Winter road fatalities in the United States do not affect all drivers equally. A new study from DeMayo Law Offices, drawing on National Highway Traffic Safety Administration crash data from 2019 through 2023, has found stark demographic disparities in who dies on winter roads, with men dramatically overrepresented, working-age adults bearing the heaviest burden, and behavioral patterns playing as significant a role as environmental conditions in determining who is most at risk.
The findings have direct implications for how winter road safety campaigns are designed, who they target, and what specific behaviors they address.
The gender disparity in winter crash fatalities is among the most pronounced findings in the data. Over the five-year study period, men accounted for 42,163 winter road deaths, compared to 17,564 for women, meaning men represented well over two-thirds of all fatal winter crashes. This gap persisted across all four winter months and all five years of the study, confirming that it reflects deeply embedded patterns of road exposure and driver behavior rather than isolated or weather-specific circumstances.
Several interconnected factors help explain the disparity. Men drive longer distances on average, spend more time on highways, and are more likely to operate vehicles during higher-risk windows, including nighttime hours, severe weather conditions, and peak commuting periods. Men are also statistically more likely to engage in dangerous driving behaviors, including speeding, drunk driving, and aggressive driving, all of which become exponentially more dangerous when combined with winter hazards such as reduced visibility, black ice, and extended stopping distances on wet or frozen roads.
Occupational exposure is also a contributing factor. Men are more likely to hold jobs that require driving regardless of weather conditions, placing them behind the wheel during storms and dangerous road conditions that other drivers may choose to avoid.
The age breakdown reinforces the outsized risk facing working-age adults. Drivers aged 25 to 34 suffered the highest number of winter driving fatalities, with 11,213 deaths over the study period. The 35 to 44 age group followed with 9,095 fatalities. These are not inexperienced drivers. They are the most active segment of the driving population, managing daily commutes, work-related travel, family obligations, and the elevated volume of social and holiday travel that characterizes the winter season.
Fatality numbers remained high among older age groups as well. Drivers aged 55 to 64 recorded 8,536 winter deaths, followed by those aged 45 to 54 at 7,837 and drivers aged 65 to 74 at 6,090. For these groups, age-related factors, including slower reaction times, reduced night vision, and greater physical vulnerability in a crash, increase the likelihood that a serious collision results in a fatal outcome.
The data challenges the common assumption that younger, inexperienced drivers are the primary source of winter road danger. While drivers under 25 do face risks, the study found that winter fatalities are driven less by inexperience alone and more by the compounding effects of high road exposure, behavioral tendencies, and injury severity across the full span of adulthood.
Behavioral data adds a further dimension to the demographic portrait. Speeding caused 16,804 winter fatalities across the study period. Drunk driving accounted for 17,955 deaths. Distracted driving contributed 4,768 fatalities. In each category, the worst outcomes were concentrated in December, when holiday travel, alcohol consumption, and early-winter road conditions create a perfect storm of elevated risk. Texas led all states in speeding fatalities (2,284), drunk driving fatalities (2,718), and distracted driving fatalities (683) during the winter months studied.
The study also flagged an underappreciated psychological dimension of winter driving risk: Seasonal Affective Disorder. As daylight decreases and cold weather sets in, SAD can manifest as fatigue, slowed reaction times, reduced concentration, and increased irritability behind the wheel. For some drivers, seasonal depression may also contribute to riskier coping behaviors, including impaired or emotionally compromised driving, compounding danger in a season already defined by elevated hazard.
Taken together, the demographic findings paint a clear picture: winter road safety is not a niche concern for drivers in snowy climates. It is a broad public health issue that disproportionately affects men, working-age adults, and drivers across all regions of the country. Prevention strategies must reflect that complexity.