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Most Dangerous Roads In The World

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20 Most Dangerous Roads In The World. While you are sweating to travel just on a dirt road, there are also bunches of roadways that will give you goose bumps. Based on construction, road conditions, and road safety, we came […]

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Most Dangerous Roads In The World

20 Most Dangerous Roads In The World. While you are sweating to travel just on a dirt road, there are also bunches of roadways that will give you goose bumps. Based on construction, road conditions, and road safety, we came up with the 20 most dangerous roads in the world where you need to carry your heart in hand while crossing. The following are in no particular order, and the list is far from exhaustive.

 

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Karakoram Highway

Connecting China to Pakistan, the “Friendship Highway” is actually not friendly at all. It’s 16,000 feet in the air, meaning altitude sickness is a serious issue for anyone braving its sharp turns.

It also has the usual landslides, avalanches, rock slides, and unpaved lanes common to mountain highways. You’re basically driving a narrow lane with flat rock on one side and an unguarded death drop on the other. It’s full of buses taking people to the destination.

 

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Yungas Road, Bolivia

Generally thought of as the most dangerous ring road in the world. The winding 40-mile road from La Paz to Coroico is mostly single-lane, with massive ascents and quick descents.

It has terrible visibility, no guard rails, and bizarre rules that force drivers to drive on the wrong side of the road and stop almost on a dime while going downhill. It’s also prone to rock slides and bad weather that makes the gravel track slick and loose.

Large vehicles routinely attempt to pass each other, and with lanes that narrow down to as small as three meters wide, this often ensures death for both parties. Despite being modernized over a two-decade period, hundreds of people die on it every year, including numerous cyclists and foolhardy travelers.

It’s not called the “Road of Death” for nothing.

 


©dangerousroads.org

 

Highway 101, Mexico

Highway 101 connects Matamoros, which is just south of Brownsville, Texas, to Ciudad Victoria and beyond. It’s not inherently dangerous, as it’s well paved and fairly straight. But virtually nobody drives on it due to its use by Mexican drug cartels. The fact that large numbers of corpses are often found along its sides.

Cartel kidnappers are known to pull migrants off buses, cars are hijacked, towns are terrorized, and multiple mass graves are found almost every year. The US government has warned residents not to use it.

 


©en.wikipedia.org

 

Trans-Siberian Highway, Russia

Connecting Vladivostok in the east to St. Petersburg to the west, Russia’s Trans-Siberian Highway is one of the longest in the world.

Crossing everything from forests to tundra to vast stretches of narcotizing nothingness. Much of the drive is uneventful, but there are sections that are deeply foreboding and dangerous. Some of the Siberian section is unpaved and traverses remote stretches far from help or gasoline.

Russia also has a high per capita death rate of its drivers due to bad roads and drinking.

 

 


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Kabul Jalalabad, Afghanistan

This is one of the most terrifying roads anywhere in the world. Also humanitarian reasons, one of the most important.

It’s got terrible gridlock due to overloaded trucks getting stuck on it, steep vertical drops, sharp turns, and kamikaze drivers. Buses and trucks often slam into each other and tumble hundreds of feet into the valleys below, or cars simply plow into the rock walls.

The road has piled up such a high body count that locals have stopped keeping track of the death toll. This death toll road is deep within Taliban territory and was routinely shelled in the ’80s and ’90s by a general contractor.

 


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Ruta 5, Chile

Runs from the Peruvian border to Puerto Montt and connects via ferry to Chiloé Island. Despite being built modern and well paved by the construction companies, it’s notoriously dangerous.

It’s only two lanes wide and has a high speed limit, winding through deep valleys and littered with steep drops and long straight stretches in the middle of nowhere. The surrounding landscape of the Atacama Desert is also bare and featureless.

Drivers easily lose their concentration and drive off the road or hit other cars.

 


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Zojila Pass, India

If you want to pick a remote road to get killed on, this winding mountain pass has it all.

High altitude, high winds, mud, heavy snowfall, narrow lanes, steep drops, and no road safety. The roads leading to the Himalaya Mountains are among the highest and deadliest anywhere, and Zojila is probably the harshest.

But in its favor, it’s the highest altitude at which tanks have operated in combat during the Indo-Pakistani War of 1947. After that, no roadwork has been done by any construction worker.

 

 


©wikipedia.org

 

The Barton Highway, Australia

Connecting Canberra to Yass, the Barton Highway is generally thought to be the worst and most dangerous major road.

Located in a rapidly growing part of the country, it’s too small for the large amount of traffic it gets and is in poor condition in many areas. It also has drivers who tend to tailgate, causing numerous traffic-clogging rear-end accidents, not maintaining any highway code and the rules by highway agencies.

 

 


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Taroko Gorge Road, Taiwan

Probably the most dangerous route. This narrow mountain road offers spectacular views. Depending on the weather, a pretty good chance of dying.

Heavy rain can result in landslides, and there’s not a small chance of a cyclone hitting it out of nowhere. It’s also full of blind corners and steep drops, with pedestrians, cars, and tour buses all fighting for space.

 

 


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Highway 550, Colorado

Known as the “Million Dollar Highway,” it is also one of the most dangerous in America.

This national highway climbs three different mountain passes, with large variations in temperature and road grade. It’s narrow, steep, and unforgiving, with some parts having no guard rails. It’s not too bad as far as mountain roads go, and plenty of people drive it. It’s best to go slow and not get distracted by the views.

How it got the nickname “Million Dollar Highway” is lost to history.

 


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Highway 2, Montana

Leading to Glacier National Park, Highway 2 is a beautiful and picturesque piece of driving. It’s also the deadliest highway in America.

It’s mostly flat and rural and doesn’t have a lot of drivers, so those that are on it tend to go way too fast. Visibility is poor, and the weather tends to be bad. It sees a higher than average number of drunk drivers and animals jump out of nowhere in front of your car.

And because it’s so remote, ambulances can take at least an hour to respond to the highway hotline. If you are in an accident, you’re on your own.

 


©wikivoyage.org

 

James Dalton Highway, Alaska

Remote, isolated, and virtually guaranteed to kill you if you break down, the 414-mile Dalton Highway was built to support oil exploration. There are just three towns along it, with a total population of 60 people.

If you’re thinking of driving it in your Honda Civic, don’t. The giant trucks that ply the route kick up huge clouds of dust, reducing visibility to zero. Windshields and headlights are easily raged by flying rocks and debris. There are mammoth potholes ready to destroy your tires or any other part of your car.

Drive it only if you’ve got an SUV and a ton of supplies because it’s freezing.

 

Read More: Most Dangerous Viruses in the World

 


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Sichuan Tibet Highway, China

With China embracing car culture, it’s also seen a skyrocketing increase in car accident deaths between 1985 and 2005. Chief among the culprits is the Sichuan Tibet Highway, a high-elevation road between Chengdu and Tibet where landslides and rock avalanches are common.

It also has seemingly random police checkpoints, massive drops and climbs, and virtually nothing in the way of services. The scenery is stunning, assuming you can traverse it.

 


©wildfrontierstravel.com

 

Fairy Meadows, Pakistan

You’d think with a cheerful name like “Way to Fairy Meadows,” this road would be a nonstop carnival of fun and charm. It’s not.

Fairy Meadows itself is a gorgeous runoff about 3,300 meters above sea level. To get there, you have to traverse a glorified one-way gravel path that was built hundreds of years ago and hasn’t been upgraded or repaired since.

It has sharp turns, steep dives, no guardrails, and cars come out of nowhere from the other direction. Even watching YouTube videos of someone driving on is scary.

 

 


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Halsema Highway, Philippines

Want to take your life in your hands? Look at the northern mountain road with insane drops and rises.

While the road was recently modernized with recent inventions like guardrails, some of it is still unpaved asphalt, which gets virtually impassible when it rains, which it does constantly.

Some of it is still unguarded, and buses can topple right off into the abyss.

 

 


©nzherald.co

 

Skipper’s Canyon Road, New Zealand

A remote gold mining route is so dangerous that you have to apply for a permit before even attempting to drive on it.

Not only that, but many car insurance companies won’t payout if you have an accident while driving its remote, unpaved single lane. It’s a one-way dirt track with steep drops and an insanely narrow bridge dropping off into nothingness.

Nonetheless, it’s popular with adventurers and campers who have experience with remote treks.

 


©ottotours.com

 

Canning Stock Route, Australia

Perhaps the world’s most remote and isolated road with 1,150 miles of empty, scorching desert in Western Australia.

Those hardy enough to traverse it will need up to three weeks to cross, a four-wheel-drive vehicle, space for food, water, and spare parts, and at least a basic knowledge of how to fix a breakdown.

For gas, you either arrange deliveries depending on where you are or buy it from aboriginal communities along the way.

 

 


©lifeinnorway

 

Trollstigen, Norway

Known as the “Troll’s Path,” it is so windy and dangerous that you probably need to be a mythical creature to survive it.

It’s closed for much of the year due to bad weather and rockslides, only opening from about May through September. It’s narrow, insanely steep, and has a dozen crazy sharp hairpin turns.

Nonetheless, the Troll’s Path is a popular tourist destination and sports some spectacular views, assuming it doesn’t kill you.

 


©vvdailypress.com

 

Route 138, California

Cheerfully known as “Blood Alley” or the “Death Trap Highway,” the Pear Blossom Highway runs a terrifying body count.

The twisty, steep, two-lane road started to be modernized, but astonishingly, local residents fought the improvements tooth and nail. The project has stalled out, and drivers keep getting killed on America’s highway of death.

The LA Times reports that during a single five-year period from 1996 through 2000, CA 138 experienced 56 fatalities and another 875 injuries, including 410 serious injuries.

 

Read More: Top 20 Most Insane Dangerous Water Slides Will Blow Your Mind

 


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Pan-American Highway, Alaska to Argentina

As we just saw, many dangerous roads branch off from the Pan American Highway, which is basically the smart motorway, can be fairly dangerous as well.

It has been named the “longest motorway” road in the world, as you can travel by car from the stretches of Alaska down to the tip of South America, which is about 30,000 miles in total.

Imagine that crossing two continents and traversing through jungles, mountains, glaciers, and deserts can inevitably lead to some challenges.

Which road do you dare to travel to? Let us know in the comment section.

That is all for now. Like always, if you enjoyed it, be sure to give us a big thumbs up. To keep up-to-date with all of our awesome videos, be sure to hit subscribe and turn your notifications on to never miss a thing. Until next time, do take good care of yourself.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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