Behind every crash statistic is a person, a family, and a set of medical bills that will not pay themselves. But the numbers matter, because they tell us where the most dangerous roads are, who is getting hurt, what behaviors are killing the most Georgians, and how state agencies are responding. For injured Georgians and their families, the data also provides important context: car wrecks are not freak events. They are predictable, preventable, and tragically common. The trial team at Schneider Williamson Car Accident & Personal Injury Attorneys has handled thousands of cases that began as just another data point on a chart, and this guide pulls together what the most recent official statistics show about driving in Georgia.
Statewide Crash Volume
According to data published by the Georgia Governor’s Office of Highway Safety, Georgia recorded approximately 367,523 reported crashes in 2024. That works out to more than 1,000 crashes per day, every day, across the state. The vast majority involve property damage or relatively minor injuries, but every year a significant subset produces life-changing harm.
Georgia traffic fatalities have hovered around 1,600 to 1,800 per year in recent reporting periods. In 2023, Georgia recorded approximately 1,674 traffic fatalities. National data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration shows total U.S. traffic deaths declined to an estimated 39,345 in 2024, the first time the national figure fell below 40,000 since 2020. Whether Georgia will see a comparable improvement is something the most recent state reports will continue to track.
The Most Dangerous Counties
The five core metro Atlanta counties consistently lead the state in both total crashes and fatal crashes. Based on 2024 GOHS data, the metro counties with the highest crash volumes were Fulton County (approximately 51,572 crashes, 944 suspected serious injuries, and 93 fatalities), DeKalb County (approximately 35,860 crashes, 574 suspected serious injuries, and 112 fatalities), Cobb County (approximately 27,604 crashes, 449 suspected serious injuries, and 57 fatalities), Chatham County (approximately 13,593 crashes, 271 suspected serious injuries, and 29 fatalities), and Clayton County (approximately 12,823 crashes, 340 suspected serious injuries, and 46 fatalities).
For our clients in Sandy Springs and Dunwoody, the takeaway is direct: Fulton and DeKalb together account for a disproportionate share of Georgia’s serious-injury crash volume.
Leading Causes of Fatal Crashes
The GOHS and Georgia Department of Transportation consistently identify the same handful of behaviors as the top contributors to fatal and serious-injury crashes in Georgia:
Impaired driving. In 2023, GOHS data indicated that approximately 28% of fatal crashes in Georgia involved at least one drunk driver, with about 23% involving a driver under the influence of drugs. Impaired driving cases often support uncapped punitive damages under Georgia law, as discussed in our damages guide.
Speeding. Approximately 18% of Georgia fatal crashes in 2023 involved at least one speeding driver. Speed compounds every other risk factor by reducing reaction time and dramatically increasing the energy involved in a collision.
Distracted driving. Texting, phone use, in-vehicle screens, and other distractions remain a leading cause of crashes statewide. Georgia’s hands-free law, O.C.G.A. § 40-6-241, prohibits most hand-held phone use behind the wheel, and a violation can support a negligence per se argument in a personal injury case.
Failure to wear seat belts. Unrestrained occupants account for a substantial share of Georgia traffic fatalities every year, even though seat belts are the single most effective intervention available.
Driver fatigue. Drowsy driving contributes to roughly 1% of Georgia fatal crashes by official count, though the true number is likely higher because fatigue is hard to document after the fact.
Crashes Involving Commercial Vehicles
Tractor-trailer and large commercial vehicle crashes are over-represented among Georgia’s serious-injury and fatal incidents. Even though commercial vehicles make up a smaller share of total traffic, their size and weight produce far more devastating results when something goes wrong. A Sandy Springs truck accident carries unique legal complexity because of federal motor carrier regulations, electronic logging requirements, and the involvement of multiple corporate defendants, including drivers, carriers, brokers, and shippers.
Pedestrian and Bicycle Fatalities
Pedestrian fatalities in Georgia and nationally have risen sharply over the past decade. The Governors Highway Safety Association estimated approximately 7,148 pedestrian deaths in the United States in 2024. In metro Atlanta, high-risk corridors for pedestrian crashes include Buford Highway, Moreland Avenue, and Memorial Drive, where dense traffic, limited walkability, and poor lighting combine to create persistently dangerous conditions.
The Most Dangerous Times
National crash data analyzed by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety shows that weekends are consistently more dangerous than weekdays, with Saturday the single deadliest day on U.S. roads. Roughly a third of fatal crashes occur between 3 p.m. and 9 p.m. Holiday travel periods, especially Thanksgiving and Memorial Day weekends, regularly produce spikes in fatal crashes across Georgia.
What the Numbers Mean for Injury Victims
These statistics matter for more than safety planning. They affect how injury cases are valued and tried. A crash on a known dangerous corridor, involving a known high-risk behavior, supported by clear evidence of fault, presents very differently to a jury than an isolated incident. They also support claims against government entities responsible for road design and maintenance in some cases, although those claims face strict notice requirements discussed in our statute of limitations guide.
Talk to Us About Your Crash
If you or a loved one has been injured in a Georgia crash, you should not have to navigate the statistics alone, or face the insurance company alone. Request a free consultation, there is no fee unless we recover for you.