JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – On average, Americans drive 29.2 miles per day, making two trips with an average total duration of 46 minutes. This and other revealing data are the result of a ground-breaking study.
"This is the first ongoing study that provides a look at when and how much Americans are driving," said Peter Kissinger, President and CEO of the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety. "Existing federal data with this level of detail was last released in 2009, eight years after the previous release. This substantially limits the extent to which we can use existing data to draw conclusions about Americans' current driving habits."
The first-year results of the American Driving Survey revealed that:
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- Motorists age 16 years and older drive, on average, 29.2 miles per day or 10,658 miles per year.
- Women take more driving trips, but men spend 25 percent more time behind the wheel and drive 35 percent more miles than women.
- Both teenagers and seniors over the age of 75 drive less than any other age group; motorists 30-49 years old drive an average 13,140 miles annually, more than any other age group.
- The average distance and time spent driving increase in relation to higher levels of education. A driver with a grade school or some high school education drove an average of 19.9 miles and 32 minutes daily, while a college graduate drove an average of 37.2 miles and 58 minutes.
- Drivers who reported living "in the country" or "a small town" drive greater distances (12,264 miles annually) and spend a greater amount of time driving than people who described living in a "medium sized town" or city (9,709 miles annually).
- Motorists in the South drive the most (11,826 miles annually), while those in the Northeast drive the least (8,468 miles annually).
- On average, Americans drive fewer miles on the weekend than on weekdays.
- Americans drive, on average, the least during winter months (January through March) at 25.7 miles daily; they drive the most during the summer months (July through September) at 30.6 miles daily.
"This is an exciting study because the examination of how much time Americans spend in the car will then be compared to crash data," said Michele Harris, traffic safety consultant for AAA. "These insights will help guide what Americans can do to stay safe when behind the wheel."