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A new analysis reviewed by The Texas Law Dog shows that Texas remains one of the most dangerous states in the country for drivers, with fatality patterns that vary sharply from county to county. The findings highlight how geography, road design, enforcement gaps, and driver behavior combine to create significant safety disparities across the state’s 254 counties. By breaking down five years of crash data, the study provides one of the clearest pictures yet of where Texans face the highest risks on the road and why certain counties consistently rank among the deadliest.

Texas recorded 4,408 traffic deaths in 2024, second only to California. The statewide fatality rate reached 1.35 deaths per 100 million vehicle miles traveled, a slight improvement from 2023 but still high enough to ensure that Texas had no death‑free days on its roads last year. The numbers reflect a long‑standing trend. Between 2019 and 2023, Texas reported 18,728 traffic fatalities, with thousands linked to speeding, impairment, distraction, and vulnerable road users.

The study reviewed by The Texas Law Dog evaluates county‑level fatality rates per 100,000 residents across nine categories, including speeding, impaired driving, distracted driving, drowsy driving, pedestrian deaths, pedalcyclist deaths, motorcycle fatalities, senior driver fatalities, and young driver fatalities. Each category is weighted equally to create a composite risk score.

The results show that some counties face extreme and persistent dangers, while others maintain some of the safest roadways in the state.

Statewide Fatality Snapshot

Texas’ 2024 crash data illustrates the scale of the problem:

  • 585 motorcyclists killed, with 37 percent not wearing helmets
  • 768 pedestrians killed, a 5.19 percent decrease from 2023
  • 78 pedalcyclists killed, a 26.42 percent decrease
  • 1,053 impaired drivers killed, representing 25.37 percent of all traffic deaths
  • 380 distracted drivers killed, a 5.71 percent decrease

Based on reportable crashes:

  • One person was killed every 2 hours and 7 minutes
  • One person was injured every 2 minutes and 5 seconds
  • One crash occurred every 57 seconds

These statewide numbers, however, mask the dramatic differences between counties.

The Ten Most Dangerous Counties in Texas

The study identifies the following counties as the most dangerous overall:

  1. Harrison
  2. Nacogdoches
  3. Navarro
  4. Rusk
  5. Van Zandt
  6. Orange
  7. Cherokee
  8. Ector
  9. Kerr
  10. Gregg

Harrison County ranks first with a composite score of 68, driven primarily by extreme speeding fatality rates. Nacogdoches follows with elevated pedestrian deaths, while Navarro ranks third due to high speeding and distracted driving fatalities.

Across the top ten counties, speeding is the dominant factor in seven of them. Impaired driving is the leading issue in Ector and Kerr counties, while Nacogdoches stands out for pedestrian deaths.

County‑Level Danger Profiles

Harrison County

  • Speeding: 13.88 deaths per 100k
  • Impaired drivers: 7.52 per 100k
  • Senior drivers: 6.65 per 100k

Harrison’s speeding fatality rate is the highest in Texas, and the county also leads the state in young driver fatalities.

Nacogdoches County

  • Pedestrians: 6.11 per 100k
  • Speeding: 5.2 per 100k
  • Impaired drivers: 5.2 per 100k

Pedestrian deaths are unusually high, suggesting infrastructure and visibility issues.

Navarro County

  • Speeding: 11.82 per 100k
  • Impaired drivers: 5.01 per 100k
  • Distracted drivers: 4.3 per 100k

Navarro ranks second statewide for distracted driving fatalities.

Rusk County

  • Speeding: 8.98 per 100k
  • Senior drivers: 4.49 per 100k
  • Young drivers: 4.49 per 100k

Rusk’s risks are spread across multiple categories.

Van Zandt County

  • Speeding: 10.47 per 100k
  • Senior drivers: 6.35 per 100k
  • Pedestrians: 3.17 per 100k

Van Zandt ranks high in four categories, including motorcycle and young driver fatalities.

Orange County

  • Speeding: 6.8 per 100k
  • Pedestrians: 4.92 per 100k
  • Impaired drivers: 4.45 per 100k

Orange also leads the state in pedalcyclist fatalities.

Cherokee County

  • Speeding: 8.01 per 100k
  • Impaired drivers: 6.49 per 100k
  • Pedestrians: 4.2 per 100k

Ector County

  • Impaired drivers: 8.93 per 100k
  • Speeding: 8.81 per 100k
  • Young drivers: 3.88 per 100k

Ector ranks second statewide for impaired driving deaths.

Kerr County

  • Impaired drivers: 5.93 per 100k
  • Speeding: 5.19 per 100k
  • Senior drivers: 3.71 per 100k

Kerr also leads the state in drowsy driving fatalities.

Gregg County

  • Speeding: 6.56 per 100k
  • Pedestrians: 5.28 per 100k
  • Senior drivers: 4.32 per 100k

Category‑Specific Statewide Rankings

Distracted Driving

  • Coryell: 4.76 per 100k
  • Navarro: 4.3 per 100k
  • Rusk: 3.74 per 100k

Pedestrian Fatalities

  • Nacogdoches: 6.11 per 100k
  • Gregg: 5.28 per 100k
  • Chambers: 5.27 per 100k

Drowsy Driving

  • Kerr: 2.97 per 100k
  • Navarro: 2.87 per 100k

Speeding

  • Harrison: 13.88 per 100k
  • Navarro: 11.82 per 100k

Pedalcyclists

  • Orange: 1.17 per 100k
  • Liberty: 1.12 per 100k

Senior Drivers

  • Harrison: 6.65 per 100k
  • Van Zandt: 6.35 per 100k

Young Drivers

  • Harrison: 5.49 per 100k
  • Rusk: 4.49 per 100k

Motorcyclists

  • Burnet: 4.42 per 100k
  • Nacogdoches: 3.97 per 100k

Impaired Driving

  • Bastrop: 9.21 per 100k
  • Ector: 8.93 per 100k

The Safest Counties in Texas

The ten safest counties include:

  • Fort Bend
  • Collin
  • Denton
  • Hidalgo
  • Webb
  • Rockwall
  • Cameron
  • Williamson
  • Brazos
  • Guadalupe

These counties maintain low fatality rates across all categories, supported by stronger infrastructure, higher population density, and more consistent enforcement.

A Clear Path Forward

The study reviewed by The Texas Law Dog shows that Texas’ road safety crisis cannot be solved with a single statewide strategy. Each county faces distinct challenges, from speeding in Harrison to pedestrian deaths in Nacogdoches and distracted driving in Navarro. Targeted, data‑driven interventions at the county level could save thousands of lives over the next decade.