The states with the highest share of young drivers on the road
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The states with the highest share of young drivers on the road
The coveted teenage dream of obtaining a driver's license at 16 has been headed toward the scrap yard for almost 40 years. from 2020, the most recent available, shows that drivers 19 and younger make up 3.7% of all U.S. drivers鈥攁nd drivers 16 and younger are just 0.5% of the nation's drivers.
Those ratios are shrinking: An analysis by mobility advocacy group Green Car Congress found that in 2018, had a driver's license, down from 80% in 1983. Over the same period, the proportion of 16-year-olds with licenses also dropped from 46% to 25%.
Using data from the FHWA, has compiled the 10 U.S. states with the largest shares of young drivers鈥攖hose 19 and younger.
Because people in more rural states may be more likely to need鈥攁nd therefore get鈥攁 driver's license, the states are also listed with their urbanization indexes, sourced from a . And indeed, more rural states tend to have a higher percentage of drivers who are young.
Rate of young drivers in each state
Rural Midwestern states were among the most likely to have higher percentages of young drivers. In part that's likely because they are made up of less dense, more expansive areas and lack significant public transit services.
As a nation, the U.S. is not the most transit-accessible: The 10 largest metropolitan areas in the country make up just one-quarter of the nation's census tracts, but , according to a UCLA analysis of Census Bureau data. Most of those transit hot spots are on either the East Coast or the West Coast鈥攚ith nearly one-third of them in the New York City metropolitan area.
In addition, the pandemic may have somewhat slowed the rate of young drivers getting licenses: Nationally, 3.9% of the nation's drivers were 19 and under in 2019. In 2020 that share dropped to 3.7%.
#10. Nebraska
- Share of drivers age 19 and under: 5.33%
- Total drivers 19 and under: 38,395
- Total drivers in state: 720,896
- Urbanization index: 10.2
#9. Idaho
- Share of drivers age 19 and under: 5.42%
- Total drivers 19 and under: 35,312
- Total drivers in state: 651,522
- Urbanization index: 9.59
#8. Alabama
- Share of drivers age 19 and under: 5.49%
- Total drivers 19 and under: 107,425
- Total drivers in state: 1,956,800
- Urbanization index: 9.61
#7. South Carolina
- Share of drivers age 19 and under: 5.58%
- Total drivers 19 and under: 103,806
- Total drivers in state: 1,861,511
- Urbanization index: 10.11
#6. Minnesota
- Share of drivers age 19 and under: 5.96%
- Total drivers 19 and under: 122,559
- Total drivers in state: 2,055,978
- Urbanization index: 10.46
#5. Iowa
- Share of drivers age 19 and under: 5.97%
- Total drivers 19 and under: 67,141
- Total drivers in state: 1,124,007
- Urbanization index: 9.59
#4. Kansas
- Share of drivers age 19 and under: 6.04%
- Total drivers 19 and under: 58,539
- Total drivers in state: 969,756
- Urbanization index: 10.12
#3. Oklahoma
- Share of drivers age 19 and under: 6.63%
- Total drivers 19 and under: 78,573
- Total drivers in state: 1,184,969
- Urbanization index: 9.94
#2. Utah
- Share of drivers age 19 and under: 6.74%
- Total drivers 19 and under: 73,075
- Total drivers in state: 1,083,825
- Urbanization index: 10.96
#1. South Dakota
- Share of drivers age 19 and under: 7.34%
- Total drivers 19 and under: 24,391
- Total drivers in state: 332,249
- Urbanization index: 8.73