Support our work!

Ensure the future of local Bay Area News by becoming a Local News Matters member today.

$
$
$

Thanks for your contribution!

Sign up for our free newsletters!

Receive in-depth news stories and arts & entertainment coverage from around the Bay Area in your inbox.

  • DONATE TO SUPPORT LOCAL NEWS!
  • Sign In
  • Local News
    • Featured News
    • Bay Area News
    • Marin News Matters
    • Santa Clara County News Matters
    • Mendocino News Matters
    • Stockton News Matters
    • Equity Ripples
    • Amplifying Voices
    • Inspire Me
  • CA News
    • California Currents
    • California Local
    • KQED
  • Election Results
  • Crime, Justice, & Prison News
    • Inside/Out
    • Crime & Public Safety
    • Prison News
  • The Big Issues
    • Living Longer & Aging in the Bay Area
    • Housing & Homelessness
    • Public Health
    • Environment
  • Arts & Culture
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • Bay City Books
    • Travel
    • Bay City Sketchbook
  • Education & Youth Voices
    • Education Matters
    • Youth Voices
    • Contra Costa Youth Journalism
  • Technology, AI & Innovation
    • Experiments with AI
    • Science, Nature & Technology
    • Data Points
  • Special Projects
    • Audio Files
    • Bay City Beat
    • Listen In Marin
    • Remember When
    • Talkers
    • Trailblazers
  • About Us
    • About Our Staff
    • About Our Board
    • Bay City News Internships
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Newsletters
    • Bay City News … in the News
    • Sponsorships and Advertising
    • Write for Local News Matters
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • RSS

  • Local News
    • Featured News
    • Bay Area News
    • Marin News Matters
    • Santa Clara County News Matters
    • Mendocino News Matters
    • Stockton News Matters
    • Equity Ripples
    • Amplifying Voices
    • Inspire Me
  • CA News
    • California Currents
    • California Local
    • KQED
  • Election Results
  • Crime, Justice, & Prison News
    • Inside/Out
    • Crime & Public Safety
    • Prison News
  • The Big Issues
    • Living Longer & Aging in the Bay Area
    • Housing & Homelessness
    • Public Health
    • Environment
  • Arts & Culture
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • Bay City Books
    • Travel
    • Bay City Sketchbook
  • Education & Youth Voices
    • Education Matters
    • Youth Voices
    • Contra Costa Youth Journalism
  • Technology, AI & Innovation
    • Experiments with AI
    • Science, Nature & Technology
    • Data Points
  • Special Projects
    • Audio Files
    • Bay City Beat
    • Listen In Marin
    • Remember When
    • Talkers
    • Trailblazers
  • About Us
    • About Our Staff
    • About Our Board
    • Bay City News Internships
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Newsletters
    • Bay City News … in the News
    • Sponsorships and Advertising
    • Write for Local News Matters
Skip to content
Local News Matters

Local News Matters

Connecting audiences with quality, local news

  • DONATE TO SUPPORT LOCAL NEWS!
  • Sign In
Sign In
  • Local News
    • Featured News
    • Bay Area News
    • Marin News Matters
    • Santa Clara County News Matters
    • Mendocino News Matters
    • Stockton News Matters
    • Equity Ripples
    • Amplifying Voices
    • Inspire Me
  • CA News
    • California Currents
    • California Local
    • KQED
  • Election Results
  • Crime, Justice, & Prison News
    • Inside/Out
    • Crime & Public Safety
    • Prison News
  • The Big Issues
    • Living Longer & Aging in the Bay Area
    • Housing & Homelessness
    • Public Health
    • Environment
  • Arts & Culture
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • Bay City Books
    • Travel
    • Bay City Sketchbook
  • Education & Youth Voices
    • Education Matters
    • Youth Voices
    • Contra Costa Youth Journalism
  • Technology, AI & Innovation
    • Experiments with AI
    • Science, Nature & Technology
    • Data Points
  • Special Projects
    • Audio Files
    • Bay City Beat
    • Listen In Marin
    • Remember When
    • Talkers
    • Trailblazers
  • About Us
    • About Our Staff
    • About Our Board
    • Bay City News Internships
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Newsletters
    • Bay City News … in the News
    • Sponsorships and Advertising
    • Write for Local News Matters
Posted inLocal News

Traffic deaths in San Francisco drop by nearly 50% in 2025 compared to previous year

by Alise Maripuu, Bay City News January 2, 2026

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
FILE: Pedestrians cross a San Francisco street in front of a Waymo driverless taxi stopped at a traffic light on Feb. 15, 2023. The city's efforts to reduce traffic fatalities appeared to bear fruit in 2025, with only 24 deaths reported compared to 43 in the previous year. (AP Photo/Terry Chea)

TRAFFIC FATALITIES in San Francisco dropped by nearly half in 2025 compared to 2024, a decrease that pedestrian advocates say is the result of years of efforts to improve traffic safety.

“This is a culmination of all the policies and traffic initiatives that the city has been doing for the last 10-plus years,” Jodie Medeiros, executive director of Walk San Francisco, said in an interview. Walk SF is an organization that pushes for better street safety for pedestrians in San Francisco.

Don't miss out on Bay Area news, delivered to your inbox twice a week.

There were 43 traffic fatalities in 2024, marking the deadliest year for travelers in the city since 2007. As of Wednesday, there were 24 traffic deaths during the year, 16 of which were pedestrians, according to the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency.

The addition of new speed cameras, more speed bumps, lower speed limits, and better visibility in crosswalks are all factors that Medeiros said have contributed to the decrease.

San Francisco deployed dozens of speed cameras across the city in 2025, becoming the first city in California to use them. The cameras have been effective, according to the SFMTA, showing a decrease in average speeds on streets with speed cameras versus before the installation of the cameras.

FILE: People ride electric scooters along car-free John F. Kennedy Drive in Golden Gate Park on April 28, 2021. Such efforts to separate traffic from pedestrians and slow vehicle speeds were spelled out in San Francisco’s Vision Zero plan that has since been replaced by the Street Safety Act. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg, File)

Contribute to Local News Matters

$
$
$

Support our independent, nonprofit newsroom, Local News Matters, by becoming a member today. Members enable us to pay reporters, photographers and editors to serve our communities with local news that matters in the greater Bay Area.

“There is no silver bullet to traffic safety,” she said. “It is really about redesigning our streets, which are often designed for cars, to design them for people walking, biking, and taking public transit.”

Fewer traffic death, but not zero

Although traffic fatalities declined in 2025 compared to 2024, the numbers fall short of the city’s Vision Zero SF policy, which aimed to bring down traffic deaths to zero by 2024.

Adopted in 2014, Vision Zero SF had little effect in reducing traffic fatalities by its 2024 deadline. Traffic deaths fell in 2017 to a low of 20 fatalities, but then rose steadily from 2018 to 2020 with steep increases seen in 2022 and 2024, according to city traffic data.

But more than 10 years later, Medeiros thinks that the accumulation of efforts to improve street safety is starting to show results.

“In countries that we look to for inspiration, whether it be Sweden or Norway, it took more than 10 years for those countries to see results,” she said. “All of these things are needed, and they all take time. We fought for almost 10 years for speed cameras, and now we’re seeing the results.”

“Three-quarters of the pedestrian fatalities this year are older adults. They are our most vulnerable. That is something that we’ll be focusing on and really talking to all the city agencies about how this needs to change.” Jodie Medeiros, Walk San Francisco executive director

After 2024’s high number of traffic deaths and Vision Zero’s expiration, street safety advocates pressured city leaders to address the issue as a public safety crisis and adopt an updated Vision Zero SF policy.

In September, the Board of Supervisors passed the Street Safety Act, a replacement to Vision Zero SF that set up requirements and deadlines for several city departments to deliver on implementing street safety interventions.

For example, the San Francisco Police Department is mandated to develop a plan on how it will boost enforcement against driving behaviors that have a high risk of leading to death or injury, such as speeding.

Other features of the legislation include requiring that the SFMTA draw up plans to redesign certain streets identified in high-injury corridors of the city, and reforming the agency’s Residential Traffic Calming Program to allow for a more efficient installation of speed-reducing devices like speed humps and traffic circles.

More collaboration between city agencies

Mayor Daniel Lurie also issued an executive directive two weeks ago to revamp the city’s approach to reducing traffic fatalities and injuries. The directive mandates greater coordination between SFPD, the city’s Department of Public Health, and the SFMTA so that city agencies can work more efficiently and collaboratively in improving street safety.

The directive also requires city departments to complete many of the actions in the Street Safety Act.

“We are absolutely thrilled that Mayor Lurie took it to an executive order,” Medeiros said. “The biggest piece of that is the interagency coordination that is now going to be managed by the mayor’s office.”

While the city appears to be making progress in bringing down traffic deaths, Medeiros said that Walk SF’s next priority is addressing the fact that most of the pedestrians killed in traffic collisions in 2025 were older people. Additionally, several of the collisions with pedestrians allegedly involved drivers fleeing the scene, according to city traffic data.

“Three-quarters of the pedestrian fatalities this year are older adults. They are our most vulnerable,” she said. “That is something that we’ll be focusing on and really talking to all the city agencies about how this needs to change.”

The SFMTA is expected to release the 2025 High Injury Network map in January, which will show which areas of the city have a higher rate of traffic-related injuries or deaths. The last map was released in 2022.

Tagged: commute, drivers, Featured, Featured News, government, Mayor Daniel Lurie, Pedestrian Safety, pedestrians, public safety, San Francisco, San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency, SFMTA, speed cameras, street safety, Street Safety Act, Traffic deaths, traffic safety, transportation, Vision Zero, Walk San Francisco, Walk SF

Alise Maripuu, Bay City News

Alise Maripuu is an intern at BCN with a focus on covering the Peninsula. Originally from San Carlos, Alise discovered her passion for journalism after studying abroad in Thailand during her senior year attending UC Santa Cruz. Her experience in Thailand taught her the consequences for democracy when living in a society with strict laws against free speech. After graduating with a bachelor’s degree in history, Alise took courses in journalism at Skyline Community College to learn how to write for news. As the Chief Copy Editor on Skyline’s student-run newspaper for the 2023-24 school year, Alise gained editing and managing experience leading a team of reporters. She covered hyperlocal stories affecting her campus such as the rise in food and housing insecurity. Alise wants to focus on data journalism.

More by Alise Maripuu, Bay City News
Local News Matters
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • RSS

Bay City News Foundation
(510) 251-8100
newsroom@baycitynews.com

Staff Page

Terms and Conditions

FIND MORE STORIES

  • Local & Community News
  • California News
  • Politics & Civic Engagement
  • Crime, Justice, & Prison News
  • The Big Issues
  • Arts & Culture
  • Education & Youth Voices
  • Technology, AI & Innovation
  • Special Projects
  • About Bay City News
© 2026 Connecting audiences with quality, local news Powered by Newspack

Sign in

Or

Sign in by entering the code we sent to , or clicking the magic link in the email.

Forgot password
Continue Set a password (optional)

Terms & Conditions. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Gift this article

 

Loading Comments...
 

    Complete your transaction