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One In Four Corvette Drivers In Fatal Crashes Is Impaired. It Gets Worse From There.

The Chevrolet Corvette is America’s dream car. It’s also apparently America’s drink-and-drive car. NHTSA fatality data reveals that 26.2% of Corvette drivers involved in fatal crashes tested positive for alcohol or drugs — the highest impairment rate of any major sports car, and one of the highest of any vehicle on the road.

26.2%
of Corvette drivers in fatal crashes were impaired

For context, the Ford Mustang — a car whose entire cultural identity revolves around “leaving Cars & Coffee into a crowd” — clocks in at 21.9%. The Camaro sits at 23.0%. The Dodge Challenger, the car that literally murdered a tire brand, manages 22.5%. The Corvette beats them all.

But here’s the kicker: the Corvette’s actual death rate (1.52 per 100M VMT) is relatively modest compared to the Mustang’s catastrophic 6.02. This means Corvette drivers are proportionally more hammered but die less often — possibly because the car costs $65,000+ and has better crash structures than a 22-year-old’s used Mustang GT. Money buys safety, even from yourself.

At the very top of the impairment leaderboard? The Buick Park Avenue at 31.7% — nearly one in three. Your grandpa’s land yacht is statistically the most impaired vehicle in America. One imagines the cocktails at the country club hitting different on the drive home.

Source: NHTSA FARS 2014–2023. Impairment = BAC > 0 or drug-positive toxicology. See methodology for caveats.