The Yellowhead Highway's Most Dangerous Sections: Jasper–Hinton and McBride–Tête Jaune Cache

Remote mountain corridors where wildlife, winter, and isolation combine to create serious risk for commercial drivers

The Yellowhead Highway (Highway 16) stretches from Portage la Prairie, Manitoba to Prince Rupert, British Columbia — over 3,000 kilometres of Canada’s northern transcontinental corridor. For much of its length, the Yellowhead is a serviceable two-lane highway through boreal forest and prairie. But two sections in the mountain west require specific attention from commercial drivers: the Jasper–Hinton corridor in Alberta, and the McBride–Tête Jaune Cache section in British Columbia.

These stretches are dangerous for overlapping but distinct reasons: extreme wildlife density, remote location, severe winter weather, mountain terrain, and in the case of the BC section, a troubling history of violence against highway users that has given this road a dark nickname.

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AB-63: Canada's Highway of Death to Fort McMurray

How Alberta's oil sands service corridor became one of North America's most dangerous industrial freight routes — and what a decade of twinning has and has not fixed

There are dangerous roads, and then there is Alberta Highway 63.

For decades, the 465-kilometre corridor between Edmonton and Fort McMurray carried a grim distinction: one of the highest per-kilometre fatality rates of any Canadian highway. The road became so notorious that provincial politicians, safety advocates, and the families of accident victims campaigned for years under the banner of “Twinning 63” — arguing that the single-lane highway was a preventable killer.

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Rogers Pass and Banff–Lake Louise: The Trans-Canada's Most Dangerous Mountain Sections

Two legendary mountain crossings where avalanches, steep grades, and severe weather have challenged drivers for generations

The Trans-Canada Highway is the longest national highway in the world, stretching over 7,800 kilometres from Victoria, BC to St. John’s, NL. For most of its length it is a manageable, if sometimes remote, route. But two sections in the western mountains stand apart: Rogers Pass through Glacier National Park in British Columbia, and the Banff–Lake Louise corridor on the BC–Alberta border through Banff National Park. Together, these segments represent some of the most consequential driving in Canadian commercial trucking.

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