IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

Map: Traffic deaths are up nationwide. They’re up in these places the most.

Fatalities reached a 15-year high last year, with Puerto Rico, Idaho and Minnesota seeing the largest increases.
A state trooper inspects a vehicle that was rear-ended by a speeding driver fleeing police on Nov. 7, 2021.
A state trooper inspects a vehicle that was rear-ended by a speeding driver fleeing police on Nov. 7 in Sharon, Mass. The driver of the rear-ended vehicle was killed in the crash. Traffic deaths in Massachusetts increased at twice the national rate from 2020 to 2021.Stan Grossfeld / The Boston Globe via Getty Images file

Nationwide roadway deaths reached a 15-year high last year, a new federal report shows, with deaths rising in all but six states.

Close to 43,000 people died on the roads in 2021, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration report, up from about 39,000 deaths in 2020. 

These figures weren’t unexpected, as a preliminary NHTSA report released in October previewed the deadly increase, prompting the Department of Transportation to announce several initiatives to combat rising road deaths.

While deaths increased 10 percent nationally from 2020 to 2021, the rates among locations varied significantly. In Puerto Rico, deaths increased nearly 40 percent, from 242 deaths in 2020 to an estimated 337 in 2021. Other states with significant increases include Idaho, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey and Vermont.

In a news release announcing the figures, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg called the national death toll a “crisis” and added that funds from the infrastructure bill President Joe Biden signed into law in November are available to fund state and local efforts to improve traffic safety.