In an encouraging sign for road safety, traffic deaths in Washington fell significantly for the second year in a row in 2025, according to state data released Tuesday.
Washington saw 659 people die in vehicle crashes in 2025, down from 809 in 2023 and 737 in 2024, according to the preliminary data from the Washington Traffic Safety Commission. It amounts to a more than 10 percent reduction. The 2023 figure was the highest in Washington since 1990.
The counts remain well above pre-pandemic annual totals, which were consistently in the 500s.
“It is a relief to see fewer people killed in 2024 and 2025. But our goal is zero. One person killed is too many,” Shelly Baldwin, the director of the traffic safety commission, said in a press release.
The deaths appeared less likely to involve impairment, speeding or distracted driving than in 2024.
Of the 2025 deaths, 297, or 45 percent, reportedly involved impaired drivers, compared to 370, or 50 percent, in 2024. However, several dozen lab tests remain pending, so last year’s figure could rise. Alcohol is the most common source of impairment, found in 57 percent of impaired drivers, followed by cannabis, found in 22 percent, and methamphetamine, accounting for 8 percent.
Some state lawmakers have tried for years to lower Washington’s legal drunk-driving limit from 0.08 percent to 0.05 percent. The policy passed the Senate this year for the first time but stalled in the House. Only Utah carries this standard. Legislators plan to try again in 2027.