Corridor Guides

I-90 Truck Trip Planning Guide

Planning notes for I-90 truck trips across the northern freight corridor from Seattle to Boston.

Corridor overview

I-90 stretches approximately 3,100 miles from Seattle, Washington to Boston, Massachusetts — the longest interstate highway in the US. The corridor crosses Snoqualmie Pass in the Cascades, the Montana Rockies at Lookout Pass, the Wyoming high plains, the South Dakota Badlands, the Chicago metro, and the Great Lakes corridor before reaching the Northeast.

This page is not navigation, route approval, or current weather-based routing. It is a planning framework for deciding what to check before the truck is committed.

Planning segments

SegmentWhy it mattersPlanning concernConservative planning habitSource note
Cascades / Snoqualmie Pass (WA)Mountain pass subject to chain controls, closures, and winter weather year-roundPass closures can be activated with short noticeCheck WSDOT before departure; plan a backup stop east or west of the passUse WSDOT Travel Center
Montana mountain passesLookout Pass and other Montana grades create traction, grade, and weather riskWinter chain requirements and slower speeds affect scheduleFuel well before mountain segments; name a stop before and after each passUse official MT resources
Wyoming / South Dakota open corridorWind exposure on open plains, distance between services in parts of the routeWind events for high-profile vehicles on open terrainSet reserve triggers; check wind advisories before open-plains segmentsUse WyoRoad for WY segments
Chicago metro approach (IL/IN)Dense freight market creates congestion and parking pressureLate-day arrivals face difficult parking and significant congestionDecide before the metro whether to stop short or push through with a confirmed backupUse state travel resources
Ohio / Pennsylvania approachWeather, freight density, and end-of-corridor parking pressureI-90 through Ohio and PA has high freight volume and limited late-night options in some segmentsPlan the overnight stop before the lake-effect snow and freight corridor zonesUse OHGO and 511PA

Winter planning priority on I-90

I-90 is one of the most winter-weather-affected interstates in the US, with major mountain passes in Washington, Idaho, and Montana, open plains wind exposure in Wyoming and South Dakota, and lake-effect snow exposure in Ohio and western New York. A winter trip on I-90 that does not check conditions at each major mountain pass and weather zone is not adequately planned.

The most critical check before any I-90 winter departure: Snoqualmie Pass (WA) current chain and closure status, Montana pass chain controls, Wyoming wind advisories on the open I-90 segment, and the lake-effect snow forecast for the Great Lakes approach.

Parking demand zones

I-90 parking pressure concentrates at three predictable points: the Chicago metro area (where I-90 merges with I-94 and enters one of the highest freight-demand overnight zones in the country), the Cleveland/Akron area in Ohio (where I-90 corridor freight volume is high), and the western edge of Chicago (where drivers from the Great Plains arrive in the evening freight window). Plan stops before reaching these zones.

Late-day corridor decisions

Use these I-90 examples as stop-or-continue prompts. They are not route instructions.

SituationDecision riskConservative planning response
A driver leaves Seattle later than planned and reaches the Snoqualmie Pass approach near dusk.Winter controls or a closure could leave the driver short of both time and parking choices.Check WSDOT before the pass. If the plan depends on the pass staying open, stop on the west side and rebuild the next day.
A westbound truck approaches Chicago after crossing Wisconsin in the afternoon.The Chicago/Gary freight zone can consume the remaining clock and make parking scarce.Decide before Madison or Milwaukee whether to stop short or cross with a confirmed legal stop beyond the metro.

I-90 corridor planning notes

  • Snoqualmie Pass can close with short notice year-round — plan a backup stop on either the east or west side before committing to the Cascades crossing, not after the pass sign appears.
  • Chicago/Gary is where I-90 and I-94 merge into one of the highest parking-demand overnight zones in the US; plan a named stop before 7 PM in this area, not after arriving inside it.
  • The Montana mountain passes and Wyoming open plains are consecutive weather-risk environments moving east from Seattle — treat both as separate planning checks before departure, not a single corridor assumption.
  • Lake-effect snow east of Cleveland can arrive with short forecast lead time; check the NWS Great Lakes forecast before any overnight stop in the Ohio through New York segment from November through March.

HOS and fuel cautions for this corridor

  • Montana and Wyoming segments under-deliver on average speed compared to scheduled miles — build conservative daily distance estimates when crossing the full northern corridor.
  • Snoqualmie Pass delays can run 2-4 hours; treat the pass as a potential duty-day event and carry enough fuel for a holding period, not just the planned crossing.
  • Chicago/Gary is a clock-consumption zone; a driver arriving at the metro with fewer than 3 hours of HOS should have a confirmed backup stop before approaching, not on arrival.

Official resources

  • Use National Weather Service resources for weather education and alerts.
  • Use current state traveler information and carrier-approved truck routing tools for current road, restriction, and closure decisions.
  • Use FMCSA and ELD records for HOS decisions.

State-by-state planning resources

Use these official planning resources as checkpoints for corridor research. They do not make this page a route planner, live closure service, truck-legal route, or low-clearance tool.

StatePlanning useOfficial sourcesCaveat
WashingtonSnoqualmie Pass chain controls, closures, and Seattle metro approach conditions.wsdotTravelCheck official resources before departure and again during legal stops; this guide is not a live routing or restriction service.
IdahoIdaho panhandle mountain weather, pass conditions, and I-90 work zones.id511Check official resources before departure and again during legal stops; this guide is not a live routing or restriction service.
MontanaLookout Pass, mountain grades, winter restrictions, and eastern Montana road conditions.mt511Check official resources before departure and again during legal stops; this guide is not a live routing or restriction service.
WyomingWind advisories and winter conditions on the Wyoming I-90 segment.wyRoadCheck official resources before departure and again during legal stops; this guide is not a live routing or restriction service.
South DakotaOpen-plains wind, winter closures, Badlands-area conditions, and work zones.sd511Check official resources before departure and again during legal stops; this guide is not a live routing or restriction service.
MinnesotaSouthern Minnesota I-90 conditions, winter road reports, and work zones.mn511Check official resources before departure and again during legal stops; this guide is not a live routing or restriction service.
WisconsinI-90/I-94 Wisconsin conditions, winter road reports, and Madison-area congestion.wi511Check official resources before departure and again during legal stops; this guide is not a live routing or restriction service.
IllinoisChicago metro approach, construction, winter road conditions, and traffic impacts.idotTravelCheck official resources before departure and again during legal stops; this guide is not a live routing or restriction service.
IndianaNorthwest Indiana and I-90 toll road conditions near the Chicago/Gary freight zone.indotTrafficwiseCheck official resources before departure and again during legal stops; this guide is not a live routing or restriction service.
OhioLake Erie corridor conditions, northeast Ohio freight zone, and winter weather planning.ohgoCheck official resources before departure and again during legal stops; this guide is not a live routing or restriction service.
PennsylvaniaWestern Pennsylvania I-90 approach conditions and winter impacts.penndot511Check official resources before departure and again during legal stops; this guide is not a live routing or restriction service.
New YorkWestern New York lake-effect snow, Buffalo-area traffic, and I-90 corridor conditions.nys511Check official resources before departure and again during legal stops; this guide is not a live routing or restriction service.
MassachusettsMassachusetts Turnpike approach, Boston-area congestion, and construction impacts.mass511Check official resources before departure and again during legal stops; this guide is not a live routing or restriction service.

What are the main winter planning challenges on I-90?

The main winter challenges on I-90 are: Snoqualmie Pass in Washington (chain controls and closures), mountain passes in Montana and Idaho, high wind exposure on the Wyoming and South Dakota open plains, and lake-effect snow in Ohio and western New York near Lake Erie. A comprehensive I-90 winter plan checks all of these segments before departure, not just the first pass.

How long does it take to drive I-90?

I-90 is approximately 3,100 miles from Seattle to Boston. At realistic commercial average speeds with required breaks, fuel, and legal rest, a coast-to-coast trip on I-90 takes 4-5 days minimum for a single driver, more in winter conditions or with significant freight delays. Plan with realistic daily distances that account for HOS, weather, and metro timing rather than theoretical maximum daily miles.