While U.S. motorists don’t have an Autobahn, with its lack of speed limits, there’s been a significant increase in the allowable pace in much of the country since the national 55 mph restriction was lifted nearly two decades ago.
Despite the objections of safety advocates, Texas now has both the single fastest highway in the country — a toll road with an 85 mph speed limit – as well as the fastest average allowable speeds when you factor in all its various limited-access roads. Those drivers looking to get somewhere fast might steer clear of the District of Columbia and Alaska, however, the two states having the nation’s lowest top and average speeds, according to a new study by the Governors Highway Safety Association, or GHSA.
Those two states have become the exception, rather than the rule, more and more allowing drivers to put the pedal to the metal. In fact, four states now have top speeds of at least 80 mph, with another dozen pushing their limits up to 75.
It’s been four decades since the first Mideast oil shock rattled the nation, fuel prices soaring while supplies dried up. Under then-President Richard Nixon, Congress enacted a national 50 mph speed limit intended to conserve scarce fuel – and improve highway safety at a time when nearly 50,000 Americans were killed in motor vehicle accidents annually.
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Facing pressure from the public – notably including long-haul truckers who argued the draconian regulations were leading to higher shipping costs – Washington raised the limit, just slightly, to 55. The “double-nickel” remained in place until the mid-1990s, when Congress began to remove the regulations. At first, states were allowed to increase speeds only on the Interstate system but, eventually, power to set limits was turned over to the states entirely.
And they’ve been raising them ever since.
For the most part, the biggest jumps have also occurred in the nation’s largest states. Perhaps it should be no surprise that Texas now has the highest limits, however you measure them. That includes a 91-mile stretch of State Highway 130 between the capital of Austin and San Antonio where motorists now can top out at 85 mph – if they’re willing to pay the toll.
Factoring in all of the Lone Star States Interstates, state freeways and toll roads, as well as other limited access highways, the GHSA came up with an average Texas highway speed of 78.3 mph, about 1.6 mph faster than second-place Idaho, at a still swift 76.7 mph.
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A quick look at the data shows that speed limits in the Midwest and Southwest run faster than the rest of the country. Along with Texas and Idaho, Utah and Wyoming also have set top speeds of at least 80 mph. Montana – which once had no official speed limit – Montana, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Nevada are among those states with speed limits of 75 mph.
The lone East Coast state on that list is large and sparsely populated Maine.
Alaska, meanwhile, is the exception among big states, with a speed limit of only 55 mph, the same as small and densely populated Washington, D.C., notes the GHSA, which represents state highway safety departments.
Even along the East Coast, there’s been a grudging trend towards faster speed limits. Delaware now averages 58 mph, the same as New York and Rhode Island.
Indeed, despite a roughly 40% decline in highway fatalities since the original 50 mph limit was passed – deaths declining even in recent years when speed limits were raised – regulators and safety groups remain unconvinced. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration earlier this year listed speeding among the three most significant causes of deaths and serious injuries. And a statement from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety asserted that, “the research is clear that when speed limits go up, fatalities go up.”
Perhaps, but the trend to faster roadways appears to be far from finished. Idaho only joined the 80 mph club in July after a study demanded by worried safety advocates. Whether any other states will eventually catch up to Texas remains to be seen.
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The national speed limit enacted in 1974 was 55 mph, not 50 mph, in response to the first OPEC Oil Embargo.
And at one time, Montana had no speed limits, just the proviso that in daytime, speed was limited by what was “reasonable and proper” but was struck down at the end of 1998. At one time Montana was known as America’s Autobahn.
Wrong, Richard. The speed limit was initially cut to 50 and then raised to 55 after a huge public backlash.
As to Montana…which I mentioned…the law basically gave police the ability to stop and ticket someone who was driving too fast, whatever the officer deemed to be so, and that usually meant don’t try to hit 90 to 100.
Paul E.
Speed really isn’t the issue it’s driver incompetence that is the real issue. In the U.S. it’s really scary to see how unskilled the majority of people operating autos are. Since government isn’t really concerned about safety they just hand out a license to anyone who pays the fee.
Took a 6-hr. trip on I-75 this w/e, and it seems so tame with the cruise set on 80. And many fewer left-lane slowpokes with GA’s new “move right for faster traffic” law. After June and July in my old 1.1 Litre Citroën in Italy, driving 72 mph or so with an 83 mphg speed limit and the sparse left lane traffic overtaking at 100 to 120, our roads here are really built to be extremely safe if you are attentive and use common sense.
The 55 mph national speed limit was another duping of America. The speed was not based on any science at all and was just an arbitrary speed that a DC bureaucrat thought was good. This is quite similar to the 54.5 mpg CAFE requirement that we are all paying dearly for.