Here's one more thing to make you dread trudging through the airport: The TSA is profiting on your loose change. The Huffington Post reports that the Transportation Security Administration raked in a whopping $675,000 last year from change travelers drop while going through airport security.

The TSA says its agents make a concerted effort to reunite passengers with things they lose, whether it's a few coins or a dropped cell phone. But sometimes, things simply stay there. When it's loose change, usually coming from passengers' pockets, they just document it and turn it into the TSA's financial office.

The agency technically has to use it for security operations, but they could also have a lot of fun with that change. Here's what the TSA could buy with all those pennies you dropped while trying to remember if you brought a water bottle to the airport:

1 studio apartment at United Nations Plaza in New York City

2 Vacheron Constantin Traditionelle 14-Day Tourbillon watches, worth $292,700 each

26 round-trip flights from New York to Dubai on Emirates Airlines first class, where you get a private suite and shower spa, a personal dining suite, and an onboard bar and lounge

39 of the most expensive Apple Watches, with an 18-karat yellow gold face and a bright red modern buckle

125 hours (over a 5-year period) of private travel on a Hawker 400XP jet, using NetJets' Marquis Jet card

421 acres of scenic property near the Big Belt Mountains in Townsend, Montana

4,861 bottles of Kavalan Solist Vinho Barrique, a Taiwanese whiskey named the best in the world this year

75,334 steak burritos at Chipotle, purchased across the street from Esquire's offices in New York City

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