New York Post

NYers taking the long way home

600K commute three hours daily

- By DANIELLE FURFARO and TAMAR LAPIN

The number of “supercommu­ters” in the country is on the rise — and more than 600,000 live in metropolit­an New York.

Unlike typical commuters, who take about 26 minutes to get to work, according to the Census Bureau, supercommu­ters spend 90 minutes or more each way on their daily trek.

Between 2005 and 2016, the ranks of supercommu­ters increased by 15.9 percent — meaning there are now 4 million nationwide, according to an analysis of census data by Apartment List, an online real-estate marketplac­e.

“You hear [of ] people commuting two to three hours one way, which is pretty insane,” said Sydney Bennet, a senior research associate at Apartment List. “They spend almost as much time commuting as working.”

The supercommu­ter capital of the country is Stockton, Calif. — about 80 driving miles from San Francisco or Silicon Valley — where 10 percent of residents have extended trips to work.

The Big Apple has the fourth-largest share of supercommu­ters in the country with 6.7 percent, and has the most overall at 616,789.

Supercommu­ters tend to live in pricey cities with strong economies, where higher rents are forcing people to move further away from work.

San Francisco, where housing costs have skyrockete­d in recent years, saw supercommu­ting double between 2005 and 2016.

Supercommu­ters also tend to be more likely to take public transporta­tion. About 68.5 percent of them in New York use mass transit, while 38.6 percent of regular commuters do.

Daniel Pearlstein, a spokesman for the Riders Alliance, told The Post that “slow and unreliable transit service is, unfortunat­ely, to blame for some of these commutes.”

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