Taylor Swift Sends Her Private Jet to Hawaii amid Reports She is picking up Travis Kelce

Taylor Swift has sent her private jet to Hawaii, amid reports she is flying her NRL star beau Travis Kelce to Australia as she continues her Eras Tour.

The megastar, 34, jetted into Sydney from Melbourne on Monday afternoon and is thought to be staying in at Crown’s presidential villa (pictured) in Sydney’s Barangaroo while in town.

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On Tuesday morning, her private jet once again took to the skies on a flight bound for Honolulu, while Swift stayed back in Sydney.

The flight from Sydney to Honolulu is usually around 10 hours on a commercial flight, however Swift’s luxurious Bombardier Global 6000 is designed to fly faster than a conventional aircraft.

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Kelce was last spotted in Kansas City, but it is possible that he is planning to catch a flight to Hawaii to board his girlfriend’s private jet.

From there, he could fly back to Australia in time to watch Swift perform at Sydney’s Accor Stadium later this week. Swift’s jet makes for a far more luxurious flight than Kelce would experience flying commercial, as the aircraft boasts a which a double bed and fine dining cabin.

It comes after Kelce dropped a huge hint that he could head Down Under on this week’s episode of his New Heights podcast, claiming that he would ‘venture to an island real soon’ with the best ones being ‘south’ of the US.

He added that next week’s podcast is a pre-recorded guest episode which he is not featured in, which led fans to believe he would join his girlfriend in Sydney from February 23 – and maybe travel with her to Singapore for her shows in the first week of March.

Rumours are also heating up that Swift and Kelce will enjoy enjoy a romantic holiday together in Queensland during their time Down Under. Swift mania will soon hit Sydney with the pop star set to perform four shows from Friday, February 23 to Monday February 26.

The Shake It Of hitmaker landed just in Sydney at about 1.30pm on Monday after her flight was delayed 30 minutes due to the severe thunderstorms.