Rexburg isn’t a sprawling metro with endless alternate streets. Traffic concentrates around the main connectors that move students, families, and commercial vehicles through town and toward regional destinations. That mix creates a few recurring patterns:
- Heavy vehicles sharing space with frequent short trips. Quick errands and campus-area driving can put smaller vehicles close to trucks that need more room to stop and turn.
- Seasonal and weather-driven visibility problems. Eastern Idaho conditions can shift quickly. Wind, blowing snow, and slick pavement change braking distances—especially for loaded trucks.
- Delivery and service trucks on tight schedules. Box trucks and semis moving between warehouses, retailers, and nearby cities may be routed through the same corridors residents use daily.
When a commercial driver misjudges a turn, follows too closely, or can’t stop in time, the physics are unforgiving. That’s why early legal guidance matters—because evidence and trucking records can disappear long before you feel “back to normal.”


