COUNTRY SAFETY
Asia · Transport safety
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Transport Safety (Asia/APAC)

Country-level transport risk signals for travelers, combining public-health road-fatality metrics and aviation oversight indicators. Bali uses the Indonesia national baseline unless a Bali-specific metric is published.

1 Low risk 2 Moderate 3 Elevated 4 High
Metric basis
Road traffic mortality rate (per 100,000)
WHO estimate; year shown per country
Aviation notes
Oversight & investigation
Uses regulator/authority sources and audit-style signals (e.g., IOSA, FAA IASA)

Road mortality comparison

Bars are colored by Level (1–4) derived from the mortality rate.

Distribution by risk level

Counts reflect the countries currently listed on this Asia/APAC page.

Country-level transport safety

Click column headers to sort.

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Country / coverage Road deaths /100k Year Score Level Official aviation oversight / investigation links Primary sources (road safety) Notes

Airlines operating from the region (safety verification links)

Public “crash risk per airline” is not published in a single, comparable metric; this section provides verifiable audit and investigation links. IOSA is an operational safety audit standard; IATA reports lower accident rates for IOSA-registered airlines versus non-IOSA in aggregate.

Airline Home country Key sources Notes

Scoring and interpretation

  • Road deaths /100k uses WHO country estimates (as published in WHO Data / WHO country pages). Levels are derived from thresholds: ≤6 (Level 1), 6–10 (Level 2), 10–20 (Level 3), >20 (Level 4).
  • Score is a transparent transform: score = clamp(0..100, 100 − 3×rate). It is intended for relative ordering, not a clinical guarantee.
  • Aviation shows oversight and investigation signal links (e.g., FAA IASA category for Thailand; investigation authority portals; IOSA registry for airline operational audit status).

Air travel

There is no single standardized “plane crash rate” that is comparable across airlines and countries for consumers. This section provides a practical directory of major airlines and a quick link to public incident summaries.

Country Airline Overview Accidents / incidents

Primary public links shown: Wikipedia airline pages and their “Accidents and incidents” sections. For official investigation reports, use the relevant national accident investigation authority and civil aviation authority for the jurisdiction involved.