The 20 cities where Americans have the longest commute to work
Matteo Merzi/flickr
In the US, most working Americans — about 108 million of them — drive alone in a car, truck, or van to get to work. On average, Americans commute about 25 minutes each way to and from work.
But when you live in a major US city like New York City or Los Angeles, how you get from point A to point B changes significantly.
And in most highly populated cities, even if you're only traveling a mere mile or so, you wind up spending more of your life commuting.
Using data collected from the US Census Bureau, personal-finance site WalletHub ranked 116 of the most populated cities based on the average number of minutes residents spend traveling from home to work. Using that same data, Business Insider also looked at how people commute to and from work in each city.
Here's how the 20 cities with the longest commute times stack up:
20. Bridgeport, Connecticut
Wikimedia CommonsAverage minutes spent commuting to work: 27
Most Bridgeport commuters travel by driving alone, followed by carpooling, and then public transportation.
18. San Bernardino, California
IK's World Trip/flickrAverage minutes spent commuting to work: 27.1
Most San Bernardino commuters travel by driving alone, followed by carpooling.
18. Chula Vista, California
Flickr/Allan FergusonAverage minutes spent commuting to work: 27.1
Most Chula Vista commuters travel by driving alone, followed by carpooling.
See the rest of the story at Business Insider