NJ Traffic Crash Data

The first 6 plots below come from NJ State Police fatal crash data (2008-present). It's generally current to the previous day.

Below that are plots of NJ DOT raw crash data, which includes 6MM property-damage, injury, and fatal crashes from 2001-2022. It's a richer dataset, but less up to date.

Work in progress map of NJDOT data: 5 years (2017-2021) of fatal and injury crashes in Hudson County:

Car Crash Deaths:

Car Crash Deaths

Click/Double-click the legend labels to toggle or solo each type.

As of Apr 1, NJ has 114 reported deaths in 2025, and is on pace for 664. More state-wide data.

2021 and 2022 were the worst years in the NJSP record (since 2008), with 697 and 689 deaths, resp.

Source: NJ State Police

Recent fatal crashes

Date/TimeCountyMunicipalityCasualtiesLocation
Sat Mar 29 5:21PMWarrenKnowlton
Driver killed
State Highway 46
Thu Mar 27 7:37PMEssexOrange
Driver killed
Thomas Blvd
Thu Mar 27 6:29PMEssexNutley
Pedestrian killed
County 645 MP 2.03
Sun Mar 23 11:30PMBurlingtonPemberton Twp
Passenger killed
West Lakeshore Dr
Sun Mar 23 3:00PMCamdenWinslow
Driver killed
County 705
Fri Mar 21 12:58AMEssexEast Orange
Pedestrian killed
Garden State Parkway
Thu Mar 20 3:46AMOceanLakewood
Driver killed
State Highway 70
Thu Mar 20 12:01AMCamdenPennsauken
Driver killed
State Highway 130
Wed Mar 19 3:35AMBergenEast Rutherford
Driver killed
New Jersey Turnpike MP 113.6
Wed Mar 12 11:39AMPassaicClifton
Driver killed
Getty Ave
Source: NJ State Police

NJ Traffic Deaths – YTD

NJ Traffic Deaths – YTD
Source: NJ State Police

Some data arrives weeks or months after the fact, so current year numbers are especially subject to change.


NJ Traffic Deaths vs. Homicides

NJ Traffic Deaths vs. Homicides

Car crashes kill twice as many people as homicides, in NJ.

In 2022, crashes killed 2.4x as many people, the largest disparity on record.

Homicide data comes from NJ State Police and Disaster Center.


NJ DOT Raw Crash Data

NJ DOT publishes raw crash data, including property-damage, injury, and fatal crashes, going back to 2001 (≈6MM records).

Data is currently public through 2022, showing all crash types rebounding from COVID lows, and a particular spike in fatalities. 2023 data is expected in Fall 2025.