Chance a Motorcycle Rider in a Fatal Crash Was Alcohol-Impaired (2023)
26% of motorcycle riders in fatal crashes
Conditional probability in US
NHTSA 2023 traffic data reports 26% of motorcycle riders in fatal crashes for chance a motorcycle rider in a fatal crash was alcohol-impaired.
NHTSA's 2023 traffic crash summary reports this conditional traffic-safety share as 26% of motorcycle riders in fatal crashes. The denominator is motorcycle riders involved in fatal traffic crashes. NHTSA reported alcohol impairment was highest for motorcycle riders involved in fatal crashes at 26 percent.
This is not an annual probability that a randomly chosen person will experience the outcome. It is a composition statistic: among fatalities or fatal-crash participants already in the defined group, it asks how often this person type, location, or behavior appeared. That makes it useful for understanding the shape of the traffic fatality problem, but it should not be compared directly with per-population or per-mile risk facts.
The decision value is targeting. Broad traffic-fatality totals are useful, but prevention gets sharper when the total is broken into person type, location, impairment, restraint use, and speed. For this specific fact, the most practical lens is sober riding, separating drinking from riding plans, group-ride norms, and refusing to ride after alcohol use.
NHTSA's summary draws fatal-crash results from FARS, which includes crashes on public trafficways involving a motor vehicle in transport and a death within 30 days. Some percentages are rounded, so related shares may not sum perfectly to 100 percent. Treat this as a national benchmark for safety planning and decision framing, not a prediction for one trip or one driver.
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