Washington, DC (January 2, 2025) – Altitude by Geotab, formerly Geotab ITS, has released a groundbreaking study revealing the states with the highest roadway safety risks based on harsh driving events like braking, acceleration, and cornering. These benchmarks empower infrastructure planners to prioritize safety investments with data-driven precision. Altitude will showcase these findings alongside its rebranded platform at the TRB Annual Meeting, January 5–9, 2025, in Washington, D.C.
Key Findings: 2024 Roadway Safety Benchmarks
- The study analyzed “harsh events” — instances of harsh braking, acceleration, or cornering — per million miles across all 50 U.S. states.
- West Virginia and Alaska reported the highest rates of harsh events for heavy-duty trucks, with over 80,000 incidents per million miles.
- Illinois and Nebraska demonstrated some of the lowest harsh events, with fewer than 2,000 incidents per million miles for light-duty trucks.
- Peak hours for harsh events occurred during 7 AM to 9 AM, underscoring trends linked to driver congestion and commute times.
Harsh events per million miles driven for heavy-duty trucks across the United States from January 2024 – November 2024.
These insights provide state and local planners with clear benchmarks to identify risk hotspots, allocate resources effectively, and improve roadway safety outcomes — just one example of how the Altitude platform empowers transportation infrastructure planners to tackle a wide range of challenges with data-driven precision.
“We’re excited to attend TRB 2025 and share how Altitude’s state-by-state safety benchmarks can help planners prioritize infrastructure investments,” said Nate Veeh, AVP Business Development, Altitude by Geotab. “Our rebranded platform empowers leaders with data-driven tools to help reduce safety risks and drive smarter, more sustainable mobility outcomes.”