SC 302 begins at an
intersection with
SC 125 (Atomic Road) south of
Spiderweb, within Aiken County, where the roadway continues as Silver Bluff Road. It travels to the northeast and crosses over Long Branch and Town Creek. It then intersects
U.S. Route 278 (US 278; Williston Road). The highway curves to the north-northeast. It passes east of Boyd Pond Park. The highway enters Aiken and turns right onto
SC 19 Truck/SC 302 (Hitchcock Parkway). The three highways travel
concurrently to the east-northeast. Just south of Virginia Acres Park, they intersect
SC 19 (Whiskey Road). At this intersection, SC 19 Truck meets its southern terminus. SC 118/SC 302 travel to the northeast and go between Kennedy Middle School and Millbrook Elementary School. They pass Citizens Park and leave the
city limits of Aiken before they curve to the north-northeast. After crossing some
railroad tracks, they intersect
US 78 (Charleston Highway). At this intersection,
US 78 Truck, which begins here, joins the concurrency. One block later, they intersect
SC 4 (Wagener Road). SC 302 turns right, and both highways travel to the east-northeast. They curve to the northeast. They cross over Shaw Creek just before curving to the east-southeast. Then, they curve back to the northeast. They cross the South Fork Edisto River and Cedar Creek. The two highways curve to the southeast and split north of
Aiken State Park. SC 302 heads to the northeast and crosses over Burcalo Creek. Then, it crosses over Dean Swamp Creek and curves to the east-northeast and enters Wagener. Just northeast of
Wagener–Salley High School, it intersects
SC 113 (Main Street South). They travel concurrently to the northeast through town. The concurrency intersects
SC 39 (Railroad Street). Just over 1,000 feet (300 m) later, SC 113 and SC 302 split, with SC 302 heading to the east-northeast. The highway passes just south of Edisto Lake and travels through
Berlin. Then, it crosses over the
Edisto River on the
Harsey's Bridge. This bridge marks the Lexington County line.[3]
SC 302 curves to the north-northeast. It passes west of Rast Pond just before entering
Pelion. It passes Pelion Elementary School and Pelion Middle School before intersecting
US 178 (Main Street). Just after leaving the city limits, it passes Fort Pond Elementary School. Then, the highway travels through
Macedon. It has a concurrency with
SC 6. They split in
Edmund. SC 302 curves to the northeast and enters
South Congaree, where it crosses
Congaree Creek. After it leaves the city limits, it travels along the eastern edge of
Columbia Metropolitan Airport and crosses Savana Branch. It travels along the western edge of
Cayce and passes
Airport High School. At Boston Avenue, east of the high school, it begins traveling along the
Springdale–Cayce line. While along the line, it crosses over Sixmile Creek and has an
interchange with
Interstate 26 (I-26). At Manley Street, it begins traveling along the
West Columbia–Cayce line. Glenn Street marks the point where the highway enters West Columbia proper. Just over 1,000 feet (300 m) later, it meets its eastern terminus, an intersection with
US 21/
US 176/
US 321 (Charleston Highway).[4]
On September 19, 2008, a
Learjet 60 crossed the highway and
crashed after a maintenance error. It crashed through the airport boundary fence then coming to rest onto an
embankment near 2860 Edmund Highway, killing four people. Two survived the crash.[5]
South Carolina Highway 106 (SC 106) was a
state highway that was established in 1940 on a path from
U.S. Route 1 (US 1) in
Aiken northeast to
SC 391 (now New Holland Road). In 1942, its southern terminus was extended with US 1 and
SC 19 through Aiken, then by itself to end in
Kathwood, which is just northwest of
Jackson. In 1947, the highway was
decommissioned. Approximately half of its path was downgraded to secondary roads: Silver Bluff Road, Hampton Avenue, Camellia Street, Wire Road, and Cooks Bridge Road. The rest of its path was redesignated as SC 302.
Eastern end of US 1 Truck/US 78 Truck, SC 4 Truck, and SC 118 concurrencies; western end of SC 4 concurrency; western terminus of SC 4 Truck; northern terminus of SC 118