State Data · NJ
New Jersey Traffic Fatality Data
New Jersey ranks in the top 10 nationally for total pedestrian deaths, at No. 9 of 51.
This page tracks New Jersey's standing across four kinds of traffic death: pedestrian, motorcyclist, large-truck crash, and bicyclist. Each is ranked against all 50 states and the District of Columbia. We rank by total count and by rate for every 100,000 residents. Every number below comes from our national crash record. We show the latest full year and the average of the last five years.
210
pedestrian deaths in New Jersey, 2024
No. 19 of 51 by rate: 2.21 for every 100,000 residents.
From federal fatal-crash records · 2024 totals
New Jersey by the numbers
Pedestrian deaths
210
2024 total · 5-year average 189 · 2.21 per 100,000 · No. 9 of 51 by total, No. 19 by rate
See the full 50-state pedestrian deaths ranking → Read pedestrian accident statistics and injury claims →
Motorcyclist deaths
112
2024 total · 5-year average 95 · 1.18 per 100,000 · No. 21 of 51 by total, No. 46 by rate
See the full 50-state motorcyclist deaths ranking → Read motorcycle accident statistics and injury claims →
Large truck crash deaths
69
2024 total · 5-year average 76 · 0.73 per 100,000 · No. 29 of 51 by total, No. 45 by rate
See the full 50-state large-truck crash deaths ranking → Read truck accident statistics and injury claims →
Bicyclist deaths
25
2024 total · 5-year average 22 · 0.26 per 100,000 · No. 11 of 51 by total, No. 23 by rate
Where New Jersey sits on the pedestrian-death map
Signals in the data
These are the patterns New Jersey's numbers show against the national picture. Each one traces to the numbers above.
- New Jersey ranks in the top 10 nationally for total pedestrian deaths, at No. 9 of 51.
- New Jersey ranks 21st in total motorcyclist deaths but only 46th by rate. That is a gap of 25 places once you adjust for population.
- New Jersey's motorcyclist deaths rose 18% in 2024 versus its own 2020-2024 average of 95 a year.
- New Jersey ranks 29th in total deaths in large-truck crashes but only 45th by rate. That is a gap of 16 places once you adjust for population.
For journalists
Every number on this page traces back to a documented method and the national ranking behind it. Cite the category page you're pulling from, or request the full state cut →.
Cite this data: "New Jersey Traffic Fatality Data," injured.org, 2024. https://injured.org/new-jersey/
Methodology
We pulled this from federal fatal-crash records, 2000-2024. Read the full methodology →
Updated July 2026
Which years the numbers cover: totals and rates use each category's latest complete year. Which states are counted: all 50 states plus the District of Columbia (51 rows). Full source list on our data sources page.