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The "Deadliest" 400 Miles in Kansas: Why Locals Fear the "Long Sleep"

Austyn Kunde
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KANSAS - If you drive through Kansas, you might think the roads are safe because they are straight and flat. That is exactly why they are dangerous. Interstate 70, running from the Colorado border to Kansas City, is statistically the deadliest highway in the state. The danger here isn't a sharp curve; it is monotony followed by sudden chaos. State troopers call it "Highway Hypnosis"—drivers zone out after hours of straight driving and drift off the road or slam into stopped traffic.


The "Deadliest" 400 Miles in Kansas
The "Deadliest" 400 Miles in Kansas

Kansas FlagBut boredom isn't the only killer. From the "perpetual construction" of Wichita’s Kellogg Avenue to the suburban speedways of Overland Park, here are the red zones you need to watch out for in 2026.

1. The "Hypnosis" Trap: I-70 (Western Kansas)

The stretch of I-70 West of Salina is deceptive.



2. The "Stroad" Nightmare: Kellogg Avenue (US-54/400) in Wichita

If you live in Wichita, you have a complicated relationship with Kellogg Avenue. It tries to be a freeway and a city street at the same time, and it fails at safety.

3. The Intersection List: 2 Spots to Watch

Kansas suburbs have massive, wide intersections where speed limits are high and red-light running is common.



A. Kellogg & Rock Road (Wichita)

This intersection is legendary in the state for crash volume.

B. 135th Street & US-69 (Overland Park)

In the KC metro area, this corridor is the headache.

4. The Rural Killer: The "Deer Zone"

While highways get the headlines, rural Kansas roads have a specific, biological danger.

How to Survive the Drive