Skip to Main Content

2026 Texas Truck Accident Update: Inexperienced & Fatigued Drivers Are Driving Deadly Surge

Fatigue & Inexperience Driving Texas Truck Crash Surge in 2026 | Undefeated Texas Truck Accident Lawyers

Undefeated Texas Truck Accident Lawyers

Federal data shows that fatigue contributes to up to 40% of all truck crashes nationwide — and potentially even more in Texas. However, fatigue and inexperience rarely appear in crash reports unless they are obvious, admitted, or supported by hard evidence.

As trucking booms in Texas, the conditions that produce exhaustion and inexperience have become nearly unavoidable on our roads: Overnight routes, long-haul schedules, oilfield traffic, a rapid influx of newer and unqualified drivers, and constant pressure to cut corners are driving a surge in deadly accidents. Yet these factors are routinely missed, minimized, or misclassified in official statistics — and they are among the hardest to prove at trial.

Only the most experienced attorneys know exactly where to look, how to connect evidence, and how to prove that the trucking company and driver were at fault after a fatigue-related truck crash — all while taking on carriers who will stop at nothing to avoid responsibility, including concealing or “losing” evidence.

At Zehl & Associates, our undefeated Texas truck accident lawyers uncover what crash reports leave out, hold negligent carriers fully accountable, and help families secure their futures after these preventable tragedies. With Billions won for accident victims, we have the resources and experience to take on the largest trucking companies in the world and not just win, but recover record-setting truck accident verdicts and settlements on behalf of our clients. 

Below, we examine how fatigued and inexperienced driving continues to fuel Texas’s truck crash crisis, why these human factors are so difficult to document, and how our team uncovers the evidence needed to prove what really happened after a serious or fatal truck accident.

At first glance, recent National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) data suggests fatigue-related truck fatalities in Texas have declined. In 2023, fatigue was cited in 21 fatal truck crashes, resulting in 24 deaths — down from 43 fatal fatigue-related crashes in 2021, the deadliest recent year on record with 51 deaths reported.

But that apparent improvement hinges on how crashes are classified, not necessarily on what caused them.

Fatigue is notoriously difficult to document after serious and fatal truck crashes. Unlike speeding or intoxication, there are no roadside tests to measure exhaustion, circadian disruption, or alertness. There isn’t even an objective threshold, like a blood-alcohol level, to define when a driver is too tired to operate a commercial vehicle.

As a result, officers at the scene often cannot determine whether a driver had been awake for extended periods, violated Hours-of-Service rules, suffered from an untreated sleep disorder, falsified logbooks, or was newly hired and inadequately trained. And when drivers do not survive or records are incomplete, those human factors are often missed entirely.

To understand the true scope of the problem, it’s necessary to look beyond how crashes are labeled, and examine when they occur, how they happen, and what the driver’s and trucking company’s safety history reveals.

Overnight Fatal Truck Crashes Are Increasing   

Fatigue can affect a truck driver at any hour. But the period between midnight and 6 a.m. remains the most dangerous window for truck drivers due to circadian rhythm disruption and accumulated sleep debt. During those hours, Texas has seen no meaningful improvement in fatal truck crash rates since 2021, the deadliest year on record for fatigue-related truck crashes in Texas:

  • 214 fatalities in 2023 (30% of all truck crash deaths)
  • 227 fatalities in 2022 (28% of all truck crash deaths)
  • 213 fatalities in 2021 (26% of all truck crash deaths)

Even though fewer crashes are being officially classified as “fatigue-related,” the proportion of deaths occurring during the most fatigue-prone hours has steadily increased — from roughly one quarter to nearly one third of all fatal truck crashes statewide.

Texas Data Shows Fatigue and Inexperience Behind the Spike in Fatal Truck Crashes

State data reinforces this trend. According to the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT), fatal truck crashes also show a slight increase in crashes from midnight and 6 a.m. from 2023 to 2024, rising from 109 fatal crashes to 115.

In 2025, at least 96 fatal truck crashes in Texas were reported during these overnight hours, resulting in 103 confirmed deaths and 200 or more serious injuries. These figures are expected to rise as enforcement struggles to keep pace with Texas’s expanding trucking corridors and overnight freight demands.

FMCSA Data Reveals an Industry-Wide Problem With Fatigued, Inexperienced, and Unqualified Drivers 

Crash reports may understate fatigue, but Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) enforcement data does not. 

A review of FMCSA Safety Measurement System (SMS) data covering the 24-month period ending December 26, 2025 reveals thousands of fatigue-related violations among five of the nation’s largest trucking companies: UPS, FedEx, JB Hunt, XPO, and Schneider National.

During that same period, these companies were involved in dozens of fatal truck crashes in Texas, tragically claiming at least 28 lives. 

Yet the FMCSA still rates each of these companies “satisfactory” when it comes to safety.

Across these five carriers, FMCSA records identified more than 3,450 Hours-of-Service and fatigue-related violations, including:

  • Driving beyond allowable hours, placing drivers behind the wheel after legally mandated limits were exceeded (hundreds of violations)
  • Failing to take federally mandated rest breaks, a core safeguard against drowsy driving (hundreds of violations)
  • Falsifying records of duty status, often used to conceal excessive driving hours or skipped rest periods (hundreds of violations)
  • Operating without a valid medical certificate, indicating drivers were medically unqualified to be on the road (hundreds of violations)
  • Operating a truck while fatigued or impaired by illness, one of the most serious fatigue-related safety violations cited by FMCSA (at least 40 violations)

These violations are not technical errors—they are direct indicators of fatigue, medical unfitness, and systemic noncompliance.

Among the most concerning findings were the hundreds of citations for operating vehicles without valid medical certificates. This isn’t just an issue of paperwork, but safety itself. These violations often point to deeper failures including undiagnosed or untreated sleep apnea and drivers who are kept on the road despite known disqualifying conditions.

The rules enforced by the FMCSA exist for one reason: to keep fatigued, unqualified, and unsafe drivers off the road. Yet federal data shows that even the largest and most recognizable trucking companies repeatedly violate these safety rules often by cutting corners. They’ll even conceal violations to protect profits and avoid responsibility.

At Zehl & Associates, our Texas truck accident attorneys know that crash reports rarely tell the full story. We know which violations matter, where critical evidence is often hidden, and how to use that information to prove what really caused a serious or fatal truck crash.

Once hired, we immediately assemble a team of experienced trial lawyers, accident reconstructionists, and trucking safety experts to conduct an independent investigation. That process often uncovers:

  • Drivers who should not have been operating a commercial vehicle
  • Carriers that failed to verify medical qualification or Hours-of-Service compliance
  • Known fatigue risks that were ignored or deliberately concealed
  • Overlapping HOS and safety violations that reveal chronic overwork
  • Crashes that were entirely preventable

Fatigue-related violations rarely stand alone. As part of our investigation, we also examine patterns of unsafe driving ,such as speeding, distracted driving, and cell phone use, as well as CDL-related violations that raise serious concerns about driver training, supervision, and fitness to operate a commercial vehicle.

Our meticulous approach led to a $35 million settlement for the Longoria family, whose loved one was tragically killed by a fatigued Ben E. Keith truck driver on Interstate 35 in Dallas, Texas — the #1 largest single-plaintiff personal injury settlement in Fort Worth history.

Our investigation revealed that the driver was severely fatigued, suffered from untreated sleep apnea, and was operating on an inverted sleep schedule at the time of the crash. Despite these known risks, the company failed to equip the truck with industry-standard safety monitoring systems designed to detect fatigue and prevent exactly this type of tragedy.

Although Ben E. Keith, one of the nation’s largest food distributors, adamantly denied responsibility, our trial team knew exactly where to look and how to prove what really happened.

We demonstrated that:

  • The driver suffered from untreated sleep apnea and was medically unqualified to drive overnight routes
  • The driver was experiencing clear fatigue-related symptoms at the time of the crash
  • The carrier’s removal of dash cameras reduced oversight and driver accountability
  • The company had a documented history of fatigue violations, falsified logs, and ignored medical-certification requirements that failed to meet federal safety standards

By exposing these failures, we were able to hold the company fully accountable, securing justice and maximum compensation for a family whose loss never should have occurred.

Undefeated Texas Truck Accident Lawyers: 1-888-603-3636 for a Free Consultation

With decades of experience and Billions won, our Texas truck accident lawyers don’t just win for victims of fatigue-related truck crashes: We set records. Having secured some of the largest verdicts and settlements in history, we have the expertise and resources to ensure you obtain the justice and full compensation you deserve.

If you or someone you love was injured in a truck crash, call 1-888-603-3636 or send us a confidential email at our Contact Us page.

All consultations are free and, because we exclusively represent clients on a contingency-fee basis, you’ll pay nothing unless we win your case.

FAQs