Every time a driver picks up a phone behind the wheel, they’re making a split-second decision that can have lifelong consequences. Texting and driving has become one of the most dangerous forms of distracted driving in the United States, contributing to thousands of deaths and hundreds of thousands of injuries each year. Despite widespread awareness campaigns, the behavior remains common, especially among younger drivers.
Texting is uniquely dangerous because it combines three types of distraction at once: visual (looking at the phone), manual (holding or typing), and cognitive (thinking about the message instead of the road). According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), sending or reading a text can take your eyes off the road for about 5 seconds, which, at 55 mph, is like driving the length of a football field completely blind.
That brief moment of inattention is enough to miss a braking car, a pedestrian crossing, or a sudden traffic change.
Additional data from National Highway Traffic Safety Administration shows just how widespread and deadly distracted driving is in the U.S.:
Even more concerning, studies suggest these numbers may be underreported because police often cannot confirm distraction after a crash.
Research shows that texting while driving can impair reaction time to a level similar to driving under the influence of alcohol. It can reduce a driver’s ability to respond to hazards and significantly increase crash risk. One major concern is the “hangover effect,” where a driver’s attention can remain impaired for seconds even after putting the phone down.
In other words, the danger doesn’t end when the phone leaves your hand.
While distracted driving is a national issue, states like New Jersey and New York have seen major impacts due to high population density, heavy commuter traffic, and congested highways.
New Jersey consistently reports hundreds of thousands of crashes tied to driver inattention over time. State highway safety data indicates that driver inattention has been a contributing factor in nearly 800,000 crashes over a multi-year period (2012–2016).
Key takeaways for New Jersey:
New Jersey has also strengthened enforcement through “hands-free” phone laws, but violations remain a concern, especially in commuter corridors.
New York has one of the strictest distracted driving laws in the country, banning handheld phone use statewide. Despite this, distracted driving continues to contribute to crashes across the state, particularly in:
State safety campaigns consistently emphasize that even brief phone use like checking a notification, can lead to serious crashes in heavy traffic conditions where reaction time is critical.
Why the problem persists
Even with strong laws in New Jersey and New York, distracted driving continues because:
Surveys consistently show that while most drivers know texting is dangerous, a significant portion still admit to doing it.
Unlike many causes of crashes, texting and driving is entirely preventable. The statistics make one thing clear: even a few seconds of distraction can change lives forever.
For drivers in high-traffic states like New Jersey and New York, the stakes are even higher. Every message can wait, but a single moment of distraction on the road cannot.
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