I-84 Traffic Cameras: Both Eastern and Western Segments
Monitor real-time traffic cameras along both disjoint segments of Interstate 84 — the Western segment from Portland, Oregon to Echo, Utah (767 miles), and the Eastern segment from Scranton, Pennsylvania to Sturbridge, Massachusetts (243 miles). Track conditions through Portland, Boise, Salt Lake City area, Scranton, Newburgh, and Hartford on TrafficVision.Live.
VIEW I-84 CAMERAS →Interstate 84 is unique among major US Interstates — it comprises two completely disjoint segments sharing the I-84 designation. The Western segment runs 767 miles from Portland, Oregon to I-80 near Echo, Utah through Oregon (375 mi), Idaho (275 mi), and Utah (117 mi) per Wikipedia's I-84 Oregon-Utah entry. The Eastern segment runs 243 miles from Scranton, Pennsylvania to Sturbridge, Massachusetts through Pennsylvania (55 mi), New York (70 mi), Connecticut (107 mi), and Massachusetts (11 mi). The two segments are over 1,500 miles apart and have no plans to connect. ODOT, ITD, UDOT, PennDOT, NYSDOT, CTDOT, and MassDOT all operate I-84 camera coverage in their respective segments.
Western I-84 Segment — Oregon-Idaho-Utah
Portland (OR)
Pacific western terminus
Portland metro I-84 / I-5 / I-205 junction — peak PNW commute.
Columbia River Gorge (OR)
Scenic canyon corridor
I-84 follows the Columbia River east from Portland to Hood River — high-wind closures and wildfire smoke risk.
Boise (ID)
Idaho capital
Boise's I-84 / I-184 junction — peak ID commuter volume.
Twin Falls (ID)
Southern Idaho agricultural corridor
Snake River Plain I-84 segment.
Ogden (UT) / Salt Lake Area
I-84 / I-80 / I-15 hub
I-84 terminates at I-80 near Echo, Utah — feeding Salt Lake City.
Eastern I-84 Segment — PA-NY-CT-MA
Scranton (PA)
Eastern western terminus
I-84's eastern segment begins at I-81 in Scranton, PA — NEPA freight hub.
Newburgh (NY)
Hudson Valley crossing
I-84 crosses the Hudson River via the Newburgh-Beacon Bridge.
Danbury (CT)
Connecticut western hub
Danbury's I-84 / US-7 junction — peak Fairfield County commute traffic.
Waterbury (CT)
Central Connecticut corridor
Waterbury I-84 segment — heavy freight plus commuter.
Hartford (CT)
State capital + I-91 junction
I-84 / I-91 junction at Hartford — peak CT commute compounding.
Sturbridge (MA)
Eastern terminus
I-84 terminates at I-90 (Mass Pike) in Sturbridge, MA.
State-by-State Camera Coverage — Western Segment
Oregon (375 miles — longest) — ODOT and TripCheck. Portland, Gorge, The Dalles, Pendleton coverage. See Oregon traffic cameras guide.
Idaho (275 miles) — ITD and 511 Idaho. Boise, Twin Falls, Burley coverage. See Idaho traffic cameras guide.
Utah (117 miles) — UDOT and UDOT Traffic. Ogden, Tremonton, Echo area coverage. See Utah traffic cameras guide.
State-by-State Camera Coverage — Eastern Segment
Pennsylvania (55 miles) — PennDOT and 511PA. Scranton, Milford coverage. See Pennsylvania traffic cameras guide.
New York (70 miles) — NYSDOT and 511NY. Newburgh, Hudson Valley coverage. See New York traffic cameras guide.
Connecticut (107 miles — longest in eastern segment) — CTDOT and CT 511. Danbury, Waterbury, Hartford coverage. See Connecticut traffic cameras guide.
Massachusetts (11 miles) — MassDOT and Mass511. Sturbridge area coverage. See Massachusetts traffic cameras guide.
Track I-84 Traffic Live
Browse live state DOT camera feeds across both I-84 segments — from Portland to Salt Lake and from Scranton to Sturbridge.
VIEW I-84 CAMERAS →Why Two Different I-84s?
Per AARoads and Interstate-Guide I-84 West, the two disjoint I-84 segments exist due to Interstate numbering decisions made decades apart. Several US Interstates have disjoint segments (I-76, I-86, I-88, and I-84), typically the result of evolving highway planning. The two I-84 segments are entirely unrelated in purpose and geography — the Western segment serves the Columbia River corridor and Snake River Plain; the Eastern segment serves the New York-Hartford commute axis.
Major Events Affecting I-84
Western segment:
- Columbia River Gorge wildfire evacuations (summer-fall)
- Winter snow events in the Blue Mountains (OR), Idaho passes, and Utah Wasatch
- Boise State football — Boise I-84 game-day traffic
Eastern segment:
- New York Yankees, Mets, Giants, Jets games — indirect I-84 commuter compounding
- UConn sports (Storrs)
- Connecticut / New York Hudson Valley commutes peak Friday PM summer beach and skiing weekends
- Sturbridge holiday tourism (Old Sturbridge Village)
Plan Your I-84 Route
Use the route builder to plot your drive along either I-84 segment with every state DOT camera along the way.
BUILD YOUR ROUTE →How long is I-84?
Interstate 84 comprises two disjoint segments totaling approximately 1,010 miles. The Western segment is 767 miles (Portland, OR to Echo, UT). The Eastern segment is 243 miles (Scranton, PA to Sturbridge, MA). Per Wikipedia, the two segments are over 1,500 miles apart.
Why are there two Interstate 84s?
The two I-84 segments were numbered decades apart as the Interstate system evolved. Several Interstates have disjoint segments due to historical numbering decisions — I-76, I-86, and I-88 are also split. There are no plans to connect the two I-84s.
Are I-84 traffic cameras free to view?
Yes. Every camera on TrafficVision.Live is free with no account required. We aggregate publicly operated state DOT feeds from all 7 states containing I-84 segments (OR, ID, UT, PA, NY, CT, MA).
Which is longer — Western or Eastern I-84?
The Western segment is much longer — 767 miles through Oregon, Idaho, and Utah versus 243 miles for the Eastern segment through Pennsylvania, New York, Connecticut, and Massachusetts. Oregon alone (375 miles) is longer than the entire Eastern segment.
What connects the two I-84 segments?
Nothing directly — they are completely separate highways sharing only the I-84 number. To travel from one to the other by interstate, drivers use I-80 (which both I-84 segments connect to or near).
Ready to Monitor I-84?
Track both Interstate 84 segments with live state DOT cameras across 7 states — free, instant, no sign-up.
VIEW I-84 CAMERAS →