compared to those who travel one to six nights a month, according to a new study by Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health and City University of ...

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In fact, frequent business travelers tend to suffer from health problems ranging from obesity to insomnia. “Oddly enough, those who never travel and those who travel the most seem to be the sickest,” says Soumya Panchagnula, M.D., a family medicine specialist with Henry Ford Health.

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You can fly with any amount of cash. No law prohibits you from bringing any amount of money on a flight. Likewise, TSA has no rules that limit how much money you can bring through security. In other words, TSA has no cash limit per person.

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But generally it indicates that on average 1 out of every 10 business days will be traveling. Travel refers to the entire duration of time you are gone in business days, not the actual commute. I would be inclined to interpret 10% travel as 10% of your working time is not in the office.

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80% travel typically means every week, M-Th at the client site. Fly out early Monday AM, leave the client site Th afternoon.

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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.

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You can fly with any amount of cash. No law prohibits you from bringing any amount of money on a flight. Likewise, TSA has no rules that limit how much money you can bring through security. In other words, TSA has no cash limit per person.

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This completely depends on where you want to go, but for a true backpacker $50 (USD) per day is more than enough. $20,000/$ per day (rounded up so you can live luxuriously) = 575 days.

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The U.S. Department of Labor states that any hours worked for non-exempt employees must be paid by the employer at the employee's agreed wage. Any time spent traveling as part of regular employment or during regular business hours must be compensated.

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The average business traveler takes around 6.8 trips a year, but millennials average 7.4 trips per year.

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The U.S. Census Bureau defines extreme commuters as workers who travel 90 minutes or more each way to work.

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There's no doubt, that a three-hour commute is extremely daunting and not justifiable. You get stressed, feel tired, and miss out on some important family time.

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