A new study released by AllCarLeasing reveals the best and worst countries in the world for driving.
The study ranked each country on a number of factors, and Denmark scored:
Quality of roads – 5.6 out of 7
Motor vehicles per 1,000 people – 438
Number of accidents per 100,000 vehicles – 110.9860805
Total Score – 63.12 out of 100
You can find the full study here: https://www.allcarleasing.co.uk/blog/2020-motoring-index/
The 3 best countries to drive in
1. Mexico is the best country to drive in the world. Fuel is $0.92 per litre, which is one of the cheapest, the road quality is 4.5/7, there are 297 cars per 1,000 people and there are only 31.78 accidents per 100,000 vehicles.
2. Netherlands comes in second. Fuel is $1.82 per litre, road quality is a staggering 6.4/7, there are 487 cars per 1,000 people and there are 223 accidents per 100,000 vehicles.
3. Chile comes in third. Fuel is $1.01 per litre, the road quality is 5.2/7, there are 230 cars per 1,000 people and there are 883 accidents per 100,000 vehicles.
The 3 worst countries to drive in
1. Iceland is the worst country in the world to drive in. Fuel is $1.63, road quality is 4.1/7, there are a staggering 824 cars for every 1,000 people and there are 276 accidents per 100,000 vehicles.
2. Italy is the second worst country in the world to drive in. With one of the most expensive prices for fuel at $1.69 per litre, road quality of 4.4/7, 655 cars per 1,000 people and 434 accidents per 100,000 vehicles.
3. New Zealand is the third worst country. It costs $1.46 per litre of fuel, road quality is 4.5/7, there are a whopping 860 cars per 1,000 people.
The study looked at fuel price, quality of roads, cars per 1,000 people and number of accidents per 100,000 people to create a global driving score out of 100.