Ever Driven Any of The 9 Longest Roads In The World?

Driving down endless roads is unarguably one of the highlights of any great road trip. Check out the longest roads in the world.

By Jesslyn ShieldsHow Stuff Works

If you want to go places in a car, it’s important to have a road. That is just a fact. Humans have been building roads since ancient people crossed well-worn paths between settlements — like the 440-mile (708-kilometer) Natchez Trace that runs between Mississippi and Tennessee.

But these days, our roads are much longer, some of them traversing thousands of miles of terrain that would be nearly uncrossable without them. Here are the nine longest roads humans have built to date.

  1. Pan-American Highway

Ever Driven Any of the 9 Longest Roads in the World?
Ever Driven Any of the 9 Longest Roads in the World?

The Pan-American Highway is the longest motorway in the world, according to the Guinness World Records. Covering almost 19,000 miles (30,000 kilometres) from the Arctic Ocean at Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, to the southernmost tip of South America, it winds through 14 countries and a dizzying variety of landscapes and terrain, from arctic tundra to tropical rainforests. Travellers of the Pan-American Highway must be ready to drive up the 11,322-foot (3,450-meter) mountain peak called Cerro de la Muerte — or Summit of Death — in Costa Rica, and then brave the Darién Gap, about 60 miles (97 kilometres) between Panama and Colombia, which remains unpaved.

  1. Australia Highway One

Australia Highway One passes by Port Pirie, a small city on the east coast of the Spencer Gulf in South Australia. MICHAEL COGHLAN/FLICKR (CC BY SA 2.0)
Australia Highway One passes by Port Pirie, a small city on the east coast of the Spencer Gulf in South Australia. MICHAEL COGHLAN/FLICKR (CC BY SA 2.0)

In Australia, they call the 9,000-mile (14,500-kilometer) Highway One “The Big Lap” because it hugs the coast of the entire continent. It passes through every state in Australia and connects seven of its eight capitals, even popping over the Bass Strait to Tasmania.

Construction on Highway One started in 1955, and it’s now the world’s longest continuous road, with over a million Australians traveling on it every day.

  1. Trans-Siberian Highway

This aerial view shows a mountain valley in Kultuk, Slyudyanka, Russia, traversed by the serpentine Trans-Siberian Highway. QUATROX PRODUCTION/SHUTTERSTOCK
This aerial view shows a mountain valley in Kultuk, Slyudyanka, Russia, traversed by the serpentine Trans-Siberian Highway. QUATROX PRODUCTION/SHUTTERSTOCK

The Trans-Siberian Highway is a 6,800-mile (11,000-kilometer) route across Russia, from St. Petersburg to Vladivostok. Construction on the Trans-Siberian began in 1949, but most of this patchwork of federal highways is relatively new, only becoming fully paved in 2015. It touches both the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans and spans a vast amount of remote territory in between — in some places, gasoline isn’t even available.

  1. Trans-Canada Highway

The Trans-Canada Highway runs near Banff National Park in Canada, with massive Mt. Bourgeau standing majestically in the background. SEAN XU/SHUTTERSTOCK
The Trans-Canada Highway runs near Banff National Park in Canada, with massive Mt. Bourgeau standing majestically in the background. SEAN XU/SHUTTERSTOCK

The Trans-Canada Highway is the second-longest national highway in the world, spanning 4,645 miles (7,476 kilometres) of the country and running east to west, between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. It links all major cities and passes through every Canadian province. Upon its completion in 1971, it was the longest continuous highway in the world.

Building a highway across Canada wasn’t an easy feat, due to the country’s rugged terrain. In 1912, a group of automobile buffs offered a gold medal to anyone who could drive a car from Halifax to Vancouver. The first man who completed the challenge did it in two months, but he didn’t win the medal because large portions of the journey involved his car strapped to a railcar or on the deck of a ship. Today the Trans-Canada Highway is driveable in 57 hours.

  1. Golden Quadrilateral Highway Network

Golden Quadrilateral Highway Network: Photo Credit: Duck Duck Go
Golden Quadrilateral Highway Network: Photo Credit: Duck Duck Go

The fabulously named Golden Quadrilateral Highway Network is, as the name implies, a 3,633-mile (5,846-kilometer) network of highways that forms a four-sided polygon and connects the four major Indian cities of Delhi, Kolkata, Mumbai and Chennai. It was built to cut down the travel time between the major cities, as well as to provide a way for people in more rural parts of the country to bring agricultural goods to markets. This relatively new highway system, completed in 2012, is big by any highway’s standards — much of it features between four and six lanes.

  1. China National Highway 318

China National Highway 318: Photo Credit: Duck Duck Go
China National Highway 318: Photo Credit: Duck Duck Go

China has a vast network of highways that can’t really be considered a single highway, but if it could, it would blow all the others out of the water. But China National Highway 318 — also called the Shanghai Tibet Highway — is the longest continuous leg of the network, and it bisects the country from east to west, running 3,403 miles (5,476 kilometres) from Shanghai to China’s border with Nepal.

  1. U.S. Route 20

U.S. Route 20 passes through nine states, including New York. DOUG KERR/FLICKR (CC BY SA 2.0)
U.S. Route 20 passes through nine states, including New York. DOUG KERR/FLICKR (CC BY SA 2.0)

U.S. Route 20 is the longest road in the country. This 3,365-mile (5,415-kilometer) roadway runs east to west, between the Pacific Northwest and New England. For most of the way, it’s just a two-lane road, although it expands when it passes through big cities like Chicago, Boston and Cleveland. Route 20 passes through nine states and is briefly interrupted by Yellowstone National Park.

  1. U.S. Route 6

U.S. Route 6. Image Credit: Google
U.S. Route 6. Image Credit: Google

U.S. Route 6, also known as The Grand Army of the Republic Highway, runs 3,199 miles (5,148 kilometres) east to west through 14 states, from Bishop, California, to Provincetown, Massachusetts. In 1953, the highway was dedicated to the veterans of the Civil War, which is how it got its formal nickname.

  1. Interstate 90 (I-90)

Interstate 90 (I-90). Image Source: Public Domian
Interstate 90 (I-90). Image Source: Public Domian

I-90 is the longest interstate highway in the U.S. at 3,021 miles (4,862 kilometres). It runs roughly parallel to U.S. Route 20 through the northern U.S., from Boston to Seattle, passing through 13 states.

Now That’s Interesting

In the U.S., highways with odd numbers run north-south and those with even numbers run east-west.

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