A major crash on Interstate 69 North at Kingwood Drive brought traffic to a standstill Tuesday morning. The collision happened around 9:49 AM, closing multiple lanes and backing up northbound traffic for miles during what should've been mid-morning shoulder time.
Crews responded to clear the debris and assist anyone hurt in the wreck. The roadway was partially reopened within the hour, but delays persisted as traffic filtered through the remaining open lanes.
Here's what makes this crash significant: it's the latest incident in a stretch of I-69 North that's become one of the region's hottest corridors for crashes. According to LocalTrafficAccidents.com data, this location has logged 28 incidents in the past 30 days alone—11 of them major collisions like this one. Over the past 90 days, the corridor has seen 87 total incidents, with 45 classified as major. That's not a random uptick. That's a pattern.
The data also shows something counterintuitive: while this Tuesday morning crash hit during the tail end of the morning rush, the dominant incident pattern at this intersection isn't peak commute times. Most crashes here happen during off-peak hours, suggesting the danger isn't concentrated during congestion—it's persistent. Over a 90-day window, the most common incident type at this location has been traffic hazards marked as urgent, and Mondays consistently see the highest incident count (12 in the past quarter). The peak crash hour, though, comes later in the afternoon between 3 PM and 4 PM, when eight incidents occurred in the same 90-day span.
Montgomery County as a whole reported 168 incidents in the past 30 days with no fatalities, but this particular corridor's concentration—28 in 30 days—stands out sharply.
If you're heading north on I-69 this week, expect lingering congestion through the Kingwood Drive area, particularly if you're traveling mid-morning or afternoon. The road's clear now, but the crash history here suggests caution is warranted. Weather conditions were clear at the time of this morning's collision—80 degrees, no rain, no visibility issues—which underscores that this corridor's crash frequency isn't driven by adverse conditions alone.
Traffic patterns at this location shift significantly depending on the day and hour. If you have flexibility in your commute, avoid northbound I-69 near Kingwood Drive between 3 PM and 4 PM—that's when the data shows the highest concentration of crashes.
Check real-time conditions before you head out. This corridor moves, but it's earned its reputation.
**Update (5:50 PM CT):** The major crash at Interstate Highway 69 N & Kingwood Dr, first reported at 9:49 AM, has cleared after more than 8 hours. All lanes have reopened and normal traffic flow has resumed in the area.
In the 30 days before this crash, 27 incidents had already been recorded at this location.
In the 15 days since this incident, the location has seen 17 more crashes. Of those, 4 were major collisions.
Crashes have slowed at this location since this crash.
Multiple crashes piled up over consecutive days.
The full count places this location among the top crash sites in the county.
Current through May 27, 2026.
Interstate Highway 69 N & Kingwood Dr
Montgomery County, Texas
This report was produced by LTA's editor-designed production system under the executive editorial direction of Dennis R. Mundy, Executive Editor. The system combines our proprietary data pipeline with AI-assisted drafting to deliver verified incident coverage to LTA's editorial standards.