Truck Accidents on Major Interstates
Certain interstate corridors see dramatically more truck traffic — and more truck crashes — than others. Find your route below.
I-10
One of the longest and busiest freight corridors in the country, I-10 carries enormous truck volume across the Sun Belt, including the notoriously congested Texas and Louisiana stretches.
I-20
A major east-west freight route through the Deep South, connecting Dallas–Fort Worth to Atlanta with heavy commercial truck traffic throughout.
I-35
A critical NAFTA/USMCA trade corridor linking the Mexican border to the Upper Midwest, with the Texas segment through Dallas–Fort Worth and Austin among the most heavily trafficked truck routes in America.
I-40
A coast-to-coast freight artery roughly tracing old Route 66, carrying heavy long-haul truck traffic across the southern half of the country.
I-70
A major east-west route through the Rockies and Midwest, with the Colorado mountain segments presenting significant runaway-truck and downgrade brake-failure risk.
I-75
One of the busiest north-south truck corridors in the eastern US, connecting Florida's ports and distribution centers to the industrial Midwest.
I-80
A transcontinental freight backbone carrying immense long-haul truck volume, including the Wyoming and Sierra Nevada segments known for severe winter weather crash risk.
I-81
A heavily trafficked Appalachian corridor known for a high concentration of multi-vehicle truck pileups, particularly through the Virginia mountain sections.
I-95
The busiest interstate on the East Coast, carrying dense truck traffic through every major East Coast metro area from Miami to the Canadian border.
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