The 27th Annual Highway Report finds Virginia’s highways and bridges rank first in overall performance and cost-effectiveness thanks to good rural pavement conditions, low fatality rates, a relatively small percentage of deficient bridges, and low highway costs. North Carolina’s solid pavement quality and low costs rank its state-controlled highway system second overall. Tennessee, Georgia, and Connecticut round out the top five in the Annual Highway Report’s performance and cost-effectiveness rankings.
In contrast, the study shows that Alaska’s highways rank last in the nation due to high fatality rates and poor urban and rural pavement conditions. New York’s high spending didn’t fix its bad urban pavement conditions or percentage of structurally deficient bridges, resulting in the state ranking 49th in overall performance and cost-effectiveness. The other worst-ranked states—Hawaii (48th), California (47th), and Washington (46th) — also tend to have high costs that are not translating into good pavement quality or safe road and bridge conditions.
Nationally, the study finds that just 21 states improved the condition of their roads and bridges in 2020, the most recent year with complete data available. Highway spending was slightly lower in 2020 than in 2019 due to reduced expenditures in three categories — capital and bridge spending, highway maintenance, and administrative costs. Unfortunately, national urban and rural fatality rates rose, and pavement conditions deteriorated on the country’s rural Interstate highways and urban arterial roads. America’s local roads are in especially bad shape, the report says.
The good news is that overall urban Interstate pavement conditions improved, and a smaller percentage of the country’s bridges were graded as structurally deficient. Urban traffic congestion was also down in 2020, but significant reductions in travel due to the COVID-19 pandemic were responsible for that decrease.
Reason Foundation’s 27th Annual Highway Report Rankings
Overall performance and cost-effectiveness rankings of state highway systems
1 Virginia
2 North Carolina
3 Tennessee
4 Georgia
5 Connecticut
6 South Carolina
7 Kentucky
8 Florida
9 North Dakota
10 Utah
11 Missouri
12 Minnesota
13 Arkansas
14 New Hampshire
15 Alabama
16 Wyoming
17 Ohio
18 Mississippi
19 Texas
20 Massachusetts
21 Nevada
22 Kansas
23 Indiana
24 Maryland
25 Montana
26 Nebraska
27 Michigan
28 South Dakota
29 Illinois
30 Arizona
31 Iowa
32 Maine
33 Wisconsin
34 Idaho
35 Delaware
36 New Mexico
37 Oregon
38 Vermont
39 West Virginia
40 Louisiana
41 Pennsylvania
42 Rhode Island
43 Colorado
44 New Jersey
45 Oklahoma
46 Washington
47 California
48 Hawaii
49 New York
50 Alaska
The study finds that a group of particularly poor-performing states is having a hard time fixing critical problems. For example, just four states—California, New York, Louisiana, and Hawaii—are responsible for more than 25% of the nation’s total urban Interstate pavement in poor condition. Likewise, over a quarter of the country’s urban arterial pavement in poor condition can be found in five states: California, New York, Massachusetts, Nebraska, and Rhode Island. Three states— California, Colorado, and Alaska—have more than 25% of the nation’s rural Interstate pavement in poor condition. And nine states reported more than 10% of their bridges as structurally deficient: Iowa, Louisiana, Maine, Michigan, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, and West Virginia.