Colorado State Patrol: Tailgating Is Aggressive Driving and Puts Lives at Risk


Description: Colorado State Patrol warns that tailgating is a form of aggressive driving linked to thousands of crashes each year and offers tips on what drivers can do when someone is following too closely. Read the Full Press Release from the Colorado State Patrol...

Tailgating is Aggressive Driving

What you can do if someone is following too close

(COLO) – Seeing a driver following your vehicle too closely can be unnerving. When a driver fails to maintain a safe gap between vehicles, it becomes difficult to stop safely if the vehicle ahead comes to a sudden stop. Professional drivers have appropriately nicknamed these drivers “bumper stickers” because the person committing the aggressive maneuver of following too close or tailgating increases his or her risk of causing a rear-end collision.

Last year, Colorado State Troopers investigated 2,795 crashes, which they determined were caused by following too closely. Over 90% of those were property damage crashes; however, 217 people were injured or killed in these crashes.

“In most cases, tailgating won’t make traffic move faster,” stated Col. Matthew C. Packard, chief of the Colorado State Patrol. “All it really does is raise the risk of a crash. Take a minute to come back to your senses by backing off and slowing down.”

With the biggest concern of tailgating being a crash, troopers are sharing some strategies for drivers to consider when faced with this aggressive maneuver in their rearview:

  • Keep calm and continue at the speed limit

  • Consider switching lanes when it is safe to do so

  • Resist the urge to drive aggressively, including speeding ahead or swerving

  • Gently apply the brakes if you need to slow down or stop (do not hard-brake)

  • Give the following driver as much space as possible

Although you may be intimidated and aggravated at being tailgated, keep your cool and your distance when possible. The worst choice is to respond aggressively. If you can get information, including a license plate, make, and model of the vehicle, as well as its direction of travel, pull over and call *CSP (*277) to report the unsafe driver.

“Drivers can experience road rage for seemingly insignificant reasons, so training yourself to think about safety over making an equal aggressive response is key,” cautioned Col. Packard. “Take hand gestures as a compliment that you are likely driving the speed limit, and the driver's actions likely have nothing to do with you. Instead, keep your eyes focused on the road ahead of you. Your life is always more important.”