Denver Pedestrian Crash Patterns: A Deep 2024 Analysis

Key Takeaways

  1. Intersections remain the epicenter of pedestrian crashes in Denver — but nearly 40% occur away from intersections, highlighting risk beyond controlled crossing points.
  2. Daylight dominates crash timing, yet over 160 incidents happened in low-light conditions, proving visibility is a factor even under street lighting.
  3. Careless driving and failure to yield are the two most frequently cited driver actions, together contributing to over 40% of pedestrian crashes.
  4. Pedestrian behavior is not negligible — mid-block crossings and non-compliance with signals are prominent contributing factors.
  5. Statewide pedestrian deaths remain alarmingly high at ~120 fatalities in 2024, despite early 2025 showing improvement.

What’s in scope:

  • All police-reported pedestrian-involved crashes in the City and County of Denver between Jan. 1 – Dec. 31, 2024, excluding fatalities and serious bodily injuries (SBIs).
  • Fatality statistics are included from CDOT at the statewide level for context, since city-level fatality data was unavailable for 2024.

Process:

  1. Filtered dataset to include any crash record where a pedestrian was a unit/mode.
  2. Deduplicated records using unique crash IDs to avoid double-counting multi-party reports.
  3. Categorized crashes by location type, lighting conditions, driver actions, driver contributing factors, and pedestrian actions.
  4. Compared findings with statewide fatality data to place non-fatal trends in perspective.

Limitations:

  • Denver’s Open Data Catalog dataset omits fatalities.
  • Statewide fatality counts are not directly comparable to Denver non-fatal counts.
  • Underreporting is possible, especially for low-severity incidents or those on private property.

Walking in Denver should be safe—whether you’re crossing Colfax to catch the bus or walking down Broadway. Yet in 2024, pedestrian-involved crashes (excluding fatalities) remain a serious concern. This blog dives deeply into police-reported crash data from Denver’s Open Data Catalog to uncover clear patterns in where, when, and how these incidents occur.

We then place these findings in context using Colorado state-wide fatality data to give full perspective. We’ll wrap up with a snapshot of 2025 trends so far.

Where Crashes Occur: Hotspot Mapping

Intersection Pedestrian Crashes (2024)
Federal Blvd & W Colfax Ave7
S Federal Blvd & W Alameda Ave7
Colfax Ave & Broadway6
Colfax Ave & Colorado Blvd5
Federal Blvd & W Evans Ave5
E Colfax Ave & N Broadway5
Federal Blvd & W 38th Ave4
Colorado Blvd & E 14th Ave4
Broadway & E Alameda Ave4
Federal Blvd & W Mississippi Ave4
Where Crashes Occur — Road/Context (2024)
At Intersection
232
Non-Intersection
115
Intersection-Related
46
Parking Lot
45
Alley / Driveway Access
20
Mid-Block Crosswalk
9
Road Location — 2024
On Roadway
396
On Private Property
45
Ran Off Right Side
4
Ran Off Left Side
2
Center Median / Island
1

Top settings:

  • At Intersection – 232
  • Non‑Intersection – 115
  • Intersection‑Related – 46
  • Parking Lot – 45
  • Alley / Driveway Access – 20
  • Mid‑Block Crosswalk – 9

Interpretation: Intersections dominate crash counts — as expected — but 38% of crashes happened outside traditional intersections (mid-block, parking lots, alleys). These areas lack signal control and are often overlooked in enforcement campaigns, making them a hidden risk zone.

Lighting Conditions at Crash Time

Daylight dominates, but low-light conditions stay risky.

Crashes by Light Condition — 2024
Daylight
283
Dark — Lighted
143
Dark — Unlighted
24
Dawn or Dusk
19

Counts:

  • Daylight – 283
  • Dark – Lighted – 143
  • Dark – Unlighted – 24
  • Dawn or Dusk – 19

Takeaway: While ~60% of crashes happened in daylight, the 167 incidents in low-light conditions suggest that visibility remains a hazard even in “lighted” areas. This points to either inadequate street lighting or overreliance on drivers to detect pedestrians in dark conditions.

Driver Behavior: Primary Risk Drivers

Top Driver Actions — Pedestrian Crashes, 2024
Careless Driving
97
Failed to Yield Right-of-Way
78
No Contributing Action
22
Other Contributing Action
20
Improper Backing
7
Failed to Stop at Signal
7
Disregarded Stop Sign
3
Disregarded Other Device/Marking
2

Top Driver Actions :

Careless Driving – 97

Failed to Yield Right-of-Way – 78

No Contributing Action – 22

Other Contributing Action – 20

Improper Backing – 7

Failed to Stop at Signal – 7

Disregarded Stop Sign – 3

Disregarded Other Device/Marking – 2

Insight: Careless driving (97 crashes) and failure to yield right-of-way (78 crashes) are clear behavioral risk factors. Together, they account for over two out of every five pedestrian crashes.
From a prevention standpoint, targeted enforcement at known pedestrian corridors during high-risk hours could yield measurable reductions.

Driver Contributing Factors: The Human Element

Recognizing distraction and visibility issues is key:

Top Contributing Factors (Driver) — Pedestrian Crashes, 2024
Looked / Did Not See
60
No Apparent Contributing Factor
54
Not Observed
47
Distracted — Other Exterior
14
Other Factor
12
Distracted — Other Interior
6
Sun Glare
6
Driver Inexperience
5

Top factors:

  • Looked / Did Not See – 60
  • No Apparent Cond. Factor – 54
  • Not Observed – 47
  • Distracted—Other Exterior – 14
  • Sun Glare, Distracted—Interior – ≤10 each

Note: “Looked but did not see” (60 crashes) remains a persistent problem, reflecting attention failures rather than willful violations. This suggests that engineering solutions — better lighting, high-visibility crosswalk markings, pedestrian refuge islands — may be as important as enforcement.

Pedestrian Behavior: Not Just a Driver Issue

Much of the pedestrian behavior that contributes to crashes occurs mid-block:

Top Pedestrian Actions — 2024
Cross / Enter NOT at Intersection
46
Failure to Obey Signs/Signals
23
Failure to Yield Right-of-Way
22
Cross / Enter at Intersection
18
Dart / Dash
10
In Roadway Improperly
10

Key behaviors:

  • Cross/Enter NOT at Intersection – 46
  • Failure to Obey Signs/Signals – 23
  • Failure to Yield ROW – 22
  • Cross/Enter at Intersection – 18
  • Dart/Dash, In Roadway Improperly – ~10 each

Takeaway: Crossing outside of intersections (46 crashes) is the leading pedestrian-related factor. While infrastructure design plays a role — mid-block destinations encourage unsafe crossings — education and targeted enforcement can reduce risk without placing full responsibility on pedestrians.

Statewide Fatality Context: The Broader Picture

While our Denver data excludes fatalities, state-level data fills the gap:

Note: Denver police data offers deep insight into incident patterns, but excludes fatal events. Statewide CDOT data indicates pedestrian deaths remain elevated, underscoring the gravity behind even non-fatal crash trends.

  • Colorado statewide fatalities are trending downward in early 2025, according to CDOT.
  • From the Denver dataset (non-fatal), early 2025 continues to reflect similar driver and pedestrian behavior patterns. Mid-block crossings, careless driving, and daylight exposure are still dominant.

Final Analysis

From an analytical standpoint, Denver’s pedestrian crash problem is multi-factorial:

  • High-exposure zones (busy intersections) combine with under-addressed mid-block hazards.
  • Driver and pedestrian behaviors both contribute, often in predictable, preventable ways.
  • Low-light incidents highlight a visibility gap even in “lighted” areas.