New Mexico is no longer the deadliest state for pedestrians, with the grim distinction of having the highest rate of pedestrian fatalities per capita in the United States. That ranking finally fell in 2025— to ninth — offering the state its first reprieve from the top five since 2016 and a rare moment of optimism in the often discouraging arena of road safety.
Preliminary data from the 2025 Governors Highway Safety Association annual report show pedestrian fatalities fell to 89 in 2025, down from 102 the year before. The numbers are sobering, and final figures could still shift. But the decline represents a break from a pattern that had long drawn national concern and local frustration.
State officials credited the improvement in ranking to a unified effort with the launch of the New Mexico Department of Transportation’s Target Zero initiative in June 2024. Rather than a single intervention, the initiative is an umbrella strategy that seeks to eliminate traffic deaths by 2050. It brought together existing programs, tightening coordination across agencies and layering in proven tools, from better infrastructure to public education, into a unified system.
National Framework for Safer Pedestrians
The approach draws on the national Safe System framework, stressing Safer People, Safer Vehicles, Safer Speeds, and Safer Roads. That has meant visible changes in communities, including enhanced crosswalks, pedestrian hybrid beacons that give walkers more time and visibility, improved lighting, and speed management measures in high-risk areas. Community-specific, evidence-based safety strategies have shaped where funding is allocated, aiming to address problems where they are most severe instead of spreading resources thinly.
“New Mexico’s progress in pedestrian safety is the result of dedicated work happening across the state,” said Shannon Glendenning, director of the NMDOT Traffic Safety Division. “We’re encouraged by the trend, and we know there’s still more to do to keep reducing pedestrian and roadway fatalities. Reducing fatalities requires sustained, coordinated effort.”
That synergism extends beyond state highways. In 2026, five New Mexico communities received federal Safe Streets and Roads for All funds to develop and implement their own safety plans. Local governments now play a pivotal role, officials say, even as NMDOT holds primary responsibility for performance measures.
‘Improvements in Transportation Safety’
“New Mexico is seeing improvements in transportation safety, and that success is the result of coordinated work statewide,” said David D. Quintana, acting NMDOT Cabinet Secretary. “NMDOT may hold legislative responsibility for traffic fatality performance measures, but local governments are critical partners. By aligning education, enforcement, engineering, and community engagement, we’re demonstrating that a coordinated approach can save lives.”
Supporting the on-the-ground work are newer capacity-building efforts. Programs include the annual Transportation Safety Summit, Road Safety Professional certification training, a Vision Zero fellowship for local governments, and a Community of Practice in Safety cohort. These initiatives aim to professionalize and connect people —engineers, planners, law enforcement, and advocates— who can shape safer streets.
Public awareness campaigns, including the long-running “Look For Me” initiative, have sought to reform driver and pedestrian behavior alike. Officials describe the overall strategy as pragmatic, taking measures with proven track records elsewhere and applying them more systematically in the state. The Department of Health’s Vital Records Division and other responders supported this initiative by data sharing among law enforcement.
Double-Digit Drop is Enough
The final 2025 numbers may still change because official counts use a 30‑day fatality window and the GHSA report is preliminary. But even a midyear report indicating a double‑digit drop has been enough to move New Mexico out of its unwanted top spot.
The improvement comes against a backdrop of difficult challenges. Rural roads, aging infrastructure in some areas, and the vast distances that shape much of the state have complicated safety efforts. Pedestrian deaths typically stem from multiple, interrelated causes — speed, impairment, visibility at night, and land-use patterns, forcing people to walk along high-speed corridors.
“Even so, the decline provides a data point officials hope to build upon. Target Zero’s architects see it less as a dramatic turnaround and more as the first signs of steady and persistent effort. It signals better coordination, steadier investment in proven countermeasures, and an increasing recognition that road safety is a shared system, not just a state or local concern.
Ninth place is not a victory for New Mexico, which has spent years at the top of the wrong list. But it is progress in terms of saved lives and, perhaps, in the steady gains in safer crossings, reduced street speeds, and sharper focus that, together, may help ensure New Mexico never regains its former ranking.
