Why Truck Accidents Spike in the Fall: Hazards Michigan Drivers Face

Michigan’s fall season brings more than colorful leaves—it brings increased risks on the road. Shorter days, slick leaf-covered streets, fog, deer crossings, and slow-moving farm equipment all create dangerous conditions when combined with heavy commercial trucks. These seasonal hazards make crashes more likely and more devastating for drivers sharing the road. Understanding the risks helps protect families and highlights the importance of accountability when accidents happen.

Why Truck Accidents Spike in the Fall: Hazards Michigan Drivers Face

Fall in Michigan is beautiful—the crisp air, fiery colors, and harvest season bring life to our communities. But behind the scenic views lurk serious dangers on our roads. As daylight hours shrink and weather conditions shift, the risk of commercial truck crashes in Detroit and across Michigan rises sharply.

Every year, the fall season brings a spike in accidents involving semi-trucks. The reason? A perfect storm of fall driving hazards: earlier sunsets, slick roads from wet leaves and rain, dense morning fog, deer crossing season, and even slow-moving farm equipment crowding rural highways. When you add 80,000-pound trucks into the mix, these seasonal hazards can turn deadly.

Unlike typical fender-benders, crashes with commercial trucks are devastating. Victims often face life-changing injuries, overwhelming medical bills, and an uphill fight against powerful trucking companies and their insurers. That’s why understanding why truck accidents spike in the fall is more than just seasonal awareness—it’s about knowing when the risks are highest and how accountability works when tragedy strikes.

Shorter Daylight Hours: More Driving in the Dark

One of the most significant changes fall brings is the loss of daylight. As the sun sets earlier, both commuters and truck drivers spend more time navigating Michigan roads in the dark. While it may seem like a small shift, the reality is that driving at night dramatically increases the risk of accidents.

  • Fatigue Sets In: Darkness naturally triggers drowsiness, and truck drivers who are already logging long hours are more vulnerable to fatigue-related crashes. A tired driver behind the wheel of a semi-truck can be as dangerous as a drunk driver.
  • Reduced Visibility: Headlights only illuminate so far, leaving blind spots where hazards can hide. Pedestrians, stalled vehicles, and especially deer are harder to see until it’s too late. Michigan consistently ranks among the top states for deer-vehicle crashes, and many of those collisions happen during fall evenings.
  • Truck-Specific Risks: Semi-trucks already face unique challenges—large blind spots and long stopping distances. Add in low light conditions, and the margin for error becomes razor thin. A car that suddenly brakes or a deer darting across I-75 at dusk can quickly turn into a multi-vehicle disaster.

For everyday drivers, this means sharing the road with trucks at night requires extra caution. But it also means that when trucking companies push drivers past safe limits—ignoring fatigue, hours-of-service rules, or proper rest—they put everyone else at greater risk.

Wet Leaves and Slippery Roads

Autumn leaves might look beautiful on Michigan streets, but once they fall, they turn into a serious driving hazard. When rain mixes with piles of leaves, the road surface can become as slick as ice. For passenger cars, this is dangerous enough. For an 80,000-pound semi-truck, it’s a recipe for disaster.

  • Longer Stopping Distances: Trucks already require significantly more distance to stop than smaller vehicles. On slick, leaf-covered pavement, that stopping distance can double—making rear-end crashes far more likely.
  • Higher Risk of Jackknifes: Sudden braking on slippery surfaces increases the chance of a truck jackknifing, where the trailer swings out of control and blocks multiple lanes of traffic. These incidents often lead to catastrophic pileups.
  • Urban Danger Zones: In cities like Detroit, fallen leaves often clog storm drains, creating hidden standing water beneath leaf piles. For truckers barreling through at highway speeds, these hazards can cause skidding, hydroplaning, and loss of control in seconds.

While drivers can’t control where leaves fall, trucking companies and their drivers have a duty to adjust for these seasonal hazards. That means reducing speed, allowing for greater stopping distances, and exercising extra caution in urban areas where leaf-clogged drains make conditions even worse.

Fog and Reduced Visibility

Crisp fall mornings in Michigan often bring something drivers dread—thick fog. What starts as a scenic haze can quickly become a deadly driving hazard when visibility drops to just a few feet. For everyday commuters, fog is unnerving. For commercial trucks, it’s downright dangerous.

  • Visibility Collapses: When fog blankets interstates like I-94 or I-75, drivers may not see stopped traffic, merging vehicles, or road hazards until it’s too late. At highway speeds, a semi-truck simply can’t react quickly enough.
  • Chain-Reaction Pileups: Michigan has seen numerous multi-car crashes tied to fog conditions. When one vehicle slows or stops suddenly, the limited visibility creates a domino effect. Add in a semi-truck with a 40-ton load, and the outcome is often catastrophic.
  • Truck-Specific Risks: Commercial trucks already have longer braking distances and massive blind spots. Fog compounds these dangers, leaving less room for error. Even a slight misjudgment can lead to jackknifes, rollovers, or deadly rear-end collisions.

While drivers can slow down and turn on their lights, trucking companies have added responsibility. When conditions make driving unsafe, companies should empower drivers to pull over rather than risk plowing ahead on Michigan’s foggy highways. Too often, though, delivery schedules and profit pressures win out over safety—leaving innocent motorists to pay the price.

Deer Season and Wildlife Collisions

Michigan drivers know that when fall arrives, so does deer season—and with it, a spike in deer-related crashes. The state consistently ranks among the highest in the nation for deer-vehicle collisions, and the risk climbs during the fall mating season, especially in October and November.

  • High Risk at Dawn and Dusk: Deer are most active during early morning and evening hours—exactly when commercial trucks are logging heavy miles. Limited light during these times makes it even harder for drivers to spot deer before it’s too late.
  • Deadly Swerves: For passenger cars, hitting a deer is bad enough. But when a semi-truck swerves to avoid one, the results can be catastrophic. Rollovers, jackknifes, and multi-car pileups often occur when a fully loaded truck tries to maneuver suddenly at highway speeds.
  • Rural and Suburban Hotspots: Highways like I-96, I-69, and countless rural Michigan routes are prime locations for deer crossings. When a truck collides with a deer—or with other vehicles while trying to avoid one—the fallout can be devastating.

While drivers can’t control wildlife, trucking companies and their operators are expected to account for seasonal risks. That means reducing speeds in high-risk areas, paying attention to deer crossing signs, and maintaining control of the vehicle at all times. When they fail to do so, innocent motorists suffer the consequences.

Harvest Season and Farm Vehicles

Fall in Michigan isn’t just about colorful leaves—it’s also about harvest season. From September through November, rural roads see a sharp increase in farm trucks and slow-moving agricultural equipment. While this traffic is essential for the state’s farming economy, it also creates unique dangers, especially when combined with heavy commercial trucking traffic.

  • Slow-Moving Vehicles on Rural Roads: Tractors, grain haulers, and other farm equipment often travel well below the speed of surrounding traffic. When semi-trucks encounter these vehicles on narrow two-lane roads, the risk of dangerous passing maneuvers—and head-on collisions—rises dramatically.
  • Cargo Shifts and Overloaded Grain Trucks: Farm trucks carrying heavy loads of corn, soybeans, or wheat may be improperly secured. A sudden shift in weight can cause a vehicle to tip or spill cargo, creating hazards for nearby truckers and passenger cars alike.
  • Poor Visibility at Night: Many farm vehicles lack adequate lighting or reflective markings, making them especially hard to spot in the dark. For large commercial trucks barreling down rural highways, that lack of visibility can turn into a deadly surprise.

The combination of farm traffic and semi-trucks during harvest season creates one of the most dangerous driving conditions of the year in Michigan. While farmers and truckers both play vital roles in keeping goods moving, every driver has a duty to share the road safely. When trucking companies and their drivers ignore these risks, the outcome can be catastrophic for families caught in the middle.

Don’t Let Fall Hazards Steal Your Future

Truck accidents spike in the fall because of hazards unique to Michigan’s roads—shorter daylight hours, slick leaves, dense fog, deer crossings, and harvest season traffic. Each of these dangers makes sharing the road with commercial trucks more treacherous, and too often, it’s innocent drivers and families who pay the price.

If you or someone you love has been injured in a fall truck crash, you deserve more than excuses from trucking companies or lowball offers from insurance carriers. You deserve answers. You deserve accountability. And most of all—you deserve justice.

At Marko Law, we fight hard for Michigan families devastated by commercial truck crashes. We know how to take on powerful trucking companies, uncover the truth, and demand the full compensation victims need to rebuild their lives.

Contact Marko Law for a Free Case Evaluation

Free Case Evaluation

We Will Help You!

Complete this form for a free case review.

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
By providing your email and signing up, you agree to our Terms & Conditions.

Marko Law Firm

Marko Law Office

Need to Talk Now?

Get in touch with a real person 24/7/365.

Consulting

If you’re a law firm owner and want help optimizing your practice for success, please email jon@markolaw.com

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Testimonials

Real stories. Real results. From personal injury recoveries to civil rights victories, our clients trust Marko Law to deliver justice when it matters most. Hear what people across Michigan are saying about their experience with our legal team.

"We highly recommend it to any business looking to improve their efficiency and profitability."

Laura Paula
Marketing @Company
iconiconiconiconicon

"We highly recommend it to any business looking to improve their efficiency and profitability."

Laura Paula
Marketing @Company
iconiconiconiconicon

"We highly recommend it to any business looking to improve their efficiency and profitability."

Laura Paula
Marketing @Company
iconiconiconiconicon

"We highly recommend it to any business looking to improve their efficiency and profitability."

Laura Paula
Marketing @Company

"We highly recommend it to any business looking to improve their efficiency and profitability."

Laura Paula
Marketing @Company

Marko Law Will Give You A Voice

At Marko Law, we don’t just take cases — we take a stand. Whether you're facing an injury, injustice, or outright negligence, our team fights like it’s personal — because to you, it is.

  • Over $500 Million recovered for our clients
  • Proven track record in civil rights, personal injury & workplace justice
  • Free, confidential consultations — you don’t pay unless we win
  • Based in Detroit, trusted across Michigan


Ready to make your voice heard?
We’re not here to play games. We’re here to win.

Get a Free Case Review
"