"Statistics show that teen crashes spike during the summer months because teens are out of school and on the road," said Dr. David Yang, AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety executive director. "The Foundation's research found that inexperience paired with greater exposure on the road could create a deadly combination for teen drivers."
The AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety's latest study, Rates of Motor Vehicle Crashes, Injuries, and Deaths in Relation to Driver Age, analyzes crash rates per mile driven for all drivers and found that for every mile on the road, drivers ages 16-17 years old are:
Fatal teen crashes are on the rise. The number of teen drivers involved in fatal crashes increased more than 10 percent from the previous year, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's (NHTSA) 2015 crash data, the latest data available. To reverse this alarming trend, AAA urges parents to help reduce the number of deadly crashes on the road by getting more involved and talking to their teens about the dangers of risky behavior behind the wheel.
"Parents are the front line of defense for keeping our roads safer this summer," said Jennifer Ryan, AAA Director of State Relations. "It all starts with educating teens about safety on the road and modeling good behavior, like staying off the phone and buckling your safety belt."
Three factors that commonly result in deadly crashes for teen drivers are:
To keep roads safer this summer, AAA encourages parents to: