California
City Coverage

Santa Clarita, CA.

Santa Clarita guards the northern gateway out of the Los Angeles Basin, where I-5 climbs through the Newhall Pass and over the Tejon Pass toward the Central Valley, the single busiest freight escape route from the nation's largest port complex. Nearly every truck hauling out of the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach toward Northern California and beyond passes through the Santa Clarita Valley. The city hosts major distribution centers in Valencia and the Centre Pointe and Gateway business parks, and the I-5/CA-14 interchange is one of Southern California's most critical truck junctions. Grade-heavy terrain and wildfire-season closures make reliable roadside coverage essential.

4
Rescuers on-call now
41 min
Average dispatch ETA
120
Calls last 30 days
24/7
Always available
Interstate Coverage

Santa Clarita CA Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage

Each corridor has a dedicated breakdown landing page with service zones, exits, and recent dispatched jobs.

Interstate 5 (Golden State Freeway) shield

Interstate 5 (Golden State Freeway)

7 exits in Santa Clarita

The Golden State Freeway, the primary freight escape from the LA Basin climbing through the Newhall Pass and on toward the Grapevine. Brake-fade and cooling failures cluster on the grades; the truck-lane split north of CA-14 is a frequent service point.

CA-14

CA-14 (Antelope Valley Freeway)

5 exits in Santa Clarita

The Antelope Valley Freeway branching northeast from I-5 toward Palmdale and the high desert. The I-5/CA-14 interchange is one of Southern California's most critical truck junctions and a hot spot for service calls.

CA-126 (Newhall Ranch Road / Henry Mayo Dr) shield

CA-126 (Newhall Ranch Road / Henry Mayo Dr)

4 exits in Santa Clarita

State Route 126 running west from I-5 toward Fillmore and Ventura through the agricultural Santa Clara River Valley. Heavy produce-truck traffic and a relief route when I-5 over the pass closes.

Interstate 210 (Foothill Freeway) shield

Interstate 210 (Foothill Freeway)

0 exits in Santa Clarita

The Foothill Freeway reached south of the Newhall Pass, an east-west alternative through the San Fernando and San Gabriel valleys that Santa Clarita-area freight uses to reach the eastern LA distribution belt.

Interstate 405 (San Diego Freeway) shield

Interstate 405 (San Diego Freeway)

0 exits in Santa Clarita

The San Diego Freeway, reached via I-5 south through the San Fernando Valley, the route port freight uses toward the Westside and the South Bay. A frequent downstream destination for loads leaving Santa Clarita.

CA-1 (Pacific Coast Highway, via CA-126) shield

CA-1 (Pacific Coast Highway, via CA-126)

0 exits in Santa Clarita

Pacific Coast Highway, reached west via CA-126 toward Ventura, a coastal alternative for produce and oversize loads avoiding the I-5 grades. Salt-air and tight-curve conditions on the coastal stretch.

City Profile

Santa Clarita CA Trucking & Freight Industry Overview

Santa Clarita guards the northern gateway out of the Los Angeles Basin, where I-5 climbs through the Newhall Pass and over the Tejon Pass toward the Central Valley, the single busiest freight escape route from the nation's largest port complex. Nearly every truck hauling out of the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach toward Northern California and beyond passes through the Santa Clarita Valley. The city hosts major distribution centers in Valencia and the Centre Pointe and Gateway business parks, and the I-5/CA-14 interchange is one of Southern California's most critical truck junctions. Grade-heavy terrain and wildfire-season closures make reliable roadside coverage essential.

Santa Clarita is a suburban city in northwestern Los Angeles County, California, United States. With a 2020 census population of 228,673, it is the third-most populous city in Los Angeles County, the 17th-most populous in California, and the 103rd-most populous city in the United States. It is located about 30 miles (48 km) northwest of downtown Los Angeles, and occupies 70.75 square miles (183.2 km2) of land in the Santa Clarita Valley, along the Santa Clara River. It is a classic example of a U.S. edge city, satellite city, or boomburb.

Anyone who's dispatched a truck through the Santa Clarita Valley knows the I-5 grades are where loads go to die. A heavy rig that loses cooling or brakes climbing the Newhall Pass, or heading up toward the Grapevine and Tejon Pass, can turn a routine haul out of the LA ports into a smoking roadside emergency in minutes. Road Rescue Network's Santa Clarita rescuers run 24/7 with dispatch-to-arrival times that beat the LA-area benchmark on these grades. Whether it's brake fade on the I-5 descent or a no-cool reefer at a Valencia DC, we have a verified mechanic close.

Santa Clarita sits at the convergence of I-5 and the CA-14 Antelope Valley Freeway, the junction where coastal port freight splits toward Northern California and the high desert. That mountain-pass geography creates breakdown patterns flatland cities never see: downhill brake fade, altitude-related cooling stress on the climbs, and the constant threat of wildfire closures that can strand a fleet on the wrong side of the pass. Our network is built around mechanics who work these grades every day and know which runaway-ramp shoulders have room, not generalists who treat the Newhall Pass like any other freeway.

From the distribution parks of Valencia to the truck traffic pouring out of the ports and over the Tejon Pass, Santa Clarita moves the freight that supplies half of California. A fleet manager in Sacramento with a reefer stranded near the I-5 and CA-14 interchange reaches the same verified, insurance-current rescuer as the owner-operator broken down on CA-126 toward Fillmore, through a single phone call. Dispatch, coordination, and ETA confirmation run through Road Rescue Network's around-the-clock operations team.