A quiet Helsinki street with a bike lane and pedestrian crosswalk for an article about zero traffic deaths

Helsinki completes a full year with zero traffic deaths

For the first time in the city’s recorded history, Helsinki went 12 consecutive months without a single person dying on its roads. Officials confirmed this week that no traffic fatality has occurred in the Finnish capital since early July 2024 C.E., when a crash on Keinulaudantie in the Kontula district claimed the city’s last recorded victim. In a city of nearly 700,000 people, that is not luck. It is the result of roughly three decades of deliberate, evidence-based work.

At a glance

  • Zero traffic deaths: Helsinki’s fatal-free streak began after July 2024 C.E. and has now extended to a full 12 months — a milestone authorities describe as exceptional.
  • Speed limit changes: More than half of Helsinki’s streets now carry a 30 km/h limit; 50 years ago, the same streets were posted at 50 km/h, a difference that dramatically changes survival odds in a pedestrian collision.
  • Long-term trend: Injury-causing accidents in Helsinki dropped from nearly 1,000 per year in the late 1980s to 277 in the past year — and annual traffic deaths that once reached 30 have fallen to zero.

How the city got here

Traffic engineer Roni Utriainen, who works in Helsinki’s Urban Environment Division, is careful not to credit any single factor. “A lot of factors contributed to this, but speed limits are one of the most important,” he told Yle News.

The physics are straightforward. A pedestrian struck at 30 km/h has a far higher chance of surviving than one struck at 50 km/h. Helsinki acted on that evidence and began systematically redesigning its streets. Raised crosswalks, narrowed traffic lanes, better lighting, and expanded cycling infrastructure followed the speed limit changes. Fixed traffic cameras and automated enforcement systems changed driver behavior over time — not just on the day a camera went in.

This approach draws on Vision Zero, the Swedish-born philosophy that the road system — not individual behavior alone — bears primary responsibility for preventing deaths. Finland adopted Vision Zero as a national framework, and Helsinki has implemented it street by street over decades. Helsinki’s current traffic safety strategy, covering 2022 through 2026 C.E., has focused specifically on safety for children, pedestrians, and cyclists, with smarter intersection design and safer crosswalks near schools. Earlier this summer, the city extended 30 km/h limits to roads near schools.

The role of transit and urban form

One factor that rarely makes headlines is how few Helsinkians actually need to drive. The city runs one of northern Europe’s most comprehensive public transit networks, combining metro, tram, bus, and regional rail into a single integrated system. “Public transport in Helsinki is excellent, which reduces car use, and with it, the number of serious accidents,” Utriainen noted.

Fewer vehicles moving at lower speeds means fewer collisions — and when collisions do happen, they are less likely to be fatal. City planners have spent decades making walking and transit the path of least resistance, and improved vehicle safety technology has added another layer of protection for everyone on the road.

A model, not an anomaly

Helsinki is not the only city to demonstrate what sustained commitment produces. Oslo reported zero pedestrian and cyclist fatalities in 2019 C.E. Stockholm has posted some of the lowest road death rates in the world for years. Utriainen himself noted that no pedestrians were killed in Helsinki traffic in 2019 C.E. either. The current milestone extends a positive trend that has been building for a long time.

Every fatal road accident in Finland triggers a formal investigation. A dedicated team examines the circumstances, identifies contributing factors, and feeds recommendations back into infrastructure planning. The system learns from each death, however rare. Helsinki also gathers continuous data on driver speeds, crash locations, and near-misses, targeting upgrades where they are needed most.

The World Health Organization estimates that 1.19 million people die in road crashes globally each year, making traffic violence one of the leading causes of death for people aged 5 to 29. The European Transport Safety Council has cited Helsinki’s approach as evidence that proactive system design outperforms reactive enforcement. The International Transport Forum tracks similar Vision Zero programs across dozens of countries, noting consistent results where speed reduction, infrastructure redesign, and systematic crash investigation are applied together over time.

The United Nations Economic Commission for Europe has long advocated for exactly the policy mix Helsinki has deployed — and the city’s results give that advocacy concrete ground to stand on.

One honest complication

Helsinki’s success rests partly on conditions that not every city can claim from the start: high transit ridership, strong institutional capacity, and a long-standing civic consensus around collective road safety. Electric scooters have also introduced new complexity — Utriainen acknowledges they became popular around five years ago “somewhat unexpectedly,” and that managing them required rapid policy responses. The E.U.’s Vision Zero goal of zero traffic deaths by 2050 C.E. remains ambitious, and replicating Helsinki’s results in cities with different infrastructure legacies or fewer resources will require more than copying a policy list.

Still, Helsinki has answered the question of whether zero is achievable. A mid-sized northern European city with cold winters, mixed urban density, and all the competing pressures of a modern road network chose to treat traffic deaths as a solvable problem — and spent decades solving it.

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For more on this story, see: Yle News

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