Driving can often be a great way to relax and unwind, cruising through back roads and listening to music or your favorite podcasts, but it is not always a pleasant experience. Many variables can factor in to whether or not a place is good for driving, from smooth and steady terrain compared to pothole-ridden highways to heavily-trafficked roads with bumper-to-bumper congestion or pleasant drives with nary another car in sight.
WalletHub compared some of the biggest cities in the America to determine which are the best to drive in and which are the worst. Four cities in Ohio managed to make the cut, with two locales ranking among the worst cities in the country to drive in:
- No. 20: Toledo
- No. 50: Columbus
- No. 58: Cincinnati
- No. 71: Cleveland
Cleveland ranked the worst overall, coming in at No. 71 thanks to its low marks in the cost of ownership & maintenance category, while Cincinnati ranked slightly higher at No. 58, earning low marks in the safety category. On the other side of things, Columbus ranks average right in the middle of the list and Toledo is among the Top 20 best overall.
These are the Top 10 best cities to drive in America, according to WalletHub:
- Raleigh, North Carolina
- Boise, Idaho
- Corpus Christi, Texas
- Greensboro, North Carolina
- Jacksonville, Florida
- Orlando, Florida
- Scottsdale, Arizona
- Wichita, Kansas
- Tampa, Florida
- Plano, Texas
To determine the list, WalletHub compared 100 of the largest cities in the U.S. across four factors: cost of ownership & maintenance, traffic & infrastructure, safety, and access to vehicles & maintenance. These factors were then evaluated using 30 relevant metrics, including cost of a new car, average gas prices, average parking rate, annual hours spend in congestion per auto commuter, number of days with precipitation, quality of roads, traffic fatality rate per 100,000 population, share of uninsured drivers, rate of car thefts, gas stations per capita and more.
Learn more about the best and worst cities in the country to drive in at WalletHub.com. You can also check out our previous coverage of the Ohio road named the "most scenic drive" in the entire state.