Every driver has a breaking point. For some, it’s rush-hour traffic. For others, it’s the second you hear “You know there’s a faster way” from someone who isn’t paying for gas.A survey of 2,000 Americans commissioned by Guessing Headlights and conducted by Talker Research crowned the reigning champion of passenger nonsense: backseat driving. “Backseat driving is officially the most irritating passenger habit for American drivers,” the report says.Now, mind you, it’s not when someone points out something legit. This is the running commentary. The unsolicited reroutes. The speed-limit freak-outs. The “you could’ve made that light” guilt trip. The low-grade criticism that keeps dripping in, even as the driver tries to focus on traffic, check mirrors, and predict what the next unpredictable person is about to do.The study also found drivers can tolerate an annoying passenger habit for about 13 minutes on average before they feel the urge to say something. That’s not a long fuse. Twenty-two percent speak up within three minutes. Half do it within ten. There’s also a chunk of people who claim they’ll never say anything, which sounds noble until it becomes clear they’re just building resentment that will definitely blow up later.Age plays into it, too. Older drivers reported more willingness to keep their mouth shut, while younger drivers were quicker to call it out. Life experience helps. So does having less energy for a car fight over whether Waze is lying.The funny thing is that the top ten is basically a list of ways to make someone regret giving a ride. Treating a car like a trash can. Turning the cabin into a fish-sandwich situation. Yelling “brake!” while the brake lights are already on. Are they crimes? No. They’re social sins. And drivers remember.Top 10 most annoying passenger habitsBackseat driving (42%)Leaving trash behind (41%)Complaining about the driving (38%)Eating messy or smelly food (31%)Saying “watch out!” when nothing is wrong (31%)Putting feet on the dashboard (30%)Changing the music without asking (29%)Slamming the door too hard (28%)Yelling “brake!” when the driver is already slowing down (26%)Talking loudly on the phone (26%)The fix is boundary-setting with a side of basic decency. Passengers can keep their hands where they belong and their opinions inside their heads. Nobody needs a blowup at minute fourteen.The post The Top 10 Most Annoying Passenger Seat Habits, Ranked appeared first on VICE.