Interstate 43
Interstate 43 (I-43) is an Interstate Highway spanning approximately 190 miles (310 km) entirely within Wisconsin, serving as a primary north-south corridor in the state's eastern region. Its southern terminus lies at the interchange with Interstate 39 and Interstate 90 near Beloit, adjacent to the Illinois state line, while the northern terminus connects to Wisconsin Highway 57 near Green Bay, providing access to major urban centers including Milwaukee, Sheboygan, and Manitowoc.[1][2] The highway facilitates freight movement as a designated long truck route and supports regional commerce by linking industrial and agricultural areas along the Lake Michigan shoreline north of Milwaukee.[2] Construction commenced in 1963 with phased development through upgrades of existing U.S. and state routes, achieving substantial completion by 1981 to enhance connectivity between southern Wisconsin and the Fox River Valley.[3] From Milwaukee northward, I-43 runs concurrently with Interstate 41, reflecting federal designations that prioritize overlapping alignments for major traffic flows.[4] Recent infrastructure improvements, including lane expansions and bridge rehabilitations between Glendale and Grafton, address capacity demands on this high-volume corridor, with major work slated for completion in 2025.[5]Route Description
Southern Segment (Beloit to Milwaukee)
Interstate 43's southern terminus is at a partial cloverleaf interchange with I-39/I-90 in the town of Beloit, Rock County, approximately 2 miles east of the Illinois state line.[4] From this point, the route spans roughly 76 miles northeastward through predominantly rural landscapes of southern Wisconsin, transitioning to suburban development in Waukesha County before reaching the southwestern outskirts of Milwaukee.[6] The freeway generally features four lanes—two in each direction—with shoulders and occasional widening to six lanes nearer urban areas; no rest areas or service plazas are present along this segment.[7] In Rock County, I-43 proceeds northeast from the terminus through flat to gently rolling farmland interspersed with industrial zones near Beloit.[4] Key interchanges include Exit 1 for County Highway Y (Shopko Drive), serving local access in Beloit; Exit 3 for WI 213 (Shopiere Road), providing connections to southern Rock County communities; and Exit 6 for US 51 (Shopiere Road extension), linking to Beloit's commercial districts and points south toward Janesville via surface roads.[8] The route crosses small waterways such as Turtle Creek via multi-span bridges but avoids major rivers like the Rock River, which lies to the west.[8] Entering Walworth County near Clinton, the terrain remains agricultural with scattered woodlots and kettle moraine features, characteristic of southeastern Wisconsin's glacial landscape.[4] Notable interchanges are Exit 13 for WI 11 (Clinton Road), offering access to rural areas and indirect ties to Janesville; Exit 21 for WI 50 (Delavan Drive) in Delavan; Exit 27 for US 14 (Bloomington Road) near Darien; and Exit 36 for WI 15/WI 67 in Elkhorn, where the freeway briefly parallels US 12 before interchanging at Exit 40.[8] These exits support agricultural traffic and small-town commerce amid fields of corn and dairy operations. In Waukesha County, I-43 shifts toward suburbanization around Mukwonago, crossing wooded areas and minor streams while bridging the Fox River headwaters.[4] The route interchanges with WI 83 (Exit 50) near Mukwonago, marking the onset of denser residential and commercial development, and WI 164 (Exit 57) further north, facilitating commuter access to Milwaukee's southern exurbs.[8] Lane additions and interchange reconstructions in this stretch accommodate growing suburban traffic volumes.[9] The segment concludes at the Hale Interchange with I-41/I-94/I-894/US 41 on Milwaukee's southern fringe, blending into the metropolitan freeway network.[4]Milwaukee Metropolitan Area
Interstate 43 traverses the Milwaukee metropolitan area as a critical urban corridor, utilizing concurrencies with Interstate 894 and Interstate 94 to link its southern and northern segments around the city's core. Entering from the southwest near the Mitchell International Airport, I-43 joins I-894 at the Mitchell Interchange, forming an east-west bypass south of downtown Milwaukee that facilitates high-volume traffic flow while avoiding the central business district.[10] This segment features multiple lanes, typically six to eight total, with elevated structures spanning industrial areas and the Menomonee River.[11] At the Zoo Interchange in West Allis, I-43 intersects I-94, US Highway 45, and I-894 in one of the region's most complex junctions, handling substantial commuter and freight movement near the Milwaukee County Zoo. North of the interchange, I-43 continues concurrently with the north-south portion of I-94 through Wauwatosa and inner Milwaukee suburbs, passing over rail yards and providing access to local arterials via closely spaced interchanges.[11] Daily traffic volumes exceed 100,000 vehicles, peaking near 160,000 in sections from Brown Street to Capitol Drive, reflecting the route's role in serving dense residential, commercial, and industrial zones.[10] [12] The corridor connects to the Lake Freeway (I-794) via the Marquette Interchange near downtown, enabling direct routing to Milwaukee's lakefront and eastern suburbs, with signage guiding traffic toward the central city and airport facilities.[11] Urban design elements include continuous frontage roads in areas like West Allis for local access and noise barriers along residential stretches in Wauwatosa, accommodating the freeway's integration into a high-density environment.[10]Northern Segment (Milwaukee to Green Bay)
Interstate 43's northern segment begins north of the Milwaukee metropolitan area, traversing approximately 110 miles through Ozaukee, Sheboygan, Manitowoc, and Brown counties before reaching its northern terminus. The route parallels the Lake Michigan shoreline, offering proximity to coastal features including bluffs in areas like Ozaukee County, where shoreline erosion and bluff stability influence local geography. It crosses the Sheboygan River downstream from Sheboygan Falls, connecting urban centers such as Port Washington, Sheboygan, and Manitowoc with rural stretches characterized by standard four-lane divided highway sections that widen to six lanes near population centers.[13][14] Key interchanges along this segment include one with Wisconsin Highway 32 near Port Washington, facilitating access to lakefront communities, and another with U.S. Route 151 south of Manitowoc, linking to inland routes toward Madison. The highway's alignment supports efficient north-south travel, transitioning from suburban development in Mequon to predominantly agricultural and forested rural landscapes, with occasional views of Lake Michigan enhanced by its eastern positioning. Near Manitowoc, it intersects U.S. Highway 10, providing connections to additional port facilities handling bulk commodities like limestone and forest products.[1] The segment culminates at a trumpet interchange with Interstate 41/U.S. Route 41/U.S. Route 141 in Howard, a suburb immediately south of Green Bay, marking I-43's northern end. This terminus integrates with Green Bay's transportation network, enhancing access to the region's paper industry—where mills contribute significantly to local employment with average worker earnings around $49,000 annually—and the Port of Green Bay, which manages cargo including forest products and supports $217 million in annual economic impact through jobs and logistics. By linking Milwaukee's urban economy to northeastern Wisconsin's manufacturing and shipping hubs, the route bolsters regional competitiveness via improved highway, port, and rail synergies.[1][15][3]History
Planning and Proposals (Pre-1950s)
The surge in automobile ownership following World War II, coupled with growing traffic congestion on routes such as US 41 along Lake Michigan, spurred initial planning for express highways in southeastern Wisconsin during the late 1940s.[16] Local traffic engineering studies in Milwaukee identified the need for limited-access roadways to improve freight and passenger movement, bypassing urban cores and addressing bottlenecks in the postwar economic expansion.[17] These efforts were influenced by national discussions on superhighways, though Wisconsin focused on state-led initiatives without toll financing, deeming it impractical for the region's needs.[18] In 1948, Milwaukee voters approved a referendum to fund a system of express highways, providing the mandate for detailed route proposals amid debates over alignments that balanced cost efficiency with avoidance of densely populated areas.[19] One early concept for a north-south corridor envisioned routing through the city via the 16th Street area, starting near Pulaski Park and extending northward to connect with existing highways, prioritizing intrastate efficiency over cross-border extensions into Illinois due to state boundary constraints and localized priorities.[20] By 1949, planners outlined a 20.4-mile expressway network estimated at $150 million, laying foundational designs for enhanced connectivity toward northern destinations like Green Bay, though full corridor integration awaited federal involvement.[21] These proposals emphasized practical relief for US 41's overload rather than expansive interstate ambitions, reflecting cautious state coordination without toll road elements.Initial Construction (1950s-1970s)
Construction of Interstate 43's core segment from Milwaukee to Green Bay, spanning approximately 120 miles, began in 1963 following approval in the 1960s as part of the Interstate Highway System.[1] This route largely paralleled U.S. Route 141, with federal funding covering 90 percent of costs through the standard Interstate formula established by the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956. Early phases prioritized the urban Milwaukee area, where elevated viaducts and bridges were engineered to traverse dense development and waterways, including spans over the Milwaukee River.[19] In Milwaukee's North-South Freeway corridor, construction during the mid-1960s addressed engineering challenges such as integrating with existing local roads and minimizing disruptions in populated zones, though land acquisition delays slowed progress amid the national push for Interstate completion.[22] Northward, rural segments through Ozaukee, Sheboygan, Manitowoc, and Brown counties involved extensive grading of farmland for alignment, with major earthwork commencing around 1972 for 94.4 miles of the route.[1] These phases coordinated interchanges with state highways to facilitate regional connectivity while adhering to Interstate design standards for divided, controlled-access roadways. By the late 1970s, initial segments near Milwaukee and intermediate rural sections had opened to traffic, providing partial four-lane freeway service and advancing the goal of full Milwaukee-Green Bay linkage, though complete end-to-end connectivity awaited final northern extensions into the early 1980s.[4] Delays in urban areas stemmed from right-of-way disputes and coordination with municipal infrastructure, reflective of broader Interstate-era challenges in balancing rapid buildout with local constraints.[16]Southern Extension (1980s)
The Rock Freeway, initially designated as Wisconsin Highway 15, was developed as a four-lane divided freeway in southern Wisconsin during the 1960s and 1970s to connect Milwaukee with the Interstate 90/39 corridor near Beloit. Construction began with early segments in the late 1960s, including a 1969 opening from U.S. Highway 45 and WIS 100 (108th Street) westward, followed by progressive extensions through Mukwonago, Dousman, and Elkhorn. The final gap between Elkhorn and I-90 was completed and opened in late 1976, establishing a continuous 76-mile interstate-standard route from Milwaukee's southwestern suburbs to the Illinois state line at Beloit, incorporating interchanges at key locations such as Janesville (serving U.S. 14) and Beloit (tying directly into I-90/I-39).[23] This infrastructure, built primarily with state funds to freeway standards, was not initially part of the Interstate system but addressed growing regional traffic demands. By the mid-1980s, Wisconsin Department of Transportation officials pursued federal designation to integrate it with the existing I-43 north of Milwaukee, recognizing its alignment and quality met Interstate criteria. On November 24, 1987, the Federal Highway Administration approved the extension, officially commissioning approximately 72 miles of the Rock Freeway as I-43 and replacing WIS 15 signage.[23][7] The designation transformed I-43 into a continuous 191-mile route from Beloit to Green Bay, facilitating interstate commerce by providing a toll-free path to the Chicago area and avoiding Illinois Tollway fees on I-90 alternatives. Signage updates were implemented by 1988, with the extension emphasizing efficient trucking access through Rock, Walworth, Waukesha, and Milwaukee counties.[24][4]Construction and Societal Impacts
Urban Displacement and Community Effects
The construction of Interstate 43's North-South Freeway segment in Milwaukee during the 1960s required eminent domain seizures that demolished over 8,000 homes in the Bronzeville neighborhood, a historic African American enclave bounded roughly by Walnut Street, North Vel. R. Phillips Avenue, North 6th Street, and West Concordia Avenue.[25] This demolition scattered the area's population across the city, disrupting tight-knit community networks centered on Black-owned institutions along Walnut Street, which served as the economic hub and was effectively eliminated by the project.[25] The freeway's alignment directly bisected Bronzeville, razing residential blocks and commercial structures in a zone where African Americans were concentrated due to prior segregation policies.[26] Further north, I-43's path through Halyard Park, another predominantly Black residential area near North 7th Street and West Hadley Street, resulted in the demolition of approximately one full block of houses in the mid-1960s, fragmenting the neighborhood's housing stock and local cohesion.[27] Concurrent widening of adjacent streets like Walnut exacerbated business losses in these corridors, with shops and services vital to daily community life forced to close or relocate amid the clearances.[27] Urban renewal programs accompanying the highway work offered federal relocation aid under the Housing Act of 1949 and subsequent Highway Acts, mandating payments for acquired properties and assistance in finding new housing, yet implementation often fell short of full equivalence in affected zones.[28] Post-construction census trends showed marked depopulation in central Milwaukee tracts, with Bronzeville's core declining from peak mid-century densities as residents dispersed, reinforcing residential segregation patterns evident in 1970 U.S. Census data for the Near North Side.[29] These shifts left voids in the urban fabric, with persistent underdevelopment in cleared parcels documented in local planning records through the 1970s.[26]Economic Development and Regional Growth
Interstate 43 functions as a key freight corridor connecting manufacturing centers in Milwaukee with paper mills and food processing industries in Green Bay, enabling efficient north-south transport of commodities such as paper products and industrial goods. The highway has facilitated growth in trucking and warehousing, with post-construction analyses indicating enhanced market access that reduced reliance on slower legacy routes. In Green Bay, developments like the I-43 Business Center have attracted $2 billion in new construction tied to freight-dependent sectors.[1][30] The corridor bolsters port operations in Milwaukee and Green Bay by providing direct highway linkages to marine terminals, improving logistics for bulk cargo. The Port of Green Bay processes about 2 million tons of freight annually, including inbound cement, coal, and limestone, as well as outbound steel and tallow, with I-43 enabling seamless truck integration alongside rail services. A Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) post-construction economic impacts analysis credits I-43, in conjunction with port and rail infrastructure, for elevating business competitiveness and supporting job growth in logistics along the route. Milwaukee's industrial output, valued at $24.1 billion yearly, benefits from this connectivity, underscoring the highway's role in regional supply chains.[1][3] In intermediate areas like Sheboygan County, I-43 has driven retail and commercial expansion by bypassing rural sections and concentrating development at interchanges, as evidenced by FHWA findings of significant growth in real estate, retail, and hospitality. Projects such as the $54 million Blue Harbor Resort and Deer Trace Plaza illustrate this, correlating with manufacturing employment rates of 40% in the county at average wages of $38,911. The 1987 southern extension to Beloit further amplified trade with Illinois by linking to I-39/I-90, fostering commercial activity and countering stagnation through improved interstate commerce flows. Corridor-wide, I-43 has induced approximately 500 direct jobs via targeted industrial and sales growth at key nodes, contributing to net economic gains in Wisconsin's north-south axis despite localized urban pressures.[1][3][4]Environmental and Land Use Changes
The construction of Interstate 43 involved the conversion of agricultural lands and impacts to wetlands, particularly during initial phases in rural segments from the 1950s through 1970s, prior to the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 which mandated detailed impact assessments.[31] Expansions in subsequent decades, such as the 1980s southern extension and 2010s corridor widenings, continued these land use shifts, with approximately 9.6 to 10 acres of farmland affected in Ozaukee County alone during the North-South reconstruction from Silver Spring Drive to WIS 60.[31] These changes prioritized transportation corridors over prior uses, with right-of-way acquisitions totaling up to 28.3 acres in the studied segment, including minimal encroachments into floodplains (4.92 acres).[31] Wetland impacts were notable, totaling 12.11 to 27.46 acres across project options in the 2013-2014 Final Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the North-South Corridor, including 2.5 acres of high-value Areas of Data Deficiency (ADID) wetlands.[31] Mitigation efforts adhered to Clean Water Act Section 404/401 requirements, involving compensation sites, restoration plans under a 2012 WisDOT-WDNR Memorandum of Understanding, and inward widening designs to minimize further habitat fragmentation.[31] Habitat losses reached 4.07 acres in environmental corridors, addressed through revegetation, fish passage structures at streams like Ulao Creek, and coordination with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for species such as the Northern long-eared bat, resulting in minimal net habitat reduction via off-site restoration.[31] The highway's proximity to Lake Michigan, especially near Port Washington, has prompted concerns over shoreline erosion and accelerated stormwater runoff from impervious surfaces, with increases noted in subwatersheds like Ulao Creek (up to 9.8% additional impervious area).[32][31] Best management practices (BMPs), including detention basins, retention ponds, and grassed ditches, were implemented to achieve at least 40% removal of total suspended solids under WisDOT's Trans 401 standards, alongside erosion controls such as silt fencing and seeding during construction phases.[31] Noise barriers, feasible at 4-5 locations spanning up to 8,999 feet, were incorporated to abate impacts on adjacent residences and institutions.[31] Air quality effects from operations were deemed non-significant in EIS analyses, with no exceedances of National Ambient Air Quality Standards projected; long-term emissions reductions of up to 80% by 2050 were anticipated from improved vehicle technologies and operational efficiencies like smoother pavements, offsetting initial construction dust through measures such as material covering and low-sulfur diesel use.[31] These interventions reflect evolving regulatory frameworks, contrasting with earlier unregulated phases where traffic growth predating the 1970 Clean Air Act contributed to localized pollution without mandated offsets.[31]Safety and Operational Performance
Major Accidents and Incidents
On October 11, 2002, a 45-vehicle pileup occurred on foggy northbound I-43 in Sheboygan County near the Lake Michigan shoreline, resulting in 10 fatalities and over 30 injuries, including seven critical cases.[33] The chain-reaction crash, exacerbated by dense fog reducing visibility to near zero, involved multiple tractor-trailers and passenger vehicles, leading to immediate highway closure for investigation by state troopers.[33] Nearly 13 years earlier, on March 12, 1990, heavy fog contributed to a 45-vehicle collision on westbound I-43 over the Tower Drive Bridge (later renamed Leo Frigo Bridge) in Green Bay, killing three people and injuring dozens.[34] The incident stemmed from sudden visibility loss on the elevated structure, prompting rapid response from emergency services and subsequent bridge inspections for fog-related hazards.[35] In the southern corridor near Milwaukee, high truck volumes and curved alignments have factored into severe incidents, such as the May 26, 2025, wrong-way crash in Port Washington that killed two and seriously injured two others after a driver entered southbound lanes against traffic.[36] Authorities closed sections for hours to probe driver impairment and signage visibility in freight-heavy zones.[36]Safety Statistics and Improvements
Interstate 43's divided highway design and controlled access contribute to lower crash rates compared to parallel undivided U.S. routes such as US 41, where head-on collisions are more prevalent due to lack of median separation.[37] Wisconsin Department of Transportation data indicate that urban segments of I-43 in Milwaukee County experience elevated crash frequencies attributable to higher traffic volumes and congestion, contrasting with lower rural rates elsewhere along the route.[38] Statewide, Wisconsin recorded 124,627 traffic crashes in 2023, with interstate facilities like I-43 showing injury metrics influenced by factors such as merging conflicts in multi-lane sections.[39] Safety upgrades along I-43 include shoulder rumble strips installed during resurfacing projects to alert drivers to lane departures, a countermeasure proven to reduce run-off-road crashes through auditory and vibratory feedback.[40][41] Beam guard replacements and widened shoulders in rural stretches further mitigate errant vehicle impacts, addressing causal factors like overcorrection during high-speed travel in 70 mph zones.[41] Empirical evidence links lane expansions on divided interstates to decreased fatality risks by accommodating higher volumes without proportional crash increases, as observed in conversions from fewer lanes that alleviate weaving and rear-end incidents. Enforcement efforts, including aerial patrols by the Wisconsin State Patrol targeting speeding and aggressive driving on I-43, have resulted in numerous stops, correlating with moderated speeds in northern rural segments.[42] Intelligent transportation systems deployed in the Milwaukee corridor since the 2010s enhance operational safety by enabling real-time incident detection and variable messaging to prevent secondary collisions.[43]Future Developments
Ongoing and Planned Expansions
The Hale Interchange project, encompassing the junction of I-41, I-43, and I-894 in Milwaukee County, began construction in late May 2025 with a budget of $22.3 million and is scheduled for completion in late 2026, weather permitting.[44][45] This multi-year effort focuses on improving traffic flow and safety at the interchange through ramp reconstructions and lane adjustments, addressing chronic congestion from over 100,000 daily vehicles in the corridor without expanding overall lane capacity.[45] Pavement resurfacing and localized repairs continue on southern segments of I-43, such as from County X/Hart Road to WIS 140 in Rock County, with work initiated in early 2025 to replace deteriorated surfaces near bridge approaches and accommodate freight and commuter volumes exceeding 50,000 vehicles per day.[46] Similar rehabilitation efforts, including a $13.3 million resurfacing of 1.5 miles in Milwaukee County, started in May 2025 to extend pavement life amid urban traffic demands.[47] Planned for construction starting in 2026, the I-43 Rock Freeway project from WIS 83 to WIS 164 in Waukesha County will replace aging pavement and reconstruct the I-43/WIS 164 interchange as a diverging diamond interchange to enhance safety and reduce delays for the 80,000+ daily users, prioritizing capacity preservation over widening.[9] Studies for full reconstruction at interchanges like Becher Street and National Avenue are advancing, with interim ramp resurfacing completed in summer 2025 to bridge to future builds, driven by structural deficiencies and integration needs with regional freight routes.[48][49] These initiatives draw funding from federal sources under the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, emphasizing empirical traffic data for congestion mitigation rather than alternative transport modes.[50]Maintenance and Long-Term Challenges
Routine bridge inspections along Interstate 43 have identified corrosion as a persistent issue in older structures, particularly those constructed in the 1960s and 1970s, necessitating targeted rehabilitation to prevent failures like the 2013 sagging of the Leo Frigo Memorial Bridge in Green Bay, where unique corrosion mechanisms involving fly ash, clay, and water eroded pier pilings.[51][52] The Wisconsin Department of Transportation (WisDOT) conducts annual evaluations and maintenance, including painting and drainage improvements, to mitigate such degradation, as seen in ongoing projects addressing structural needs from Brown Street to Capitol Drive in Milwaukee County.[10][53] Funding for these efforts relies heavily on state and federal allocations through WisDOT's biennial budgets, which cover highway maintenance amid rising costs for pavement resurfacing and bridge repairs, though specific annual figures for I-43 vary by project phase and do not include dedicated toll revenues due to legislative resistance.[54] Proposals to introduce tolls on Wisconsin interstates, including potential extensions to routes like I-43, have faced rejection or lack of consensus in the state legislature, preserving reliance on user fees such as the gas tax, whose sustainability is challenged by increasing electric vehicle adoption and declining fuel consumption.[55] Climate-related demands exacerbate long-term challenges, with lake-effect snow along the Lake Michigan corridor driving elevated plowing and de-icing expenses, as WisDOT's winter maintenance strategies emphasize anti-icing to reduce packed snow adhesion despite environmental and cost constraints.[56] Flood risks near rivers, addressed through targeted drainage enhancements like those on northbound I-43 over County LL in Ozaukee County, require adaptive engineering to handle intensified precipitation patterns.[57] To maintain relevance into the 2030s, WisDOT is integrating smart infrastructure adaptations, including EV charging stations funded under the Wisconsin Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Program, with installations planned at 12 sites along the I-43 corridor in areas like Green Bay, Sheboygan, and Manitowoc to support growing electric vehicle traffic without compromising core maintenance priorities.[58][59]Auxiliary Routes and Features
Alternate and Business Routes
Interstate 43 has no officially designated auxiliary, alternate, or business routes maintained by the Wisconsin Department of Transportation or the Federal Highway Administration.[60] Wisconsin policy avoids Interstate business loops or spurs, instead relying on state highway business designations for legacy alignments in urban areas where I-43 passes nearby, such as Business State Trunk Highway 42 (Bus. WIS 42) in Manitowoc, which spans approximately 5 miles from its southern terminus at the I-43/US 151/WIS 42 interchange (exit 149) to northern rejoining points serving downtown access.[61] In lieu of permanent variants, temporary alternate routes are signed during mainline closures from construction or incidents, primarily in the densely developed Milwaukee corridor to divert traffic via parallel local and state roads. These serve to minimize urban congestion and support freight and commuter flows, with paths often incorporating arterials like Green Bay Avenue, Silver Spring Drive, and Port Washington Road for northbound detours north of the city.[62] Similar ad hoc routings apply sporadically in Green Bay and Sheboygan vicinities, leveraging pre-existing urban grids for short-term relief, though they adhere to lower design standards than the Interstate proper and lack dedicated signage as I-43 variants outside of active events.[63]Junction and Exit List
The exits of Interstate 43 are numbered according to mileposts, beginning at 0 near the southern terminus with I-39/I-90 in Beloit and increasing northward to approximately 192 at the northern terminus with I-41/US-41/US-141 near Howard in Green Bay.[64] [65]| Exit | County | Destinations |
|---|---|---|
| – | Rock | I-39/I-90 – Beloit, Madison, Chicago (southern terminus) |
| 1A | Rock | I-90 east/I-39 south – Janesville, Chicago |
| 1B | Rock | I-90 west/I-39 north – Madison |
| 2 | Rock | CTH X/Hart Road – Tiffany |
| 6 | Rock | WIS 140 – Clinton, Avalon |
| 15 | Walworth | US 14 – Delavan |
| 17 | Walworth | CTH X – Delavan |
| 21 | Walworth | WIS 50 – Delavan |
| 25 | Walworth | WIS 67 – Delavan |
| 27A | Walworth | US 12 east – Whitewater |
| 27B | Walworth | US 12 west – Elkhorn |
| 29 | Walworth | WIS 11 – Elkhorn |
| 33 | Walworth | Bowers Road – Elkhorn |
| 36 | Walworth | WIS 120 – East Troy |
| 38 | Walworth | WIS 20 – East Troy |
| 43 | Waukesha | WIS 83 – Mukwonago |
| 50 | Waukesha | WIS 164 – Big Bend |
| 54 | Waukesha | CTH Y/Racine Avenue – New Berlin |
| 57 | Waukesha | Moorland Road – New Berlin |
| 59 | Waukesha | Layton Avenue – Greenfield (NB only) |
| 60 | Milwaukee | US 45/WIS 100 south – Milwaukee (SB only) |
| 61 | Milwaukee | I-894 west – Milwaukee (NB only) |
| 72A | Milwaukee | Michigan Street/10th Street – Milwaukee (NB only) |
| 72B | Milwaukee | I-794 east – Lakefront (SB only) |
| 72C | Milwaukee | Kilbourn Avenue – Milwaukee (NB only) |
| 72D | Milwaukee | I-94 west – Madison (SB only) |
| 72E | Milwaukee | Highland Avenue/11th Street – Milwaukee (SB only) |
| 73A–B | Milwaukee | Fond du Lac Avenue/McKinley Avenue, North Avenue – Milwaukee |
| 74 | Milwaukee | Locust Street – Milwaukee |
| 75 | Milwaukee | Keefe Avenue/Atkinson Avenue – Milwaukee |
| 76A | Milwaukee | WIS 190 east/Capitol Drive – Milwaukee (NB only) |
| 76B | Milwaukee | WIS 57/Green Bay Avenue, WIS 190 west – Milwaukee (NB only) |
| 76A–B | Milwaukee | WIS 57/Green Bay Avenue, WIS 190/Capitol Drive – Milwaukee (SB only) |
| 77A | Milwaukee | Hampton Avenue eastbound (NB only) |
| 77B | Milwaukee | Hampton Avenue westbound (NB only) |
| 78 | Milwaukee | Silver Spring Drive – Glendale |
| 80 | Milwaukee | Good Hope Road – Glendale |
| 82A | Milwaukee | Brown Deer Road east/STH 32 east – Brown Deer (NB/SB) |
| 82B | Milwaukee | WIS 100 west/Brown Deer Road west – Brown Deer |
| 83 | Milwaukee | CTH W/Port Washington Road – Mequon (NB only) |
| 85 | Ozaukee | WIS 167/Mequon Road – Mequon |
| 89 | Ozaukee | CTH C – Thiensville |
| 92 | Ozaukee | WIS 60/CTH Q – Cedarburg |
| 93 | Ozaukee | WIS 32 north/CTH V south – Saukville |
| 96 | Ozaukee | WIS 33 – Port Washington |
| 97 | Ozaukee | WIS 57 – Port Washington (NB only) |
| 100 | Ozaukee | CTH H west/WIS 32 south – Grafton |
| 107 | Ozaukee | CTH D – Belgium |
| 113 | Sheboygan | WIS 32 north/CTH LL – Kohler |
| 116 | Sheboygan | CTH AA/Foster Road – Sheboygan |
| 120 | Sheboygan | CTH V/CTH OK – Sheboygan Falls |
| 123 | Sheboygan | WIS 28 – Sheboygan Falls |
| 126A | Sheboygan | WIS 23 east – Plymouth |
| 126B | Sheboygan | WIS 23 west – Sheboygan Falls |
| 128 | Sheboygan | WIS 42 – Sheboygan |
| 137 | Manitowoc | CTH XX – Cleveland |
| 144 | Manitowoc | CTH C – Manitowoc |
| 149 | Manitowoc | US 151/WIS 42 south – Manitowoc |
| 152 | Manitowoc | US 10 east/WIS 42 north/CTH JJ – Manitowoc |
| 154 | Manitowoc | US 10 west/WIS 310 – Manitowoc |
| 157 | Manitowoc | CTH V – Manitowoc |
| 160 | Manitowoc | CTH K – Maribel |
| 164 | Manitowoc | WIS 147/CTH Z – Denmark |
| 171 | Brown | WIS 96/CTH KB – Dyckesville |
| 178 | Brown | US 141/CTH MM – Abrams |
| 180 | Brown | WIS 172 – Suamico |
| 181 | Brown | CTH JJ/Eaton Road – Suamico |
| 183 | Brown | CTH V/Mason Street – Green Bay |
| 185 | Brown | WIS 54/WIS 57/University Avenue – Green Bay |
| 187 | Brown | Webster Avenue/East Shore Drive – Green Bay |
| 189 | Brown | Atkinson Drive – Green Bay |
| 192A–B | Brown | I-41/US 41/US 141 – Green Bay, Marinette (northern terminus) |