Accidents on federal highways decline in 2025

For the first time in six years, the number of accidents on federal highways fell in 2025, following a record in 2024. The decline is attributed to improvements in privately conceded roads, according to a study by Fundação Dom Cabral. However, experts emphasize that human factors remain key to road safety.

In 2025, the total number of accidents on federal highways was 56,116, a decrease from the 56,435 recorded in 2024, which was the highest in the historical series starting from 2018. This decline interrupted an upward trend observed over the past six years. Deaths dropped from 4,995 to 4,799, while serious injuries fell from 15,916 to 15,098 in the same period.

The Fundação Dom Cabral study, led by Paulo Resende, director of the Logistics, Infrastructure, and Supply Chain Nucleus, attributes the improvement mainly to concessions of highways to the private sector. “In our analysis, the new numbers reflect the concessions carried out in recent years, which brought infrastructure works capable of increasing road safety,” states Resende. Between 2023 and 2025, at least nine concession auctions took place, including road duplications that reduce risks in maneuvers like overtaking on single-lane sections.

Regional variations were noted: the drop in accidents with serious injuries was 5% nationwide, but reached 21% in São Paulo, 30% in Bahia, and 8% in Minas Gerais. Despite the progress, Resende warns: “The number is still high.” Experts stress that human factors, such as speeding, improper overtaking, phone use while driving, and driving under the influence of alcohol, remain the main causes of serious collisions. Thus, structural improvements must be complemented by responsible driver behavior to sustain the reduction.

Related Articles

Dramatic photo-realistic illustration of a police crime scene in São Paulo at night, symbolizing the 2025 record of 834 deaths by police action.
Image generated by AI

Police lethality in SP hits record at end of 2025

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

São Paulo's Public Security Secretariat released 2025 data showing 834 deaths by police, with the fourth quarter recording 276 victims, the highest since 2015. While homicides fell 4% statewide to 2,527, the capital saw a 6% rise to 530 cases. Experts criticize the rising lethality trend under Governor Tarcísio de Freitas's administration.

The National Bureau of Statistics has reported that 1,374 people died in road accidents during the fourth quarter of 2025.

Reported by AI

Provisional data shows 41 miners died on the job in South Africa last year, marking the lowest annual toll on record. This figure edges below the 2024 low of 42 and highlights progress toward zero harm in the industry. The Minerals Council SA released the figures at the Mining Indaba in Cape Town.

The Subsecretaría de Prevención del Delito announced on Monday the start of preliminary weekly reports on homicide victims. The first report showed 97 victims from President José Antonio Kast's inauguration to April 12, a 2.1% increase from 2025. Annually, figures indicate a 12.8% decrease.

Reported by AI

A private car collided head-on with a bus on the Mexico-Cuernavaca federal highway, resulting in four deaths and eleven serious injuries. The crash happened on the night of Saturday, January 24, at kilometer 47 in Huitzilac, Morelos. Both vehicles caught fire after the impact.

Fentanyl-related overdose deaths in the US dropped by 34 percent from 2023 to 2024, falling from nearly 73,000 to under 48,000. This decline, observed across demographics and regions, appears linked to reduced purity in illegal fentanyl supplies. While marking progress in the opioid crisis, experts caution that other drug deaths are rising and the trend may not last.

Reported by AI

A semi-truck crashed into vehicles queued at the Casa Blanca toll on the Zipaquirá-Ubaté road, killing five people including a minor at the start of Holy Week. Cundinamarca Governor Jorge Emilio Rey confirmed the toll and offered condolences. More than 20 people were injured.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline