Driving in El Paso is not all that unpleasant.

In fact, according to Wallethub the Sun City offers a better experience behind the wheel than most of the 100 largest cities in America; good enough to rank in the top 15.

Best Cities to Drive In 2022

Per the latest study, El Paso is the 13th best city to drive in.

Now before you demand a recount and start listing the number of ways El Paso drivers suck, you have to understand the rankings have nothing to do with tailgating, lack of courtesy, or any of the other numerous things people on the mean streets of El Paso do to tick you off on the daily.

Methodology

Getty Images
Getty Images
loading...

To determine “2022’s Best & Worst Cities to Drive in,” the financial website looked at 30 factors of driver-friendliness in areas such as hours spent in traffic congestion, cost of vehicle ownership and maintenance, rate of car thefts, and share of uninsured drivers -- all of which El Paso scored fairly well in.

Although I'm not sure how we can score high in an 'uninsured drivers' category unless its 'most number of.'

Wallethub graphic
Wallethub graphic
loading...

All that being said, you’re initial reaction when you first read the headline was right on the money. El Paso drivers do suck. It's so bad out there, some days I have to forego driving altogether just to give my middle finger some much needed rest.

El Paso Drivers, Am I Right? Biggest Driving Pet Peeves

Bet You Didn't Know: 10 Bizarre Texas Laws Still on the Books

Many states still have strange laws on the books that aren’t enforced or taken seriously anymore, and Texas is no exception.

Most of these laws are just funny now, but at one time, there was a valid (or at least somewhat valid) reason for them to exist.

Texas has plenty of strange rules and regulations that you could technically be prosecuted for if you violate them, since they've never been amended. Some of these are only for specific cities and not state-wide, but all of them are pretty odd!

Let's take a look at 10 of the weirdest ones in the Lone Star State.

More From KLAQ El Paso