The 2025 Global Traffic Scorecard has just come out from INRIX, revealing the cities with the worst traffic congestion in the U.S. and worldwide.
- The transportation analytics company analyzes traffic data from 36 countries and nearly 1,000 cities and ranks cities by measuring changes in average peak-period travel times from 2023 to the end of the third quarter of 2025.
- According to their report, the typical U.S. driver lost 49 hours to being stuck in traffic this year. That’s up 11% from last year, equal to a six-hour jump.
- INRIX’s data shows that traffic costs drivers in highly congested areas an average of hundreds of dollars a year. Those 49 hours equal $894 in lost time per driver.
- Congestion cost the U.S. around 4.7-billion hours last year, or close to $86-billion in lost time.
- Chicago has the worst traffic congestion in the country, according to the report, which finds drivers there lost 112 hours to it this year. It cost them an average of $2,063 in lost time, while the city lost $7.5-billion.
The Top 10 U.S. Cities With The Worst Traffic
- Chicago, Illinois
- New York, New York
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- Los Angeles, California
- Boston, Massachusetts
- Miami, Florida
- Atlanta, Georgia
- Houston, Texas
- Washington, D.C.
- Seattle, Washington
Source: CNBC
Photo: Scott Olson / Getty Images News / Getty Images