What nationalities are the best drivers?


What nationalities are the best drivers? The world's best drivers are in Switzerland and the UAE, while the most polite drivers are found in Turkey, according to a study by global transfer service i'way. The study analysed reviews and ratings from passengers in 120 countries from February 2022 to February 2023.


What city has the best drivers in the world?

Calgary, Canada has been recognized as the best city in the world for drivers, according to Mister Auto study, while Dubai, UAE and Ottawa, Canada placed second and third, respectively.


Is Portugal an easy country to drive in?

Regarding driving Portugal is not worst than in Italy or the South of Spain or France. Decades old stereotypes die hard I guess. Haven driven right across Europe, I can say that driving in Portugal is probably the easiest of all European countries.


Who are statistically the best drivers?

The evidence suggests that insurance suppliers and governing authorities deem women to be safer drivers overall and this plays out in both fatality rates as well as insurance policy pricing.


Which country has the most car accidents in Europe?

Road fatalities in the EU (2011-2021) In terms of high rates, Eastern member countries Romania, Bulgaria and Latvia led the count despite reducing the number of road fatalities to slip under the 100 deaths per million threshold. Malta had only 17 road traffic victims per million.


What country has the safest drivers?

It's official: the world's safest drivers can be found in Japan! Blood alcohol limit levels are quite low, at 0.03g/dl, similar to the likes of Chile, and the Czech Republic, and it has the highest positive sentiment on social media for driving-related terms, at 33.4%.


What European countries have bad roads?

Deaths in road accidents per 1 million passenger cars (2021) Romania, Northern Macedonia, Lithuania and Hungary are thus among the worst European countries when it comes to road accidents.


Which country has the worst road accidents?

Car crashes have become the leading cause of death for people aged between 5 and 29 yeard old and they cost the global economy up to $500 billion annually. Libya has by far the most deaths per capita - 73.4 per 100,000 inhabitants. Thailand comes a distant second with 36.2 while Malawi is in third place with 35.