VMT reduction has become a central objective of California transportation and land use policy. It shows up in SB 743 compliance, climate action plans, housing elements, and Vision Zero strategies. But practitioners working on these efforts often face the same challenge: how do you translate a built environment decision into an evidence-based, quantifiable expectation for how much driving it will generate or reduce? Without that, it’s hard to evaluate tradeoffs, compare scenarios, or make the case to decision-makers.
That’s a gap our team set out to close.
We developed a statistical model as part of a new study built around a deliberate design choice: including only variables that planners and policymakers can actually control. Not income. Not household size. Not demographics. The variables that made the cut are the ones that respond to planning decisions: population density, employment density, intersection density, transit frequency, job accessibility by transit, and housing affordability.
The results are consistent across every major metropolitan region in the state: the Bay Area, Southern California, Sacramento, San Diego, and smaller MPO areas alike. Compact, mixed-use development paired with frequent, competitive transit service shows the strongest association with lower driving. But that’s not the only takeaway for practitioners. Not every community has strong transit to build on, and the research shows that’s not the whole story. Incrementally increasing density, adding a mix of uses, and improving walkability and street connectivity each move VMT in the right direction, even without major transit investment. These shifts don’t have to happen all at once to make a difference. Communities can start where they have the most control and build from there.
This research is part of a broader body of work connecting built environment decisions to outcomes across safety, climate, public health, and economic vitality. Last month, our colleagues published peer-reviewed findings linking VMT and mode share directly to traffic fatality rates. The variables that predict how much people drive also predict how safe communities are. The factors are the same. The opportunity to move multiple outcomes at once is real.
Related: Demand Management Is Injury Prevention · Safety Multipliers · MXD: Mixed-Use Trip Generation · Q&A: VMT Under CEQA · VMT Impacts · SB 743
If you’re working on a general plan update, an SB 743 analysis, a housing element, or a VMT reduction strategy and want to explore how this model applies to your context, we’d love to think through what this means for your community.
share this article
Connect with our Contributors
Jennifer Ziebarth
Associate
PhD
Email Me
Matt Goyne
Principal
PE
Email Me
Mackenzie Watten
Travel Behavior Practice Leader
PTP
Email Me
Explore More
VMT Agency Decision Matrix
This guide helps agencies choose the right methods and tools to measure Vehicle Miles Traveled (VMT) for land use and transportation projects, supporting compliance with California’s SB 743.
Street Safety in an Autonomous Vehicle Future
Autonomous vehicles may have the potential to support core elements of the Safe System approach, which strives to eliminate fatal and serious transportation injuries. Fehr & Peers partnered with ITE to publish “Autonomous Vehicle Considerations under a Safe System Framework,” which explores potential AV benefits, risks, and considerations within the Safe System framework.
New Office in Sonoma County
Fehr & Peers is proud to announce the opening of our Petaluma office space! As we continue in our dedication to providing innovative transportation solutions that improve communities, our Petaluma location will allow us to better support our existing and future clients throughout Sonoma, Napa, Marin, Mendocino and Lake Counties.








