Skip to main content

The context you need, when you need it

When news breaks, you need to understand what actually matters — and what to do about it. At Vox, our mission to help you make sense of the world has never been more vital. But we can’t do it on our own.

We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?

Join now

Why Washington and Minnesota are the most bicycle-friendly states in the US

A bike lane in Minneapolis.
A bike lane in Minneapolis.
A bike lane in Minneapolis.
(Matthew Traucht)

Cold-weather states like Minnesota, Washington, and Massachusetts are some of the best places in the US to be a cyclist — at least according to the League of American Bicyclists.

Each year, the league releases a new set of rankings for the country’s most bicycle-friendly states. Here are the top 10, with ratings on a scale from 0 to 100:

bike chart new

Note that the rankings don’t take weather into account. Instead, they’re mainly based on factors that local officials can control — like street design, traffic laws, the presence of bike lanes, and transportation planning processes that take cyclist safety into account. Here’s each state’s rating:

bike rankings map

It might initially seem crazy for these rankings to ignore the fact that Minnesota is absolutely frigid much of the year, or that Colorado is so mountainous. But lots of research shows that infrastructure and local policies are more important than climate in getting people to bike.

Here, for comparison, is a map of the percentage of people who commute to work by bike daily in each state, from the most recent US Census American Community Survey (conducted in 2011):

bike commuting map

It’s not a perfect correlation, but the states that systematically do the most to encourage biking tend to have many more people who bike to work every day.

Future Perfect
The biggest drawback of driverless carsThe biggest drawback of driverless cars
Future Perfect

Driverless cars could save thousands of lives. They might also break our cities.

By Marina Bolotnikova
The Case for Growth
How America made it impossible to buildHow America made it impossible to build
Podcast
The Case for Growth

A system built to stop government from doing harm stopped it from doing anything.

By Sean Illing
Future Perfect
Is NYC’s controversial $9 toll working? The data is in.Is NYC’s controversial $9 toll working? The data is in.
Future Perfect

New York City’s congestion pricing experiment, explained in one chart.

By Pratik Pawar
Podcasts
What the government shutdown means for air travelWhat the government shutdown means for air travel
Podcast
Podcasts

“I literally can’t think of anything that’s been like that since 2001.”

By Hady Mawajdeh and Noel King
Future Perfect
A self-driving car traffic jam is coming for US citiesA self-driving car traffic jam is coming for US cities
Future Perfect

A century ago, cars remade America. Autonomous vehicles could do it again.

By David Zipper
Explain It to Me
The curse of America’s high-speed railThe curse of America’s high-speed rail
Podcast
Explain It to Me

Other countries have reliable trains that travel as fast as 200 mph. In the US...not so much.

By Jonquilyn Hill