10 U.S. Bridges That Scare Drivers The Most (Here's Why)

Here you go: Some bridges break people. Not physically — psychologically. The lanes get narrow. The water appears. The guardrail starts looking very small. And something in your brain says: this was a mistake. These are the ten scariest bridges in the United States to drive over — not the tallest, not the most dangerous, but the ones that most consistently, most completely break the people who cross them: Astoria-Megler Bridge, Oregon — Starts at water level then spirals almost two hundred feet into the air without warning. Two lanes. No shoulder. Wind that has toppled tractor-trailers. Lake Pontchartrain Causeway, Louisiana — Twenty-three point eight miles. For eight of them you cannot see land in any direction. Police regularly rescue drivers who stop in the middle lane and cannot continue. Delaware Memorial Bridge, Delaware/New Jersey — One hundred and seventy-five feet. Notorious winds. And an ascent where the crest disappears from view — locals call it the Christopher Columbus fear. Sunshine Skyway Bridge, Florida — Beautiful. One hundred and ninety feet above Tampa Bay. With the remains of the bridge that collapsed in nineteen eighty still visible in the water on both sides. I-35W Site Bridge, Minneapolis — The current bridge is safe. But every driver in the Twin Cities knows what collapsed here on August first, two thousand and seven. And crosses the spot anyway. Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge, New York — Two hundred and twenty-eight feet. Thirteen lanes. A deck that visibly flexes in high winds. Truckers say it makes every other scary bridge feel manageable. Chesapeake Bay Bridge, Maryland — Four point three miles. No shoulder. Narrow lanes. And a fear so widespread that a private industry exists to drive people across it for forty dollars a trip. Tacoma Narrows Bridge, Washington — The replacement for Galloping Gertie — the bridge that collapsed four months after opening in nineteen forty. The current bridge still moves in the wind. Drivers still feel it. Deception Pass Bridge, Washington — Built in nineteen thirty-five. Two lanes. One hundred and eighty feet above churning water with whirlpools visible from the deck. Still the only way across. Atchafalaya Basin Bridge, Louisiana — Eighteen miles over living swamp. No shoulder. Barely thirty feet above dark water. At night it is eighteen miles of complete darkness with nowhere to stop and nowhere to go except forward. Some people pay someone else to drive them across. Some close their eyes. Some turn back entirely. They're not wrong. They're just honest.