Wikipedia has a summary article on American speed limits, and more detailed speed limits by state.
Most cities and states have default speed limits, for places where the speed limit is not posted. Theoretically, people can look up these speed limits. In practice, the following default speed limits are very common, and most Americans assume them unless they have reason to believe otherwise. From higher priority to lower priority:
In practice, speed limits are treated as “suggested speeds”. Most roads are designed to be safe (in well-maintained “street-legal” vehicles in daylight, with clear, dry weather and awake, sober drivers) for speeds about 20 percent faster than the posted speed limit.
Many jurisdictions have “minimum speed” laws. If the weather is good, and there are no traffic jams, and you cannot stay within 10 miles per hour of the nominal speed limit, then you should probably find a different road. Of course, if everybody is going slowly, you should also go “with the flow of traffic”.
In many places, people expect to go as fast as they (more-or-less) safely can go. In these places, a person who scrupulously stays just below the speed limit might be dangerous, and might be more likely to be “pulled over” by police for other alleged infractions. (Many drunk drivers travel suspiciously slowly; many drug smugglers follow the law so precisely that it makes the police suspicious.)
Some states (such as Washington) have “keep right except to pass” laws. In these states, the left lane of major highways is effectively reserved for speeders. Also, if several cars have stacked up behind you, you should try to let them pass when it is safe to do so. Some roads have “slow lanes” or pull-outs so that slow vehicles can let regular vehicles pass them.
Towns sometimes post the default speed limit on a sign near the city limits.
In my experience, densely populated areas will almost always have speed limits posted everywhere, except on residential streets. For residential streets, the speed limit should be at least 25 mph.
For gravel roads out in the middle of nowhere, it’s anyone’s guess, but it should be at least 25 mph. If you want to know the speed limits for rural areas, you would have to look up the phone number or website for every town or county you’ll be driving through, and ask about default speed limits.
Knowing the speed limit won’t generally be a problem if you stick to more populated areas, and remember to drive 25 mph in residential areas.
Many GPS driving devices or apps will tell you the speed limit for your current location.
For example: List of Garmin devices with speed limit indicator
There is generally no official database that provide you with the speed limits on various roads because State and Local authorities can specify speed limits on the roads within their jurisdiction case in point New York City.
But there are places where you can find it such as Wikispeedia or Open Street Maps as described in the help discussion.
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
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