Utah Weekly Crash Forecast  ·  Jun 22–28, 2026

About 1,080 crashes projected this week.

Summary: About 1,080 traffic crashes are projected across Utah for Jun 22–28, 2026, with Salt Lake County the top hotspot and 💥 Killed or Seriously Injured the highest-risk hazard. Based on five years of UDOT crash data for this same calendar window. The top three counties — Salt Lake, Utah, Davis — historically account for 66% of the statewide total.

What this means for your weekIf you drive in Salt Lake County, your highest-risk window this week is Afternoon Rush (3–7 PM) (~409 crashes statewide in that window). Watch especially for Killed or Seriously Injured incidents.
Projected this week
1,080crashes
Year-over-year
+1.2%
Top hazard
💥 Killed or Seriously Injured
Hotspot county
Salt Lake
~427 crashes / week
Statewide

This week's hot spots

Pulsing markers show counties with the highest projected crash volume for the next 7 days. Numbered pins call out the top 5 statewide crash segments. Tap any county or pin to open the crash map filtered to that area.

Utah Risk Map

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Top counties this week

By projected crash volume
  • #01Salt Lake County~427/wk+1.0%
  • #02Utah County~195/wk-4.1%
  • #03Davis County~94/wk+1.6%
  • #04Weber County~80/wk+16.7%
  • #05Washington County~56/wk-7.4%
  • #06Cache County~44/wk-4.2%
  • #07Tooele County~23/wk+22.8%
  • #08Summit County~22/wk+22.0%
  • #09Box Elder County~20/wk+37.4%
  • #10Iron County~17/wk-6.7%
Open statewide map
7-day outlook

Daily projection

Year-weighted historical average for each calendar day, adjusted for day-of-week patterns. Holiday weekends bump projections slightly upward to reflect recreational travel.

Top 10 segments

Statewide hotspots

Single quarter-mile street segments with the most crashes in this calendar window across 2021–2025. Each row deep-links to the crash map zoomed to that segment.

#LocationCrashes
01272 E 12300 S, DraperSalt Lake County11View on map
02I15, SandySalt Lake County9View on map
03I-15, MurraySalt Lake County9View on map
04S PLEASANT GROVE BLVD S NORTH COUNTY BLVD, Pleasant GroveUtah County8View on map
053456 S REDWOOD RD @ 3470 S, West Valley CitySalt Lake County8View on map
06I15 @ 700 WEST, American ForkUtah County8View on map
07I15, South Salt LakeSalt Lake County8View on map
084700 S @ 2700 W, TaylorsvilleSalt Lake County8View on map
09I15, DraperSalt Lake County8View on map
10850 E MAIN ST, LehiUtah County8View on map
By hazard type

What to watch for

Hazards grouped by category — severity first, weather last. Within each group, cards are listed in an order optimized for audience clarity (most-serious-first for severity, vulnerable-users-first for people, morning-to-late-night for time). Each card links to the crash map filtered to that hazard.

By county

Where it's happening

Top counties by projected weekly crash volume. Each card shows projected count, year-over-year change, the dominant hazard, and the top 3 segments where crashes cluster in each commute window — morning rush, midday, and afternoon rush.

5-year context

This week, over time

Total crashes in the same ±7-day calendar window across the last five years.

Method

How we forecast

For today's day-of-year, we pull every crash within ±7 days across 2021–2025 — a 15-day rolling window across five years, roughly 75 days of comparable historical observations.

The baseline is a year-weighted average (recent years weight more: 0.28 (2025), 0.24, 0.20, 0.16, 0.12 (2021)). Each forecast day starts as the baseline scaled by its day-of-week multiplier. Holiday weekends (Memorial Day, Independence Day, Pioneer Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving) receive an 8–12% bump for recreational travel.

The risk score for each hazard combines relative volume (60%), severity weighting (KSI and pedestrians up-weighted because Vision Zero and HSIP optimize for these outcomes), and a year-over-year trend bonus.

The forecast also uses weather. UDOT tags every crash with the weather at the time of the crash (rain, snow, fog, etc.) and the road surface (wet, snow/ice, dry). For each weather category we compute an empirical day-level rate: how many crashes per day occur when, say, snow is reported, versus a comparable day without snow. That ratio becomes a multiplier — for example, snow days in Utah historically run about 1.4–1.8× the dry-day rate. When the 7-day weather forecast from Open-Meteo calls for snow on a given day, that day's projection is multiplied by the snow multiplier from your own data. When the empirical sample is too small (fewer than 3 weather-days in the window), we fall back to FHWA's published rates from How Do Weather Events Impact Roads? (FHWA-HOP-15-038).

Locations are joined to UDOT's road network by street_id — the same quarter-mile segments used by the PMTiles crash map. Every count on this page ties back to a column in udot_stats.csv, and every address links to the crash map zoomed to that segment.

Data source: UDOT Highway Safety  ·  Live crash map