It really depends on the region. My experience in California is that aerial data is way more accurate than most TIGER data. In most other regions that I’ve looked at (not too many), this seems to be the same. But I’ve seen some data in Texas where TIGER data is extremely accurate.

Even if aerial is off, at least in terms of relative positioning, it’s very, very good, so if you align roads to aerial data and somebody passes by with absolute references (real GPS data), it’s a simple matter of moving all the coordinates of a region to the correct reference…