NEW Car Crash Compilation | USA & Canada – Nov 6, 2025


In this dashcam footage compilation, a routine day turns into a masterclass in defensive driving—proof that clear dashcam footage can turn chaos into clarity and help you avoid the next car crash or car accident. Watch the full video:

It opens with a near‑miss that could have been life‑changing: a driver turns left across a crosswalk and almost clips a pedestrian who has the right of way—judging by the look on his face, either he does this often or he simply doesn’t care. Minutes later, a FedEx rig has a pants‑tightening moment on I‑44 between Tulsa and Oklahoma City (November 5, 2025), dodging trouble at highway speed. In another clip, a white GMC swings from the left lane into the right during the turn, cutting off the cam car and nearly triggering a rear‑end chain reaction; only a fast stop from the driver behind prevents a car crash.

The reel heads to Old Tampa Bay Road for a recorded car crash, then to a QuickTrip approach where everyone has a green, but a Chevy Avalanche plows through anyway, tags the right corner of a Honda, and spins it—then flees. The dashcam footage goes straight to the Honda’s driver for the hit‑and‑run report. Back at the next intersection, we see a quieter kind of risk: rolling past the limit line into the crosswalk. Hold the line—crosswalks exist for a reason.

Neighborhood drama arrives when a black pickup stops in the lane with no hazards to pick up a passenger with dogs. A honk, some tense words, and a reminder: there’s side parking one street over. Elsewhere, a clip from two weeks after a family car accident illustrates exactly why you install a camera in the first place. A different driver tries a blind U‑turn without mirrors or a shoulder check; another slams the brakes after missing a turn and gets rewarded with a rear‑end car crash into the cammer’s van. Glare makes an appearance (“blinded while driving”), while a patient driver intentionally leaves room before a gas‑station driveway to let others in and out—textbook courtesy that prevents fender benders.

More teachable moments stack up. “Please look both ways before pulling out” becomes painfully relevant when someone noses out without scanning both directions. Passing a truck? Don’t crowd it—and definitely don’t run a police motor off the road in the process. A “normal morning in Waterloo” produces its own surprises, as does a reckless move near the Pentagon in Virginia. Impatience shows up everywhere: drivers dive before their lane clears, a stranger tries to run the cammer off the road (complete with hand gestures and phone cameras), and the video later clears the cammer when police review it—while reports suggest the aggressor crashed doing the same thing to someone else.

Freeway antics round things out. A Jetta attempts the classic “push‑in” move on Mast; a rideshare driver “runs out of talent” and only the cammer’s brakes and reflexes keep it from becoming another car accident; and a flatbed loses a ratchet strap that launches into traffic—load securement really matters. Finally, a hair‑pin curve posted at 15 mph proves the point the hard way when an oncoming driver drifts across the centerline.

Takeaways for calmer miles (and cleaner claims):
Leave a real following gap so somebody else’s last‑second move doesn’t become your car crash. Treat every maneuver as mirror → signal → shoulder check—a blinker isn’t permission; a gap is. Hold the limit line and scan left/right on fresh greens; red‑light runners and rolling turns are everywhere. Slow for neighborhoods, work zones, and blind curves; use hazards if you must stop. And most of all, keep your dashcam rolling and save the original dashcam footage—when stories conflict after a car accident, clear video turns opinions into facts.


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