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My travel hack saves so much time and stress — I never have to look at airport screens

My travel hack saves so much time and stress — I never have to look at airport screens

Now this will get your trip off to a flying start.

Air travel, while often a pleasurable experience for avid vacationers, can come with a unique set of stressors. 

The frustration of navigating foreign airports to find your gate, anxiously listening for announcements about flight delays and cancellations, and feverishly updating loved ones with last-minute changes to your flight plan all typically add undue hitches to jet-setters’ giddy-ups. 

Content creator Darby Maloney scored over 12 million TikTok views after sharing her viral flying hack that saves travelers time and stress. TikTok / @durbinmalonster

But this ex-airline employee’s trending tip may help frequent flyers steer clear of the chaos. 

“I worked in the airline industry for three years and this is my number one flying hack,” began content creator Darby Maloney, 28, in a buzzy TikTok bulletin on avoiding plane-day pangs. 

“The morning of your flight, you’re going to text yourself your flight number — but the key is, you have to include your airline code,” she explained, referencing the 1 to 4 digit number that’s assigned to each flight, as well as the two-character designator that every airline uses to differentiate itself from other imprints. 

“For example,” said Maloney, “If I’m flying American [Airlines] flight 686, I’m going to type ‘AA686.’”

The brunette then advised her over 12 million virtual viewers to send the code to whoever was picking them up from the airport at their final destination. And for folks planning to hop into an Uber after landing, she suggested texting the code to themselves. 

“That text will become a link to tell you everything you need to know about your flight and it will update in real-time,” Maloney revealed. 

“What’s your gate? You’re going to go through security, click on your link and [get your exact gate number],” she continued. 

Calling this tip “the greatest hack ever,” Maloney explained the perks of having all of one’s flight information at the tip of their finger. Lukas Wunderlich – stock.adobe.com

The cyber-savvy millennial even gave online audiences a glimpse at how well her hack works, demonstrating the easy breeziness of accessing traveling info for her upcoming jaunt from Miami to Salt Lake City. 

“It’s on time,” she said, reading the detailed description of her trip via the link. The rundown included her gate number, expected flight duration and her baggage claim carrousel. 

“If it changes, it will change in that link”, Maloney raved. “Whoever is picking you up can literally see your little airplane flying across the screen [of their phone]…they can see [if] your flight status changes.”

The moving and grooving millennial struggled to contain her excitement over the techy-trekking trick. 

“I never have to look at screens in the airport anymore,” cheered Maloney of her hack. Elizaveta – stock.adobe.com

“It’s the greatest hack — I never have to look at the screens in the airport anymore,” she gushed. 

“If you have a connecting flight, just text yourself both flight [codes],” advised Maloney, who later noted that her hack is an Apple feature that can only be used by iPhone users. “The second you land, you can just click your link and know exactly what your gate is so when you get off of the plane, boom, you’re off to your connection.”

The smoothness of her how-to notwithstanding, other sky-high tourist have previously shared their equally hassle-free shortcuts for optimal aircraft cruising. 

Hailed the “ultimate plane hack” in December, plane passengers began using airline vomit bags as phone holsters during flights, allowing them to view their screen hands-free while flying.

And a flight attendant named Taylor recently unveiled the simple secret to combating the craziness of mid-air bumps

“When turbulence hits, basically, just pretend you’re jelly or submerged in jelly,” she during an impromptu interview with digital influencer Nicky Kelvin in March. 

“Wiggle in your seat like a little jellyfish; you’ll feel so much better.

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