Comparison of Waymo Rider-Only Crash Rates by Crash Type to Human Benchmarks at 56.7 Million Miles
Kristofer D. Kusano, John M. Scanlon, Yin-Hsiu Chen, Timothy L., McMurry, Tilia Gode, Trent Victor

TL;DR
This study evaluates the safety of Waymo's Rider-Only autonomous vehicles over 56.7 million miles, showing significantly lower crash rates than human benchmarks across various crash types, especially in intersection-related incidents.
Contribution
First retrospective safety assessment of Rider-Only ADS comparing crash rates by type with human benchmarks, including serious crash outcomes, over extensive mileage.
Findings
Significantly lower crash rates in all categories for Waymo's RO vehicles.
Largest reduction observed in V2V intersection crashes with up to 96% decrease.
No statistically significant increase in any crash type for Waymo's RO vehicles.
Abstract
SAE Level 4 Automated Driving Systems (ADSs) are deployed on public roads, including Waymo's Rider-Only (RO) ride-hailing service (without a driver behind the steering wheel). The objective of this study was to perform a retrospective safety assessment of Waymo's RO crash rate compared to human benchmarks, including disaggregated by crash type. Eleven crash type groups were identified from commonly relied upon crash typologies that are derived from human crash databases. Human benchmarks were aligned to the same vehicle types, road types, and locations as where the Waymo Driver operated. Waymo crashes were extracted from the NHTSA Standing General Order (SGO). RO mileage was provided by the company via a public website. Any-injury-reported, Airbag Deployment, and Suspected Serious Injury+ crash outcomes were examined because they represented previously established, safety-relevant…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAutomotive and Human Injury Biomechanics · Agriculture and Farm Safety · Transportation Safety and Impact Analysis
