New Jersey's Most Dangerous Areas for Pedestrians: Accident Statistics and Safety Tips
New Jersey's most dangerous areas for pedestrians are not defined by county lines alone. They are specific high-injury corridors, uncontrolled crossings, and wide arterial roads where fatal and serious-injury crashes cluster year after year.
In 2024, 230 pedestrians died on New Jersey roads, according to preliminary data from the New Jersey Attorney General's office. That figure marked the highest pedestrian death toll the state had recorded in more than three decades.
The state's
Target Zero Action Plan shifts the focus from broad county totals to the exact roads and intersections producing the most harm. The plan identifies 140 sections of high-injury roadways that need attention. For those who have already been injured, the same data may help explain how a driver's negligence or a dangerous road design contributed to the accident.
Key Takeaways About New Jersey's Most Dangerous Areas for Pedestrians
- Pedestrians and bicyclists accounted for a disproportionate share of New Jersey's roadway fatalities in 2024, and pedestrian deaths fell by nearly 24 percent in 2025, from 230 to 175
- In 2024, the counties with the highest pedestrian death counts included Essex (26), Middlesex (21), Bergen (19), Atlantic (18), Monmouth (18), Camden (15), and Union (12), according to New Jersey State Police data
- The state's Target Zero plan centers on a High Injury Network (HIN), a data-driven map of the specific road segments where fatal and serious-injury crashes concentrate, rather than treating county totals as the whole picture
- The majority of fatal pedestrian crashes occur at uncontrolled crossing locations or at intersections without a traffic signal or stop sign, according to NJDOT and FHWA guidance
- New Jersey's Stop and Stay Stopped Law requires drivers to stop for pedestrians in crosswalks, and a collision within a crosswalk creates a permissive inference that the driver failed to exercise due care
Which New Jersey Counties Have the Most Pedestrian Deaths?
County-level data reveals consistent patterns. In 2024, the counties with the highest pedestrian death counts included Essex (26), Middlesex (21), Bergen (19), Atlantic (18), Monmouth (18), Camden (15), Passaic (11), Ocean (11), Mercer (11), and Union (12).
Essex County, home to Newark, has led the state in pedestrian fatalities in multiple recent years. In 2025, Essex County again recorded the most pedestrian deaths in the state at 25.
The Target Zero plan's High Injury Network currently identifies 140 one-mile corridors across state and county roads where fatal and serious-injury crashes cluster. These are not random dots on a map. They are road segments where repeated crashes have accumulated at a level that makes them statewide priorities.
The counties with the highest death counts share several characteristics. Dense urban corridors with heavy foot traffic, bus routes, and commercial districts create frequent contact points between pedestrians and motor vehicles.
What Roads Are Most Dangerous for Pedestrians in New Jersey?
The data points to several overlapping conditions that make specific corridors more dangerous than others. No single cause explains the pattern, but a handful of factors appear repeatedly in the locations with the worst records.
- Uncontrolled crossings: Intersections without traffic signals, stop signs, or marked crosswalks force pedestrians to cross multi-lane roads with no protection. Federal guidance confirms that the majority of fatal pedestrian crashes occur at these uncontrolled locations.
- High posted speed limits: Roads designed for 40 mph or higher give drivers less time to react and dramatically increase the severity of impact. Vehicle-pedestrian collisions have a five percent fatality rate at 20 mph, but the rate reaches 85 percent at 40 mph, according to the New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission.
- Poor lighting and low visibility: Pedestrians not crossing at crosswalks or intersections accounted for nearly half of all pedestrian deaths in 2024. Many of these mid-block crashes occur after dark on roads without adequate street lighting. The Target Zero plan specifically calls for expanded pedestrian-scale lighting as a priority countermeasure.
- Gaps in sidewalk networks: In some New Jersey communities, sidewalks end abruptly or do not exist at all, forcing pedestrians to walk along the roadway or cross at uncontrolled locations.
- Turning conflicts near transit stops: Bus stop areas without safe pedestrian access create dangerous crossing patterns, especially on wide arterial roads. The Target Zero plan includes bus stop redesign among its priority actions.
These conditions do not excuse driver negligence. A driver who strikes a pedestrian may still bear legal responsibility, even if the road design contributed to the dangerous conditions.
Are Intersections or Mid-Block Crossings More Dangerous for Pedestrians?
Both present serious risks, but mid-block and other non-intersection locations account for a disproportionate share of fatal pedestrian crashes. When a pedestrian crosses a multi-lane road between intersections, there is often no signal, no marked crosswalk, and no median refuge to provide a safe stopping point.
At intersections, the risk shifts to turning vehicles. Drivers making left or right turns may focus on gaps in traffic rather than checking for pedestrians in the crosswalk. NJDOT notes that some drivers fail to obey New Jersey's law requiring them to stop for pedestrians in crosswalks, and pedestrians are advised to remain alert even when they have the right of way.
Both scenarios involve preventable driver behavior. Whether a crash happens at an intersection or mid-block, evidence of the driver's speed, attention, and compliance with traffic laws may factor into a negligence claim.
Pedestrian Safety Tips for Walking in High-Risk Areas of New Jersey
Awareness of dangerous conditions may help reduce the risk of a crash. The New Jersey Division of Highway Traffic Safety and NJDOT recommend several practical steps for pedestrians.
- Use crosswalks and intersections whenever possible. Crossing in a marked crosswalk or in an unmarked crosswalk at an intersection gives you legal protections under N.J.S.A. 39:4-36 and may trigger a permissive inference that the driver failed to exercise due care. Use crosswalks and intersections whenever possible.
- Make eye contact with drivers before crossing. A crosswalk marking does not guarantee a driver has seen you. Confirming visual contact before stepping into the road adds a layer of protection that infrastructure alone may not provide.
- Walk facing traffic when no sidewalk is available. New Jersey law requires pedestrians to walk along the extreme left side of a highway or its shoulder, facing approaching traffic, when no sidewalk is present.
- Stay alert on wide arterial roads and near bus stops. These are exactly the kinds of locations the Target Zero plan identifies for redesign, which means they are already recognized as problematic.
- Wear bright or reflective clothing after dark. Low visibility is a factor in a significant share of fatal pedestrian crashes. Reflective gear improves a driver's ability to see you from a greater distance.
- Be cautious around turning vehicles. Drivers making turns at intersections may focus on oncoming traffic and fail to check for pedestrians in the crosswalk. Watch for turning vehicles even when you have the walk signal.
These steps may reduce risk, but they do not shift legal responsibility away from a negligent driver. A pedestrian who follows every safety guideline and is still struck by a car may have a strong claim under New Jersey law.
What New Jersey Is Doing to Reduce Pedestrian Deaths
In January 2025, Governor Phil Murphy signed legislation creating the 13-member Target Zero Commission, charged with developing an action plan to eliminate traffic fatalities and serious injuries on all public roadways by 2040.
The plan is organized around seven focus areas:
- Safer People
- Safer Roads
- Safer Speeds
- Safer Vehicles
- Post-Crash Care
- Safer Land Use
- Coordinated Implementation
For pedestrians, the most significant actions include expanded use of pedestrian-oriented safety countermeasures, bus stop redesign, street-lighting improvements, traffic calming, school-street strategies, quick-build pilot projects on high-injury corridors, and a public crash data portal.
The plan also commits to identifying the overlap between overburdened communities and High Injury Network segments to direct resources where they are needed most.
What to Do If You Are Injured as a Pedestrian in New Jersey
A pedestrian accident may leave you with serious injuries, mounting medical bills, and questions about who is responsible. The steps you take in the days and weeks after the crash may directly affect the strength of a future claim.
- Follow through on medical treatment. If you have not yet seen a doctor, do so as soon as possible. If you have, follow the recommended treatment plan. Gaps in medical care give insurance companies a reason to argue that your injuries are not as serious as claimed.
- Obtain a copy of the police report. A police report provides an official record of the crash, including the driver's information and any traffic violations the officer observed. If a report was not filed at the scene, you may still be able to file one through the local police department.
- Photograph your injuries and any damaged belongings. Images of visible injuries, torn clothing, and damaged personal items preserve evidence of the collision's impact. If you are able to return to the scene safely, photographs of the crosswalk conditions, lighting, and road layout may also be helpful.
- Keep all documents organized. Medical bills, treatment records, police reports, pay stubs showing missed work, and correspondence from insurance companies all support the value of a claim.
- Avoid giving recorded statements to the driver's insurance company. Adjusters may contact you early in the process. Anything you say may be used to reduce or deny your claim.
- Speak with a pedestrian accident attorney. An attorney may help identify who was at fault, determine what insurance coverage applies, and assess whether dangerous road design or a government entity's failure to address known risks played a role.
Acting early matters. Surveillance footage gets overwritten, witness memories fade, and the usual 90-day notice deadline for claims against government entities may pass before you realize it applies.
The Numbers Describe Patterns, but Your Situation Is Personal
Pedestrian accident statistics describe where drivers are failing and where infrastructure is falling short. The Target Zero plan makes clear that the problem is not just broad county trends. It is specific corridors, specific crossings, and specific gaps in pedestrian access that are repeatedly producing preventable deaths.
If a negligent driver caused your pedestrian accident in New Jersey, you have the right to pursue compensation. Call Onal Injury Law for a free consultation. Our attorneys may help you understand your legal options and take the next step toward recovery.
FAQs About Pedestrian Accident Statistics and Safety in New Jersey
Where do most pedestrian accidents happen in New Jersey?
The highest fatality counts appear in urban and suburban counties like Essex, Middlesex, and Bergen, but the state's Target Zero strategy focuses more precisely on 140 high-injury corridors where fatal and serious-injury crashes cluster on specific road segments.
Are pedestrian deaths increasing in New Jersey?
Pedestrian fatalities reached 230 in 2024, a 36-year high, then fell to 175 in 2025. The decline is encouraging, but pedestrians still account for a disproportionately large share of New Jersey's total traffic deaths.
Do drivers have to stop for pedestrians in New Jersey crosswalks?
Under N.J.S.A. 39:4-36, drivers must stop and remain stopped for pedestrians in marked crosswalks and yield to pedestrians in unmarked crosswalks at intersections. Violating this law carries a $200 fine, community service, and two motor vehicle points.
What if poor road design contributed to my pedestrian accident?
Dangerous road conditions may support a claim against a government entity. The Target Zero plan itself identifies lighting, crossings, bus stops, speed management, and sidewalk gaps as safety priorities, which may be relevant when evaluating whether a road authority failed to address known risks. These cases usually require a notice of tort claim within 90 days.
What should I do if I am hit by a car as a pedestrian in New Jersey?
Follow through on medical treatment, obtain the police report, photograph your injuries and the scene, and avoid giving recorded statements to the driver's insurance company. Speaking with an attorney may help protect your claim and identify all available sources of compensation.













