Interstate 17
Interstate 17 (I-17) is a north–south Interstate Highway spanning 145.76 miles (234.58 km) entirely within Arizona.[1] It begins at its southern terminus with Interstate 10 in Phoenix and ends at its northern terminus with Interstate 40 in Flagstaff.[1] The route passes through the Phoenix metropolitan area, the Black Canyon, Verde Valley, and the Mogollon Rim, traversing urban, desert, canyon, and forested mountain landscapes while climbing from about 1,100 feet (340 m) in elevation near Phoenix to over 6,900 feet (2,100 m) in Flagstaff.[2][3] Designated as a Key Commerce Corridor and part of the National Highway System, I-17 facilitates vital freight transport, commuter traffic, and tourism between southern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau.[4] The southern portion, known as the Black Canyon Freeway, largely follows the path of the historic State Route 69, originally developed as a stagecoach route in the late 19th century and paved as a state highway starting in 1936.[2] The northern section incorporates alignments from State Route 79, completed in 1961.[5] Freeway construction commenced in 1956, with the final segment opening in 1978, marking the full designation of I-17 and significantly reducing travel times across the state.[2][5]Overview
Route summary
Interstate 17 (I-17) is a north–south Interstate Highway located entirely within Arizona, connecting the Phoenix metropolitan area to the city of Flagstaff over a distance of 145.93 miles (234.85 km). Its southern terminus is at an interchange with Interstate 10 (I-10) and U.S. Route 60 (US 60) in downtown Phoenix, while the northern terminus is at a junction with I-40 and State Route 89A (SR 89A) just south of downtown Flagstaff.[1] The northern portion from Black Canyon City to Flagstaff is designated as the Arizona Veterans Highway in 2004 through Senate Joint Resolution 1001, honoring the service and sacrifices of Arizona's military veterans.[6] The highway ascends dramatically from an elevation of 1,090 feet (330 m) above sea level in Phoenix to 6,910 feet (2,110 m) in Flagstaff, linking the arid Sonoran Desert lowlands with the cooler, forested highlands of northern Arizona.[1] Annual average daily traffic (AADT) along I-17 peaks at over 178,000 vehicles in the Phoenix area, such as near state milepost 210 (between Cactus Road and Thunderbird Road), but drops to around 34,000 north of Camp Verde near interstate milepost 93 (between state mileposts 285 and 287).[7] Note that mileposts referenced here use Arizona's state milepost system, where I-17 begins at milepost 194. The route briefly serves communities including Glendale, Peoria, Anthem, Black Canyon City, and Camp Verde en route to Flagstaff, while providing essential connectivity to I-10 southward and I-40 northward.[1]Length and specifications
Interstate 17 measures 145.93 miles (234.85 km) in total length, entirely within Arizona, connecting Phoenix to Flagstaff. The route traverses three counties, with 59.86 miles (96.34 km) in Maricopa County, 60.81 miles (97.87 km) in Yavapai County, and 25.26 miles (40.64 km) in Coconino County. As a divided freeway, Interstate 17 adheres to Interstate Highway System design standards, featuring four lanes throughout its length (two in each direction), with certain urban and high-traffic segments expanded to six lanes for improved capacity. Speed limits vary by terrain and location, ranging from 65 mph (as of 2023) in the Phoenix metropolitan area to 75 mph in rural and mountainous sections.[8][9] The Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT) maintains jurisdiction over all segments of the route, ensuring compliance with federal and state safety and operational requirements.[10] Service facilities along Interstate 17 are limited, with rest areas provided at mileposts 252 (Sunset Point, bidirectional), 298 (McGuireville, northbound and southbound), and 324 (Christensen, northbound); no full-service plazas with fuel or extensive amenities are available.[11]Route description
Phoenix metropolitan area
Interstate 17 begins at the Stack Interchange in downtown Phoenix, where it connects with Interstate 10 and U.S. Route 60 along the Papago Freeway, functioning as the primary northbound artery for traffic exiting the urban core toward northern suburbs and beyond.[1] The highway, designated as the Black Canyon Freeway in this southern segment, traverses densely developed commercial districts and residential zones, carrying heavy commuter volumes that peak at around 220,000 vehicles per day in urban stretches.[2] Starting at an elevation of 1,117 feet, it provides essential access for the Phoenix metropolitan area, which spans over 14,500 square miles and serves more than 4.9 million residents.[1][12] Heading north, I-17 passes through the cities of Phoenix, Glendale, and Peoria, intersecting key arterials such as U.S. Route 60 (Grand Avenue) near 19th Avenue in Phoenix and State Route 74 (Carefree Highway) on the northern outskirts of Peoria.[13] The route lies in proximity to Luke Air Force Base, the U.S. Air Force's largest fighter wing training facility located about 15 miles west in Glendale, supporting regional military and civilian mobility. Urban features dominate this corridor, including high-rise office buildings, retail hubs like Arrowhead Towne Center near Peoria Avenue, and institutional sites such as Glendale Community College, all amid persistent congestion from daily commutes between the Valley's job centers and suburbs.[1] The freeway typically features four to six general-purpose lanes, supplemented by high-occupancy vehicle (HOV) lanes in denser areas to manage peak-hour flows.[4] As I-17 progresses northward through Deer Valley in north Phoenix, it transitions from intense urban environments to expanding suburban developments, widening to six lanes to accommodate growing residential communities and commercial outlets like Happy Valley Towne Center and Park West shopping areas.[14] Exits serve major residential enclaves, golf courses, and recreational facilities, reflecting the area's shift toward master-planned neighborhoods and light industrial zones.[1] This 34-mile segment, from milepost 194 at the Stack Interchange to approximately milepost 228 near Anthem, marks the gradual fade of metropolitan sprawl into semi-rural landscapes, with daily traffic volumes decreasing to around 100,000 vehicles as development thins.[15][16]Black Canyon corridor
The Black Canyon corridor of Interstate 17 begins north of the Phoenix metropolitan area at Anthem, approximately at milepost 229, where the highway transitions from suburban development into the rugged desert landscape of the Agua Fria River drainage.[4] Here, I-17 enters Black Canyon, characterized by steep grades reaching up to 6 percent and sharp curves that wind through narrow, rocky confines flanked by desert scrub and prominent rock formations.[2] This segment, spanning roughly 33 miles northward to around milepost 262, provides scenic views of Black Mesa and the surrounding arid terrain, serving as a vital link for commuters and freight between central Arizona communities.[4] As the route progresses, I-17 passes through the community of New River near milepost 232 and continues to Black Canyon City at exit 242, a small settlement historically tied to mining and stagecoach travel.[2] The highway intersects State Route 69 at Cordes Junction (milepost 262), facilitating access to nearby Dewey-Humboldt and the Prescott area.[4] Along this stretch, exits such as 256 (Badger Springs Road) and 259 (Bloody Basin Road) provide entry points to the Agua Fria National Monument, a protected area featuring prehistoric ruins, riparian corridors, and hiking opportunities within the Bloody Basin region east of the interstate.[17] The corridor's alignment largely follows the historic path of the 1878 stagecoach route along the old State Route 69, which traversed challenging river crossings and canyon terrain before I-17's construction in the mid-20th century.[2] Terrain challenges in the Black Canyon corridor include the narrow canyon walls that restrict roadway expansion and contribute to safety concerns like rockfall and single-vehicle crashes, particularly in the mountainous segments between Black Canyon City and Sunset Point rest area (mileposts 251-252).[4] These geological constraints, combined with the route's curves and elevation gains, limit the highway to primarily four lanes (two in each direction) with occasional climbing lanes for trucks, though flex third lanes were added in the mileposts 244-252 segment as of May 2025.[2][18] Northward, the corridor approaches the Verde Valley near milepost 278, where the landscape begins to open into broader valleys, though the focus remains on the canyon's distinctive desert confines.[4]Northern Arizona mountains
The northern segment of Interstate 17 departs Camp Verde at approximately milepost 287, initiating a challenging ascent through the Verde Valley as it heads toward higher elevations while within Prescott National Forest. Here, the highway intersects State Route 260 at exit 287 in Camp Verde, providing access to regional attractions, before continuing northward with access to Montezuma Castle National Monument via exit 289 and crossing State Route 179 at exit 298 near Big Park. This intersection offers indirect connectivity to Sedona's iconic red rock vistas via SR 179, though I-17 itself maintains no direct exits into the town, preserving the route's focus on efficient northbound travel through the valley's open terrain.[1][13] Entering the final stretch of Prescott National Forest near milepost 310, I-17 navigates a rugged stretch characterized by sharp curves, grades reaching up to 7 percent, and steady climbs that elevate the roadway to over 7,000 feet. The path indirectly skirts Oak Creek Canyon, traversing forested ridges and valleys within the national forest boundaries, where dense woodlands and occasional overlooks highlight the transition from valley scrub to coniferous landscapes. This section demands careful navigation for vehicles due to the steep inclines and winding alignment designed to conform to the mountainous topography.[1][19] As I-17 proceeds into Coconino National Forest around milepost 320, it winds through ponderosa pine stands and elevated plateaus, offering distant views of the San Francisco Peaks, Arizona's highest mountain range. The final approach to Flagstaff involves an interchange with State Route 89A at exit 337, culminating at a modified partial cloverleaf junction with Interstate 40 west of the city. Amid this high-elevation setting, the highway incorporates environmental safeguards, including wildlife overpasses, extensive fencing, and erosion control features like reinforced slopes and drainage culverts to address the steep terrain's challenges and minimize ecological disruption; flex lanes for dynamic third-lane use operate near mileposts 310-319 as of 2024.[1][20][13][21] This mountainous portion covers roughly 53 miles, from milepost 287 to the northern terminus at milepost 340 (equivalent to interstate mile 145.76).[1]History
Pre-interstate era
The origins of what would become Interstate 17 trace back to the mid-19th century, when the Black Canyon Road, following ancient Native American trails established in the 1860s, became a vital wagon and later stagecoach route connecting Phoenix to Prescott in the Arizona Territory. This path followed ancient Native American trails along the Agua Fria River, navigating steep gorges, rugged desert terrain, and mountain grades that made travel arduous and time-consuming, often requiring several days for the 140-mile journey. The first stagecoach line began operating in March 1878.[22][23] Early development faced significant challenges, including pervasive dust storms that obscured visibility and choked engines later on, seasonal flooding along washes like the Agua Fria that washed out sections of the road, and ongoing conflicts with Yavapai and Tonto Apache peoples, whose lands the route traversed during a period of intense territorial expansion and military campaigns.[24][23] These territorial roads were first formalized in 1864, with the segment between Dewey and Prescott designated as the Arizona Territory's inaugural public road, reflecting efforts to support mining booms and military logistics amid such adversities.[25] In the early 20th century, automobile travel prompted improvements to these historic paths, leading to the designation of Arizona State Route 69 in 1936. This state highway aligned closely with the Black Canyon route, providing a more reliable paved connection from Phoenix northward through Black Canyon City toward Prescott, though initial construction focused on grading and basic surfacing to address ongoing issues like erosion and dust.[22][26] The route's completion to Prescott occurred in 1956, just as federal interstate planning accelerated, but it served as the primary precursor for the southern portion of the future I-17 corridor.[2] Further north, connectivity to Flagstaff was improved by a later Arizona State Route 79, designated in 1954 and completed in 1961, which provided a more direct alignment from near Cordes Junction through the Mogollon Rim to Flagstaff via Munds Park, serving as the basis for I-17's northern section. The earlier SR 79 (established in 1927) had used a more scenic but winding path from Prescott through Jerome, the Mogollon Rim, and Oak Creek Canyon, extended northeast to U.S. Route 66 in Flagstaff by 1928, with paving of its northern segments completed in the mid-1930s to mitigate steep grades and weather-related hazards.[27][28][29] Following World War II, Arizona's highway department intensified planning for modern infrastructure to handle growing traffic and economic demands, influenced by the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1955, which proposed a national network of controlled-access highways.[30] This legislation spurred state-level studies, including evaluations of the Black Canyon corridor as a key north-south link. The pivotal moment came with the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956, which authorized the Interstate Highway System and explicitly included the Phoenix-to-Flagstaff corridor—aligning with former SR 69 and SR 79—as Interstate 17, marking the transition from rudimentary territorial trails to a federally funded expressway.[2][31]Construction and completion
Interstate 17 was designated in 1957 as part of the national Interstate Highway System established by the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956, with the Black Canyon Freeway in the Phoenix area selected as its southern alignment to connect the capital to northern Arizona.[32][2] Construction began in 1956 on the initial segments of the Black Canyon Freeway, with the first interchange opening at Grand Avenue in 1957, marking Arizona's inaugural freeway interchange.[2] By 1960, the freeway extended north from Phoenix to near what is now State Route 74 (Carefree Highway), spanning about seven miles and providing the state's first modern limited-access route in the metropolitan area.[25] The northern sections from Flagstaff south to Camp Verde were constructed primarily between 1960 and the early 1970s, building on the earlier State Route 79 alignment completed in 1961 from Cordes Junction to Flagstaff, which was upgraded to interstate standards.[2] Central portions through the Black Canyon faced significant delays due to the challenging rocky and steep terrain, requiring extensive blasting and realignment; these links were largely finished between 1973 and 1976.[2] The alignment was adjusted east of Bumblebee and Cordes Junction to ascend Black Mesa, avoiding the steeper grades of the former State Route 79 path.[2] Key engineering challenges included navigating the narrow Black Canyon corridor, where crews blasted through solid rock and constructed over 20 bridges, including the twin spans over the Agua Fria River completed in 1960 and the Verde River Bridge opened in 1978.[33][2] These efforts led to cost overruns, exemplified by the final 5.4-mile segment from Copper Basin to Montezuma Castle, which cost $7.7 million upon its completion.[2] The full 146-mile length of Interstate 17 opened to traffic in August 1978 with the dedication of the northernmost stretch near Camp Verde, marking the completion of Arizona's primary north-south interstate corridor.[2] In 2003, the Arizona Legislature designated the route as the Arizona Veterans Highway in honor of military veterans, a name that applies to its entire length from Phoenix to Flagstaff.[34]Improvements
Past expansions
Following the completion of Interstate 17 in 1978, the highway underwent several significant expansions in the Phoenix metropolitan area during the late 1980s and 1990s to accommodate rapid suburban growth and increasing traffic volumes. These upgrades primarily involved adding auxiliary and high-occupancy vehicle (HOV) lanes along the Black Canyon Freeway corridor. For instance, HOV and auxiliary lanes were constructed between Peoria Avenue and Glendale Avenue, with construction occurring in 1999 and the lanes opening to traffic by September 2000.[35] This project, part of a broader seven-mile widening from Thomas Road to Peoria Avenue costing $82 million, enhanced capacity in the densely populated northwest Phoenix area.[1] In the 2000s, focus shifted to bridge rehabilitations and safety enhancements, particularly in the canyon sections prone to geological hazards. Key efforts included replacing bridges at Camelback Road and Glendale Avenue as part of the 2000 widening project, which also incorporated improved guardrails and barriers to address runoff and stability issues in rugged terrain.[1] Additionally, the I-40/I-17 interchange north of Phoenix was reconstructed between 1998 and 2002, with the overpass completed in fall 1998 for $12.7 million, improving structural integrity and traffic flow.[1] These rehabilitations were prompted by wear from heavy use and environmental factors, such as occasional rockfalls in the Black Canyon corridor, leading to upgraded guardrails for better vehicle containment.[36] Environmental mitigations were integrated into expansions during the 1990s, with wildlife underpasses constructed in northern forested areas to minimize animal-vehicle collisions. Structures like those at Munds Canyon and Woods Canyon bridges, operational by the early 2000s, facilitated safe passage for elk and deer across the highway, reducing incidents in high-risk zones.[37] In 2011, the SR 17 Business Loop through Black Canyon City was decommissioned and fully integrated into the mainline I-17, streamlining the route along former SR 69 alignments and eliminating redundant signage.[38] Funding for these past expansions came primarily from the Federal Highway Trust Fund, which supported interstate maintenance and improvements nationwide, supplemented by Arizona state bonds for urban segments in the Phoenix area.Current and future projects
The I-17 Improvement Project, initiated in 2022 by the Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT), focuses on enhancing capacity and safety along a 23-mile stretch between Anthem Way and Sunset Point Rest Area near Black Canyon City. This effort includes widening the freeway to add a third lane in each direction over 15 miles, which was completed and opened to traffic in 2025.[16] Additionally, approximately eight miles of flex lanes—reversible shoulders that can be dynamically opened to traffic during peak times—are under final construction and scheduled for completion by the end of 2025, marking Arizona's first implementation of such technology on a freeway.[16] The project is delivered through a design-build-operate-maintain public-private partnership and is part of ADOT's 2021–2025 Five-Year Construction Program, with a total budget of $522 million funded by state and federal sources.[10][39] As part of the I-17 Improvement Project, bridge enhancements have addressed structural vulnerabilities in the corridor. Two bridges were fully replaced, while ten others were widened to accommodate the expanded lanes; these works, including the northbound Bumble Bee Road bridge, were largely completed by mid-2025, with final detailing such as deck pours and barrier installations finished in the summer of that year. Ongoing minor widenings on select bridges are expected to conclude by the end of 2025, improving load capacity and reducing maintenance needs without major disruptions to traffic, as work is confined to off-peak hours.[16][10][40] The I-10/I-17 Spine Corridor Master Plan, launched by the Maricopa Association of Governments (MAG) in April 2014, provides a long-term framework for managing congestion through 2040 along the interconnected I-10 and I-17 routes in the Phoenix area. Key strategies include modernizing 24 of 31 interchanges, adding five new high-occupancy vehicle (HOV) ramps, and implementing smart corridor technologies such as intelligent transportation systems for real-time traffic management. The plan also emphasizes transit integration, with coordinated light rail crossings at four locations and enhanced pedestrian and bicycle connectivity via nine new structures, alongside the addition of at least one managed lane per direction to create a continuous system. Accepted into MAG's 2040 Regional Transportation Plan in 2017, the plan's recommendations continue to guide programming and funding priorities as of 2025.[41] In northern Arizona, proposed projects target safety and environmental concerns. Construction on the Willard Springs Wildlife Overpass at milepost 327, south of Flagstaff, began in spring 2025 to facilitate safe animal crossings and reduce vehicle-wildlife collisions; the $15.8 million initiative, a partnership between ADOT and the Arizona Game and Fish Department, is slated for completion in late 2026.[20][42] A 1993 proposal to extend I-17 northward into Utah along U.S. Route 89 was ultimately deemed unfeasible due to environmental, tribal, and cost barriers, and it has not advanced since.[43][44]Special routes
Business loops
Interstate 17 has no active business loops as of 2025, with all former auxiliary routes having been decommissioned and absorbed into local roadways or the mainline alignment.[38][45] The sole business route associated with I-17 was State Business Route 17 (SR 17 Bus.) in Black Canyon City, which followed the former alignment of State Route 69 along Old Black Canyon Highway for approximately three miles between exits 242 and 244.[38][13] Signed from the 1970s until its removal in 2011, this loop provided direct access to local businesses and services in the bypassed community, serving as a vital link for commerce along the historic Black Canyon corridor.[46][45] Business loops like SR 17 Bus. are designed to preserve economic vitality in small towns by routing through central districts, allowing travelers to exit the freeway for shopping, dining, and services without disrupting the efficiency of the primary highway.[38] Following its decommissioning, the former loop was redesignated as a local road, eliminating separate signage and integrating it seamlessly into the I-17 system to improve overall traffic flow and direct connectivity north of Phoenix.[13][46]Former alignments
One notable former alignment of Interstate 17 (I-17) was the short-lived State Business Route 17 in Black Canyon City, a 3-mile (4.8 km) loop that followed the old alignment of State Route 69 (SR 69), also known as the Old Black Canyon Highway.[38] Signed from the 1970s until its decommissioning in 2011, this route provided access to the west side of Black Canyon City from exits 242 and 244 on the mainline I-17.[1] The business loop was removed after the underlying roadway was transferred from state to local maintenance, in line with Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT) policy against signing business routes on non-state-maintained highways.[38] In the northern section, portions of the original SR 79 alignment from the 1930s through the 1960s between Cordes Junction and Camp Verde were bypassed by a straighter path during I-17's construction.[47] SR 79, established in 1950 to connect Cordes Junction northward toward Flagstaff, was largely replaced by I-17 as the freeway was completed, leading to the route's decommissioning in 1970.[28] The new interstate alignment straightened the winding older road, improving travel efficiency through the mountainous terrain.[2] Decommissioning of these older alignments, including the Black Canyon City business loop, was driven by factors such as low traffic volumes on the legacy routes and the high costs of ongoing state maintenance, with traffic patterns shifting to direct interchanges like exits 244 through 248.[38] Following realignments, much of the old SR 79 and SR 69 pavement was repurposed or left as remnants, particularly near Bumblebee where sections of the pre-interstate road remain visible as frontage roads or abandoned segments east of the current I-17 corridor up Black Mesa.[2]Route data
Exit list
Interstate 17 features mile-based exit numbering starting near milepost 194 at its southern terminus with Interstate 10 in Phoenix.[48] The following table lists all exits from south to north, including mileposts where documented by the Arizona Department of Transportation.[49]| Exit | Milepost | Locations Served | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 194 | 194.21 | I-10 (east to Globe/Tucson; west to Sky Harbor Airport/Los Angeles) | Southern terminus of I-17; partial interchange with full access to I-10. |
| 195A | 194.91 | 16th Street | Northbound exit/southbound entrance only. |
| 195B | 195.93 | 7th Street, Central Avenue | |
| 196 | 196.94 | 7th Avenue, Central Avenue | |
| 197 | 197.94 | 19th Avenue, State Capitol, Durango Street | |
| 198 | 198.81 | Buckeye Road | |
| 199A | 199.12 | Grant Street | Northbound entrance/southbound exit only. |
| 199B | 199.53–199.69 | Adams Street, Van Buren Street, Jefferson Street | Combined access for downtown Phoenix streets. |
| 200A | — | I-10 (west to Los Angeles; east to Central Phoenix) | No direct southbound exit; traffic uses Exit 199B. |
| 200B | 200.83 | McDowell Road, Van Buren Street | |
| 201 | 201.68 | US 60 west, Thomas Road, Grand Avenue | Partial cloverleaf interchange. |
| 202 | 202.86 | Indian School Road, VA Hospital | |
| 203 | 203.86–203.90 | Camelback Road, Grand Canyon University | |
| 204 | 204.91 | Bethany Home Road | |
| 205 | 205.87 | Glendale Avenue | |
| 206 | 206.88 | Northern Avenue | |
| 207 | 207.93 | Dunlap Avenue, Glendale Community College | |
| 208 | 208.92 | Peoria Avenue | |
| 209 | 209.92 | Cactus Road | |
| 210 | 210.92 | Thunderbird Road, Arizona State University West | |
| 211 | 211.91 | Greenway Road | |
| 212 | 212.91 | Bell Road | |
| 213A | 213.96 | Union Hills Drive | Northbound exit/southbound entrance only. |
| 213B | 214.46 | Yorkshire Drive, Utopia Road | |
| 214 | — | Loop 101 (east/west) | Full directional interchange; Exit 214C northbound. |
| 215A | 215.50 | Rose Garden Lane, Deer Valley Road | Southbound exit/northbound entrance only. |
| 215B | 215.96 | Deer Valley Road | |
| 217 | 217.10 | Pinnacle Peak Road | Partial interchange. |
| 218 | 218.01 | Happy Valley Road | First diverging diamond interchange (DDI) in Arizona. |
| 219 | — | Jomax Road | |
| 220 | — | Dixileta Drive | |
| 221 | — | Loop 303 south, Sonoran Desert Drive | Northern terminus of Black Canyon Freeway segment. |
| 222 | — | Dove Valley Road | |
| 223 | 223.99 | AZ 74 west (Carefree Highway to Wickenburg), Carefree Highway east | Split into 223A (eastbound) and 223B (westbound); partial cloverleaf interchange. |
| 225 | 225.54 | Pioneer Road | |
| 227 | 227.03 | Daisy Mountain Drive | |
| 229 | 229.09 | Anthem Way | |
| 232 | 231.45 | New River Road | |
| 236 | — | Table Mesa Road | |
| — | — | Yavapai County line | County boundary crossing. |
| 242 | — | Rock Springs, Black Canyon City | Unsigned access point. |
| 244 | — | Black Canyon City, Coldwater Road | |
| 248 | — | Bumble Bee, Crown King | |
| — | 252 | Sunset Point Rest Area | Northbound scenic view and rest area. |
| 256 | — | Badger Springs Road | |
| 259 | — | Bloody Basin Road, Agua Fria National Monument | |
| 262 | — | AZ 69 north (Cordes Lakes Road to Prescott) | End of Black Canyon Highway segment. |
| 263 | — | Arcosanti Road | |
| 268 | — | Orme Road, Dugas Road | |
| 278 | — | AZ 169 (to Dewey-Humboldt, Prescott) | |
| 285 | — | General Crook Trail | Historic route access. |
| 287 | — | AZ 260 (to AZ 89A, Cottonwood, Payson, Jerome) | |
| 289 | — | Middle Verde Road | |
| 293 | — | McGuireville, Montezuma Castle National Monument | |
| — | 296 | Rest Area | Southbound rest area. |
| 298 | — | AZ 179 north (to Sedona) | |
| 306 | — | Stoneman Lake Road | |
| — | — | Coconino County line | County boundary crossing. |
| 313 | — | Scenic View | Northbound overlook. |
| 315 | — | Rocky Park Road | |
| 317 | — | Fox Ranch Road | |
| 320 | — | Schnebly Hill Road | |
| 322 | — | Munds Park, Pinewood Boulevard | |
| 326 | — | Willard Springs Road | |
| 328 | — | Newman Park Road | |
| 331 | — | Kelly Canyon Road | |
| 333 | — | Kachina Boulevard, Mountainaire Road | |
| 337 | — | AZ 89A south (Flagstaff Airport, Sedona, Oak Creek Canyon) | |
| 339 | — | Lake Mary Road, Mormon Lake | |
| 340A | — | I-40 east (to Albuquerque) | Northern terminus of I-17. |
| 340B | — | I-40 west (to Los Angeles) | |
| 341 | — | McConnell Drive | Access to Northern Arizona University; post-interstate exit. |