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America’s 5 Fastest Roads

Ronald Groenendijk / FlickrRonald Groenendijk / FlickrSummer driving doesn’t always mean spending hours sitting in traffic and crawling along the interstate on the way to the beach. On the fastest highways in America, some drivers are blazing down stretches of open road at more than 90 mph.

The fastest car on the fastest road in America clocked in at 94 mph heading northbound on Arizona’s Route 79 between Saguaro National Park and Phoenix earlier this year, according to INRIX, a traffic data company that tracks speeds using vehicle GPS data. On this 39-mile stretch — two lanes wide and almost completely straight for its entire length — the fastest drivers regularly reach speeds of 87 to 90 miles per hour. Arizona’s speed limit is 75 mph on rural interstates and 65 mph on urban interstates.

To determine America’s fastest roads, INRIX first looked for stretches of roadway where motorists routinely floor it, then it found the speed range at which each roadway’s fastest 5% of drivers travel. INRIX multiplied that figure by the length of each road to decide the final ranking. The result is a list of roads where drivers put the pedal to the metal over fairly long distances. Inrix counts the same road separately in different travel directions.

INRIX drew information from its crowdsourced Smart Driver Network, which consists of anonymous GPS data points gathered from from 5 million drivers in consumer and commercial vehicles nationwide, from January through June 15.

This year’s fastest drivers are going a bit slower across the board: The average speed across the 10 fastest roads in America was 81 mph, compared to an average of 85 mph during the same period in 2010.

“High gas prices are slowing drivers down,” says INRIX spokesman Jim Bak, who thinks drivers are putting on the brakes to improve fuel economy.

Tom Kloza, an oil and gas expert at Oil Price Information Service, thinks a more likely explanation is that high gas prices are working in concert with the poor economy and high unemployment to keep more young drivers — who tend to speed and engage in the riskiest driving behavior — off the road.

Demand for gasoline in America has fallen since last year, notes Kloza, who thinks cash-strapped drivers between the ages of 16 and 25 may be cutting down on driving based on necessity. Those who are left on the road could be older, and thus slower.

Another factor: police appear to be working harder to enforce the speed limit. On Arizona’s Route 79, Tim Gaffney, spokesman for the Pinal County Sheriff’s Office, which covers the highway’s particularly speedy stretch, says gas prices and “heavy speed enforcement details” have impacted how people are driving.

While Americans aren’t exceeding speed limits as much as they were last year, INRIX says they seem to be going faster on the home stretch.

“As drivers travel slower on average to conserve fuel, we see them going faster at the end of trips as they try to make up time,” says Bak. “Many of our fastest roads this year are on open stretches just before entering major urban centers.” And on stretches of road just outside chronically congested areas like Los Angeles and New York City, traffic is also moving much faster than normal, Bak adds.

Here are the 5 fastest roads in the United States where motorists are driving at full throttle:

5. Arizona State Route 77
Heading North out of Tucson up to the AZ-76/Redington Road interchange near San Manuel Airport

Average speed of fastest 5%: 81 mph
Top speed clocked by INRIX: 81 mph
Length of corridor: 4.8 miles

4. Eastbound MI-5 Michigan Highway
Heading into Detroit from the I-275/I-96 interchange to Telegraph Road

Average speed of fastest 5%: 81 mph
Top speed clocked by INRIX: 83 mph
Length of corridor: 4.9 miles

3. California State Route 73
In both directions between Moulton Parkway and Bear Street

Average speed of fastest 5%: 81 mph
Top speed clocked by INRIX: 85 mph
Length of corridor: 14.8 miles

2. Oklahoma State Highway 33
In both directions just Northwest of Oklahoma City

Average speed of fastest 5%: 83 mph
Top speed clocked by INRIX: 87 mph
Length of corridor: 24

1. Northbound Arizona State Route 79
Between Saguaro National Park and Phoenix

Average speed of fastest 5%: 88 mph
Top speed clocked by INRIX: 94 mph
Length of corridor: 17.6 miles

Full list: America's Fastest Roads
 

1,240 comments

  • mark s  •  9 months ago
    Has anyone reading or writing this article ever been on U.S. 50 in Nevada (the loneliest road in America)? I think this would by far be faster than any of the roads mentioned.
    • gruntled 9 months ago
      You can literally scan the next 30 miles for speed traps or patrols if you have binoculars.
    • Internal Server Error 9 months ago
      I think those areas patrol from the sky.
    • Action Man 9 months ago
      Almost hit a cow standing in the middle of the road at midnight once on US 50!
  • Gabriel Tiler  •  9 months ago
    You all have never driven the mind numbing 400 miles of IH-10 in West Texas between Junction City and El Paso. The posted speed limit is 80 mph and most drivers ignore it.
    • shawn n 9 months ago
      Yeah, I'm calling BS that the "fastest highways in America" had top speeds below 90... Even I-20 between Abilene and Big Springs seems like it would have top speeders in the upper 80's, but I-10 is definitely faster overall...
    • Jeffman 9 months ago
      between Junction and El Paso, not junction city two completely diff cities...and the 80 speed limit goes pretty much to Kerrville.
    • Patricia Miller 9 months ago
      It goes from miles marker 493 to El Paso -- so that makes it a 493 mile stretch of road. Posted speed limit is 80 for cars, 70 for trucks but many treat that "limit" as a mere suggestion of what the speed should be.
  • m2tat  •  9 months ago
    um....I10 between San Antonio and El Paso has a speed limit of 80? I know for sure that stretch of road would be WAY faster than what is in this article....
    • Frank 9 months ago
      I remember driving this stretch when the speed limit was 55 . Set the cruise control on 100.
    • Dataman 9 months ago
      There's a stretch on I-10 adn I-20 in West Texas that is posted at 85. Was last time I went through there.
    • scyankee 9 months ago
      One more reason to love Texas :)
  • Sacrificio de Alma  •  9 months ago
    Do you honestly believe the police have no idea how fast cars are traveling down certain roadways?
    • LibertyGuy 9 months ago
      My dad was a cop and I never ever met a cop who didn't speed. Not one. Maybe the desk jockey's don't but all others do. That's why the ticket game is just a revenue game. I don't think most cops even like doing it.
  • James  •  9 months ago
    This is why I like my older cars, all this info was gathered using "anonymous" GPS info. It is just a few keystrokes and a law away from your car getting ticketed using this info. Who needs traffic cams anymore?
    • tim 9 months ago
      i hope you leave your smart phone at home then.
    • cooky m 9 months ago
      it would never happen, just like the traffic cam tickets never stick... they can prove your car was speeding, or running the red light. but they cant prove it was you. therefore, no ticket.
    • Right 9 months ago
      On the East coast they get you to by pass's so you can pay toll roads with a RFID chip with all of your info on it when you hit the first pass they punch you in by computer and take your picture and when you exit if you get there too soon you get your picture taken and a ticket issued and they already have your credit card info.
  • Ryan Chandler  •  9 months ago
    forbes has really went downhill in their subject matter
  • CurtisE  •  9 months ago
    They obviously ignored the East Coast for this survey. If you don't do 80 around DC and you could get run over.
  • Big D  •  9 months ago
    Has anyone ever driven around the Md/Va Beltway? It's like a NASCAR race. Rubbing is racing!
  • the_boss  •  9 months ago
    roads aren't fast. cars are fast
  • SVTCobra  •  9 months ago
    The real idiots in my opinion and many others, are the ones that fail to recognize or read, the signs on the side of the Highways that say Slower Drivers Keep Right. These self-centered idiots are only causing congestion unnecessarily. I've seen some Stupid Friggin idiots just putting along in the fast lane getting pasts by the trucks as well and causing traffic to back up. These are the people that cause road rage and accidents and should be tested every year by the DMV and reported for not using the slower lanes. Maybe their just too drunk or high on drugs, who knows !
  • VrLux  •  9 months ago
    That's cute..! :I I'm in Luxemburg (europe, next to Germany) and I was laughing reading this....over here 115 to 130 mph is a normal cruising speed (highways)
  • Bruce  •  9 months ago
    When I lived in Germany I had a crappy Ford fiesta. Top speed 75 mph. Porsches and Mercedes flew by me at 140 mph. Man, what fun I could have had. Regret regret regret.
  • zzrydr  •  9 months ago
    I LIVED in Germany for 5 years...I look at these "clocked" speeds and just go Huh? 94MPH would get you run off the Autobahns in Deutschland...My own Honda Prelude SI (European version) was clocked at 145MPH at redline...5th gear...AND I was passed several times...And once, when i returned for 3 week vacation, I rented a Volkswagen Passat/4dr/4 cyl and "calmly" drove 110mph with 42 miles per gallon, at that speed. American hiways and most cars are a joke!
  • ERICK  •  9 months ago
    97 MPH? That's it? I did 147-160 on the Autobahns in Germany many times. So this is a SLOW road if you ask me!
  • LaneL  •  9 months ago
    Back to using a large map and atlas. No one is getting my info by GPS.
  • Jack S  •  9 months ago
    LOL that ain't dodo. Used to set my cruise control at 110 on west Texas FR (paved farm roads) many in better shape than national highways.
  • Brad 33  •  9 months ago
    Thanks a lot, now every Barney Fife within 50 miles of these roads will be out there to provide "revenue enhancement'' for his Department.
  • Rob  •  9 months ago
    I would love to go 85 to 110 without fear of loosing my licenseyou guys are sooo lucky!
  • HERE KITTY KITTY  •  9 months ago
    It's the slow arses in the fast lanes that pose the biggest danger to other drivers. If any of you are guilty just get the fuak over and let those that work for a living get through. Mostly illegals heading north that drive real slow because they think driving slow (in the fast lane) will keep themselves from getting stopped.
  • Someone  •  9 months ago
    "NRIX, a traffic data company that tracks speeds using vehicle GPS data."

    WHAT!?! I don't want the government, or a private company, monitoring my driving. They say this wall anonymous. That would be easy for them to 'fix'.

    Where I go should be no business of business or government (without a warrant). How fast I go should depend on the road conditions and the road. The stretch of road they mention in OK, I'm pretty sure it is a 75 mph limit. So the top 5% are within a few mph of the limit.

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