Background
Road safety remains a critical challenge for the organizations and frontline workers who keep the physical economy and our communities running – those who stock our shelves, heat our homes, deliver essential goods, and maintain public infrastructure and safety. Across industries and the public sector alike, these teams share one thing in common: they rely on commercial vehicles to do their jobs and serve the communities that depend on them every day.
To better understand how collision patterns evolved over the past year – and where risk is headed – Motive analyzed data from commercial drivers using the Motive AI Dashcam across the United States, Mexico, and Canada.
This analysis focuses on AI-detected safety events captured in 1.2 billion hours of video to identify when, where, and why collisions occurred from 2024 to 2025. All statements included in the report are based on data captured by Motive’s platform and analyzed by our data science team, offering a data-driven look at how road safety risks shifted in 2025, what organizations can expect in 2026, and why this year represents a turning point in how collisions are prevented.
Data methodology
The 2026 Motive AI Road Safety Report is based on aggregated, anonymized insights from the Motive platform covering October 2024 through October 2025, with select analyses extending through December 2025. The report also incorporates publicly available data from the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA), the U.S. Census Bureau, and the U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT).
Top Findings
Top Predictions
Traffic fatalities declined in 2025, but road risk remains
Early estimates show road safety meaningfully improved in 2025 with fewer severe collisions on the road, exactly the kind of progress AI-powered prevention is meant to drive. Severe collisions involving injuries, tow-aways and fatalities are trending 9.5% lower, with reported injuries trending 7.7% down year-over-year and focused on long-haul, heavy-duty interstate fleets that move goods nationwide. These data points concentrate mainly on the long-haul, heavy-duty transportation space, involving vehicles that see some of the greatest risk on the road due to weight and cargo.
This is also in line with what the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) reported in September showing an 8.2% decrease in traffic fatalities in the first half of 2025 compared to the same period in 2024, the largest mid-year decline in more than a decade, even as Americans drove more than 12.1 billion more miles.
Our data suggests that what has changed isn’t driver behavior – it’s visibility. The decline signals that more organizations are identifying and addressing risk earlier, before collisions happen. Increased adoption of AI-powered Driver Safety products, which can detect risky behaviors and alert drivers and managers in real time, are increasingly shaping outcomes rather than simply capturing them.
To read the complete 2026 Motive AI Road Safety Report, click here.