Kourtney penned ‘Happy birthday to the love of my life’ on Instagram
Kourtney Kardashian-Barker took to Instagram to wish her husband Travis Barker a happy birthday.
The mom-of-four, who shares her 12-month-old son, Rocky, with the Blink-182 star, shared a series of loved-up photographs to celebrate his 49th birthday.
In doing so, the Poosh founder gave a rare glimpse into her favourite method of travel with her loved ones – and it’s predictably one of the most luxurious ways to get from A to B.
Kourt posted several photos from inside a lavish private jet, which she is believed to charter for personal and business use.
According to reports, the couple prefer to use a Gulfstream G550, which range between $13 million and $31 million second hand, and up to $54,500,000 when new. The lavish jets, which feature lavish cream leather interiors, glossy finishings and three separate cabins, can cost up to $2,588,136 per year to operate, per Liberty Jet.
Kourtney isn’t the only Kardashian sister to fly via private jet. The Kardashian family have made no secret of their penchant for luxury vacations nor their chartered methods of travel.
Kylie Jenner, 27, even has her own namesake airline called ‘Kylie Air’.
PEOPLE reported that Kylie, who was formerly named the youngest self-made billionaire after the success of her own company, Kylie Cosmetics, bought her Bombardier Global 7500 in January 2020.
Complete with its signature candy-pink branding, private crew and even a luxurious on-board menu, Kylie’s $72.8 million private jet certainly wouldn’t be hard to spot as it landed in LAX airport.
The Kardashian’s use of private jets is not without its controversy. In 2022, Kylie faced a major backlash from fans after using Kylie Air to go to Target alongside her daughter, Stormi, and nieces Chicago West and True Thompson.
Kylie’s actions sparked concern amongst those who were worried about the unnecessary use of air travel and its impact on the planet – with private jets said to be five to 14 times more polluting than commercial flights per passenger, and 50 times more polluting than trains.