See Where Utah Ranks On The List Of Best And Worst States To Drive In
By Ginny Reese
January 19, 2021
Not only can driving cause stress, make you late with the inevitable traffic jams, and be the source of an all-day bad attitude, but it can also be bad on your wallet.
In 2019 alone, congestion cost U.S. drivers $88 billion and an average of 99 hours of their time.
For many Americans, however, driving down a calm back road is a way to relieve stress and free their minds.
So what it is like driving in Utah?
Wallethub compared all 50 states across 31 key indicators of a positive commute to determine 2021's best and worst states to drive in.
According to the list, Utah is somewhere in the middle. The state came in at number 21 on the list.
Here is the complete list of 2021's best and worst states to drive in:
- Texas
- Indiana
- North Carolina
- Iowa
- Tennessee
- Kentucky
- Maine
- Idaho
- South Dakota
- Ohio
- Wisconsin
- Kansas
- Nebraska
- Illinois
- North Dakota
- Virginia
- Georgia
- Montana
- New York
- Oklahoma
- Utah
- Vermont
- Alabama
- Wyoming
- Arizona
- Arkansas
- Florida
- West Virginia
- Mississippi
- Alaska
- South Carolina
- Minnesota
- Louisiana
- New Mexico
- Connecticut
- Nevada
- Oregon
- Michigan
- Massachusetts
- Missouri
- Colorado
- New Jersey
- New Hampshire
- Pennsylvania
- Rhode Island
- Delaware
- Maryland
- Washington
- California
- Hawaii
Photo: Getty Images
#Traffic congestion cost U.S. #drivers $88 billion per year. Is your state among the best to drive in? Find out here: https://t.co/0bEMkhZIc7 pic.twitter.com/6e5jqercBu
— WalletHub (@wallethub) January 19, 2021