Former Defence Minister Mark Mitchell says he knows that all the flights were to or from official duties but it was still inappropriate for the minister to have accepted the flights to an airfield near his home - where the Air Force does usually go.
Mitchell said he himself lived three minutes away from the airfield at Dairy Flat near Auckland, which was not that far from the Air Force base at Whenuapai
"In terms of convenience, they could have popped over from Whenuapai, picked me up at Dairy Flat and taken me to wherever we were going.
"I wouldn't in a million years even consider asking them to do that – and had they had offered I would have declined it because it is just wholly inappropriate to have helicopters and planes flying around to make your life a bit more convenient.
"They are burning hours, they are burning fuel, it is just not right and it sticks in my craw. In my view there is no excuse."
Mitchell said his National predecessors Gerry Brownlee and Jonathan Coleman had not accepted such flights either.
The first Wairarapa flight for Ron Mark to Masterton was three days after he was sworn in as a minister, on October 29. It was in a B200, a King Air small plane, to pick him up for a flight to Woodbourne, to visit Exercise Southern Katipo17.
He was flown back home in a NH90 helicopter later than day, after landing en route on HMNZS Canterbury.
The next time was a helicopter flight on December 9 from Masterton to Waiouru Camp where he was the reviewing officer at the graduation parade.
He was flown back to Masterton on the same afternoon on the same helicopter.
Mark Mitchell said it was only a three-hour trip each way by car.
"The Air Force is not a taxi service for its minister," he said.
"Why did he not save the taxpayer the cost and NZDF the time and use a much cheaper Crown car instead?
"It's happening so regularly, locals are asking questions about it."
Ron Mark released a table of all the NZDF flights he had taken in New Zealand since becoming minister – 10 one-way flights – including a Hercules to the Chatham Islands on March 4 for the funeral of Alfred Preece, a veteran of the 28th Maori Battalion, and an already scheduled flight to the Antarctic in December.
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and the Defence Force did not respond to requests for comment.