Traffic & Transit
Here's How Bad Drivers Are In Maryland
SmartAsset ranked every state in the country. You might want to avoid the South, plus see how Maryland fared.

BALTIMORE, MD — How bad are Maryland drivers? Actually, not that bad. A new report has ranked Maryland 32nd in the country when it comes to bad drivers. The financial advising company SmartAsset released its second annual study on states with the best and worst drivers this month. The study looked at four metrics: percent of drivers with insurance, number of DUIs per driver, average number of deaths per miles driven and how often residents Google terms such as traffic ticket or speeding ticket.
Maryland tied with Wyoming, and fell between South Dakota and Virginia for bad driving. Across state lines, our neighbor Pennsylvania had a similar score, coming in at No. 38 on the list.
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Here's the complete breakdown for Maryland:
- Percent of drivers with insurance: 92.8%
- Number of DUIs per driver: 4.01
- Average number of deaths per miles driven: 0.85
- Index: 55.56
Bad drivers are a drag. Literally. They cause headache-inducing traffic congestion — which cost the U.S. an estimated $305 billion last year — and can lead to costly crashes and even death.
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So if you're planning a road trip any time soon, you might want to avoid Mississippi, Tennessee and basically the rest of the South. Mississippi ranked the worst in the country, with the authors noting it had the second-highest death rate at 1.7 deaths per 100 million miles driven.
"Insurance rates in Mississippi are also fairly low, which raises the chance that an accident will lead to someone paying for repairs out of pocket," the study said. "Those high, unexpected costs can really take a toll on the checking accounts of Mississippi drivers."
Furthermore, Google Trends data indicated quite a few drivers "run afoul of the law," with Mississippi having the 11th highest search volume for ticket offenses.
Overall, five of the worst 10 states were located in the South. These states tended to have the highest death rates and lowest auto insurance rates, the authors wrote. Florida fell to eighth this year after ranking worst last year. The state still has the lowest rate of insured drivers with a paltry 73 percent.
Here are the states with the worst drivers:
1. Mississippi
2. Tennessee
3. California
3. Missouri
5. New Mexico
5. Texas
7. Alabama
8. Florida
9. Alaska
9. Arizona
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If safety is what you're after on your next road trip, consider the Northeast. Massachusetts has the best drivers, while Vermont, Connecticut and New York all ranked in the top five. Maine, New Hampshire and Rhode Island fell inside the top 10.
The prevalence of Google searches for "traffic ticket" and "speeding ticket" was included in the final analysis but the results were not published, the authors noted.
Patch national staffer Dan Hampton contributed to this report.
Photo credit: Shutterstock
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