Gallup, NM.
Gallup sits at the convergence of I-40 and US-491 in McKinley County, the freight pivot between Albuquerque New Mexico and Flagstaff Arizona on the trans-continental I-40 corridor and the gateway to the Navajo Nation and the Hopi Reservation. The metro is one of the highest-volume long-haul truck rest stops on the western I-40 corridor, with the largest single concentration of layover truck parking on the entire western I-40 stretch. Outbound runs heavy on contract distribution serving the Navajo Nation and the rural McKinley County belt. The I-40 corridor west toward Flagstaff and east toward Albuquerque carries the trans-continental Pacific Coast freight backbone.
Every roadside service we run in Gallup
Featured Gallup Service Providers
Insurance-current network rescuers with verified compliance, equipment, and live availability status.
Gallup NM Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage
Each corridor has a dedicated breakdown landing page with service zones, exits, and recent dispatched jobs.

Interstate 40
6 exits in Gallup
The trans-continental east-west backbone running west toward Flagstaff Arizona and east toward Albuquerque. Heaviest service-call volume between Exit 16 (Allison Road) and Exit 22 (East Gallup); the I-40 corridor is the metro's defining commercial route and the highest-volume long-haul rest-stop stretch in the western US.
US Route 491
4 exits in Gallup
The north-south corridor through Gallup connecting Shiprock New Mexico and the Four Corners area to the north with St. Johns Arizona to the south. Carries Navajo Nation contract distribution and rural traffic; common winter recovery zone in the rural Reservation belt.

Historic Route 66
4 exits in Gallup
The historic east-west corridor through Gallup parallel to I-40. Local distribution arterial through the Route 66 heritage commercial district.
New Mexico Highway 118
3 exits in Gallup
The state corridor running east-west through Gallup connecting to Thoreau and the Mariano Lake area. Local distribution and rural agricultural traffic.
New Mexico Highway 264
0 exits in Gallup
Reached via US-491 north, the corridor toward the Hopi Reservation and Window Rock Arizona. Carries Navajo and Hopi distribution traffic.

Interstate 25
0 exits in Gallup
Reached via I-40 east through Albuquerque (140 miles east). Common Front Range distribution route.
Gallup NM Trucking & Freight Industry Overview
Gallup sits at the convergence of I-40 and US-491 in McKinley County, the freight pivot between Albuquerque New Mexico and Flagstaff Arizona on the trans-continental I-40 corridor and the gateway to the Navajo Nation and the Hopi Reservation. The metro is one of the highest-volume long-haul truck rest stops on the western I-40 corridor, with the largest single concentration of layover truck parking on the entire western I-40 stretch. Outbound runs heavy on contract distribution serving the Navajo Nation and the rural McKinley County belt. The I-40 corridor west toward Flagstaff and east toward Albuquerque carries the trans-continental Pacific Coast freight backbone.
Gallup is a city in McKinley County, New Mexico, United States, with a population of 21,899 as of the 2020 census. A substantial percentage of its population is Native American, with residents from the Navajo, Hopi, and Zuni tribes. Gallup is the county seat of McKinley County and the most populous city between Flagstaff and Albuquerque along historic U.S. Route 66.
Gallup anchors the I-40 corridor midway between Albuquerque and Flagstaff at the western edge of New Mexico, and the freight rhythm here is shaped by long-haul rest cycles. The TA, Pilot, Love's, and Petro truck stops on the east and west sides of the city stage hundreds of long-haul tractors daily for layover, refueling, and pre-trip discovery. The BNSF Gallup Subdivision carries intermodal freight east and west, and the contract distribution serving the Navajo Nation pulls steady freight from the regional centers. The I-40 corridor between Gallup and Flagstaff includes the Querino Canyon and Lupton-area grade-and-altitude stretches.
Dispatchers running loads through Gallup know the I-40 corridor here is one of the highest-volume long-haul rest-stop stretches in the western US. Winter brings ice-storm and chain-up conditions on the I-40 corridor between Gallup and Flagstaff, and summer brings the long desert exposure that punishes cooling systems and DPF after-treatment. The Navajo Nation distribution network requires regional knowledge for safe pull-out points and reservation-coordinated dispatch. Our Gallup rescuers stage at the Pilot and TA on the east and west sides because that is where the long-haul layover and Navajo-bound calls cluster.
When a Class 8 tractor breaks down on I-40 at the Querino Canyon area during a January cold snap, or a Navajo Nation-bound contract distribution carrier loses air on US-491 north toward Shiprock, every minute the truck sits is fuel idle plus delivery schedule risk. Whether you are a fleet manager dispatching from Albuquerque with a load stranded at the BNSF intermodal yard, an owner-operator on I-40 westbound from Flagstaff, or a Navajo Nation-bound carrier on US-491 north, the closest verified Road Rescue Network rescuer in McKinley County is reached through a single phone call.