Law Blog

Get Home for the Holidays: Tips to Avoid Road Accidents for the Winter Traveler

The holiday season is a wonderful time for many people to take vacations and visit their family friends. It is also a time where cars slide on the ice, drivers drink too much egg nog, and shopping frenzies cause insurance-raising fender benders. Here are some pointers to keep you and your kin safe and out of trouble on the way to your destination.

1. Prepare for driving through the ice and drifting snow

Winter driving requires patience, skill, and knowing when to pull over. One University of Georgia researcher, Alan Black, analyzed ten years of recent weather data to show that 800 drivers die each year just by driving in inclement winter weather such as sleet, snow, and freezing rain. This type of weather also causes well over a million accidents every year. 

Insurance experts and state agencies have compiled many lists of winter driving tips, and here are a few that stand out:

2. Don’t cancel out Black Friday deals by increasing your insurance bill

Tens of millions of shoppers attend Black Friday sales, and they are starting earlier and earlier, creeping into Thanksgiving evening. Often, cars file in and out of cramped parking lots. Progressive Insurance discovered that parking lot claims rose by 36% on Black Friday in 2011. Unfortunately, there hasn’t been a more recent study, but drivers should still be careful. Here, the advice is simple:

3. Don’t drive intoxicated after a holiday party unless you want a DUI…or worse

Each year, “Blackout Wednesday” packs the local bars and kicks off the holiday season as one of the biggest binge-drinking days of the year. The frequency crashes involving alcohol during the holidays in general is 2-3 times higher than during the rest of the year. In all, 40% of holiday crashes involve alcohol. Bad road conditions combine with drivers’ diminished control of vehicles and poor reaction time produce serious and sometimes deadly accidents. Knowing this, the police and their DUI/DWI patrols are often poised to catch drivers in the act. Here are tips to avoid the ultimate holiday calamity:

Happy Holidays, and stay safe!