Written at the direction of Mundy & Associates, PLLC | April 13, 2026
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Location: Us-290 Northwest Eastbound At West Rd | Date: April 13, 2026 | Severity: Major
A crash shut down eastbound lanes on US-290 Northeast at West Road early Monday morning, April 13, 2026, creating a major traffic backup during the start of the work week. The collision was reported at 5:45 AM, hitting the corridor during a critical window when commuters from northwest Houston begin their drive toward downtown and beyond.
The incident brought significant delays to one of the region's busiest commute corridors. Drivers heading east on US-290 faced extended travel times as traffic diverted away from the crash scene. Those flexible enough to avoid the area entirely had options: northbound drivers could shift to TX-249 toward The Woodlands, while some chose surface streets through Spring or took Hockley Road as a bypass. For those already committed to US-290, patience became the only real strategy as crews worked to clear the roadway.
This stretch of US-290 near West Road is no stranger to serious collisions. Over the past 90 days alone, the location has logged 68 total incidents, with 50 classified as major—a striking number that reflects the corridor's vulnerability to backups and secondary crashes. The combination of high volume, frequent lane changes, and complex interchange geometry has made this particular section one of the busier crash corridors in Harris County. Rush-hour traffic patterns amplify the risk, particularly when incidents occur during peak arrival windows.
The eastbound direction bore the brunt of the disruption. As of the initial report, the crash remained active and under investigation. Drivers in the area needed to watch for emergency personnel, disabled vehicles, and debris scattered across lanes. Recovery crews worked to clear the roadway, but the early-morning timing meant that clearing the scene was just the first step—traffic would need significant time to dissipate once lanes reopened.
The timing couldn't have been worse for the Monday commute. Many drivers were already navigating the transition back to a full work week, and this collision compounded the usual bottlenecks that plague US-290 during morning hours. Secondary incidents often follow major crashes as traffic backs up, so conditions likely remained unstable for an extended period even after initial clearance.
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