12 Defensive Driving Tips That Could Prevent Accidents
Most crashes are preventable when you drive as if everyone else might make a mistake—and these twelve habits make that mindset automatic.
Most crashes are preventable when you drive as if everyone else might make a mistake—and these twelve habits make that mindset automatic.
Rain turns small mistakes into big slides—slow down, light up correctly, and know exactly when staying on the road is the wrong call.
Real mpg gains come from how you drive and maintain the car—not from miracle additives or aggressive hypermiling tricks.
Highway speed magnifies beginner mistakes—learn the merge, spacing, and lane habits that keep fast traffic from becoming scary traffic.
Parallel parking is geometry, not talent—use these reference points and a repeatable sequence to nail tight spots on the first try.
Fatal crash rates spike after dark; these night-driving habits protect your vision, your reaction time, and everyone sharing the road.
When tires lose grip on ice, your first instinct is usually wrong—here is how to recover without spinning into something solid.
The best road trips combine miles with rest: plan stops, share driving, and keep sharp before highway hypnosis sets in.
Commute fatigue builds quietly—fix sleep, movement, and monotony before your autopilot moment becomes someone else's crash story.
When something jumps into your lane, how you brake matters as much as how fast—use ABS correctly and keep steering options open.