Mixing alcohol and motor vehicles is one of the most dangerous things you can do. Studies show that the risk of a fatal car crash starts to increase significantly even before you reach a blood alcohol content of 0.08%, which is the legal limit in every U.S. state except Utah. In fact, your reaction time while driving can be impacted by a BAC as low as 0.02%.
And younger drivers — particularly young men — are especially likely to be the ones involved in alcohol-related crashes.
The results are chilling: A person dies every 39 minutes in a car crash involving a drunk driver, according to statistics from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, leading to thousands of preventable deaths every year.
To try to quantify just how much alcohol increases the danger of car crashes, we used records from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS) database. We looked into more than 7,000 fatal crashes involving alcohol across the country in 2022, comparing them to non-alcohol-related crashes and crashes in previous years to find the things that set them apart.
KEY FINDINGS
Fatal drunk driving crashes fell by 5% nationwide from 2021 to 2022 — but increased by 49% in Washington state, the fourth-largest increase of any state.
King County is home to more fatal drunk-driving crashes than anywhere else in Washington, with 24 such crashes in 2022 — up 50% from 2021.
Nearly 60% of fatal crashes that involve alcohol happen between 8 p.m. and 4 a.m., compared to just under 30% of fatal crashes not related to alcohol.
Drunk driving crashes are down nationwide — but up in Washington.
The FARS data shows some positive developments. Overall, fatal drunk driving crashes dropped to 7,405, a 5% decrease year over year. However, the pattern is much less consistent from state to state.
In Washington, there were 128 fatal crashes in 2022 involving drivers who had been drinking. That’s a 49% year-over-year increase, catapulting the state from #29 in fatal drunk driving crashes in 2021 to #19 in 2022.
And it’s the fourth largest increase by percentage, behind only Georgia — where alcohol-related fatal crashes more than doubled — Oregon, and New Hampshire. Arkansas and Oklahoma were the only states where fatal drunk driving crashes fell by at least 50% year over year.
The State of the States: Changes in Alcohol-Related Fatal Crashes
State
Fatal crashes with alcohol, 2021
Fatal crashes with alcohol, 2022
Change (%)
Georgia
101
215
113%
Oregon
50
85
70%
New Hampshire
14
21
50%
Washington
86
128
49%
Maine
29
43
48%
Delaware
27
38
41%
New Mexico
57
74
30%
West Virginia
38
48
26%
Wyoming
30
37
23%
Maryland
85
102
20%
North Dakota
23
27
17%
Colorado
179
198
11%
Minnesota
88
97
10%
Pennsylvania
182
194
7%
Vermont
24
25
4%
Alabama
118
120
2%
California
918
938
2%
Texas
922
930
1%
Massachusetts
55
55
0%
Mississippi
116
116
0%
Indiana
147
145
-1%
New Jersey
149
148
-1%
Tennessee
265
262
-1%
Missouri
175
172
-2%
South Carolina
299
293
-2%
Virginia
125
122
-2%
Hawaii
35
34
-3%
Utah
52
50
-4%
Illinois
131
123
-6%
Nebraska
47
44
-6%
Arizona
167
154
-8%
Kansas
92
85
-8%
Michigan
300
275
-8%
Louisiana
225
201
-11%
District of Columbia
8
7
-13%
Iowa
83
72
-13%
Idaho
70
60
-14%
New York
153
131
-14%
Nevada
81
69
-15%
Kentucky
142
119
-16%
Alaska
18
15
-17%
Wisconsin
163
132
-19%
Florida
619
490
-21%
Ohio
222
168
-24%
North Carolina
359
258
-28%
Connecticut
68
46
-32%
Montana
99
67
-32%
South Dakota
47
29
-38%
Rhode Island
13
7
-46%
Oklahoma
115
56
-51%
Arkansas
174
80
-54%
The Seattle area is the state’s biggest hotspot for drunk driving crashes.
King County tied for the most fatal drunk driving crashes in the state in 2021, with 16. Unfortunately, that number spiked by 50% to 24 fatal crashes in 2022, still the most in Washington.
Also troubling: Neighboring Snohomish County reported 14 fatal crashes involving alcohol in 2022 after having just one such crash in 2021. If you suspect somebody driving under the influence, keep your distance and call 911 to report the drunk driver.
Most drunk driving crashes happen overnight.
Of the fatal crashes that do not involve alcohol, the most common window of time is from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m., when evening commutes typically take place; roughly 1 in 4 fatal crashes happens during that period.
But when you add alcohol to the mix, the balance shifts much more heavily to night driving. Both nationwide and in Washington, 30% of fatal crashes involving alcohol happen between 8 p.m. and midnight, followed closely by the window from midnight to 4 a.m.
And in King County, over 40% of fatal drunk driving crashes happen between midnight and 4 a.m. (the smaller sample size when looking at a single county can cause larger variance).
Data sources and methodology
Data for this analysis comes from the Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS), a database of all fatal U.S. motor vehicle crashes maintained by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Information on fatal crashes from 2022, the most recent year available, was released in April 2024.
We used fields in the FARS data tables to identify fatal crashes in which drunk driving was a factor and compared the number and characteristics of those crashes to previous years at the national, state, and county level.
Feel free to use data from this analysis elsewhere, but if you do, please link back to this page and credit Malcolm Law for attribution purposes.