San Angelo, TX.
San Angelo is the freight and supply hub of the Concho Valley, the regional center where US-87, US-67, and US-277 converge in the heart of West Texas oil and ranching country. It serves as the staging and resupply point for Permian Basin-adjacent oilfield freight, agricultural shipments, and the wind-energy components moving across the open plains. As the only sizable city for a hundred miles in several directions, San Angelo is a critical service stop for trucks crossing the West Texas distances.
Every roadside service we run in San Angelo
Featured San Angelo Service Providers
Insurance-current network rescuers with verified compliance, equipment, and live availability status.
Concho Valley Mobile Diesel
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 7
- 15 years in business
- Insurance verified
West Texas Heavy Recovery
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 12
- 20 years in business
- Insurance verified
Tom Green Tire & Road Service
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 6
- 11 years in business
- Insurance verified
Bryant Boulevard Fleet & Welding
- Fleet of 4
- 18 years in business
- Insurance verified
San Angelo TX Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage
Each corridor has a dedicated breakdown landing page with service zones, exits, and recent dispatched jobs.

US Route 87
8 exits in San Angelo
The main northwest-southeast corridor through San Angelo toward Big Spring and the Permian Basin one way, Brady and the Hill Country the other. Heavy oilfield and ag freight; the long open pulls north toward Big Spring are frequent breakdown stretches.

US Route 67
6 exits in San Angelo
The northeast-southwest route linking San Angelo to Ballinger and the Abilene markets, carrying ag and distribution freight across the open Concho Valley plains.

US Route 277
7 exits in San Angelo
The north-south corridor connecting San Angelo to Abilene and the I-20 freight network north, and toward Eldorado and the border country south. A key oilfield-supply route with long, sparse stretches.

Loop 306
9 exits in San Angelo
San Angelo's bypass loop carrying through-freight around the city and connecting the converging US highways. Service calls gather at the US-87 and US-67 interchanges on the loop.

Bryant Boulevard (US-87 Business)
8 exits in San Angelo
The main commercial through-route into central San Angelo, heavy with local delivery and oilfield-supply freight serving the city's yards and warehouses.

State Highway 208
4 exits in San Angelo
The north-south state route toward Robert Lee and the Colorado City area, carrying oilfield and ranch freight across the open country north of San Angelo.
San Angelo TX Trucking & Freight Industry Overview
San Angelo is the freight and supply hub of the Concho Valley, the regional center where US-87, US-67, and US-277 converge in the heart of West Texas oil and ranching country. It serves as the staging and resupply point for Permian Basin-adjacent oilfield freight, agricultural shipments, and the wind-energy components moving across the open plains. As the only sizable city for a hundred miles in several directions, San Angelo is a critical service stop for trucks crossing the West Texas distances.
San Angelo is a city in and the county seat of Tom Green County, Texas, United States. It is in the Concho Valley, a region of West Texas between the Permian Basin to the northwest, Chihuahuan Desert to the southwest, Osage Plains to the northeast, and Central Texas to the southeast. According to the 2020 United States Census, San Angelo had a population of 99,893. It is the principal city and center of the San Angelo metropolitan area, which had a population of 100,159.
San Angelo sits at the convergence of US-87, US-67, and US-277, the highway crossroads that makes it the supply hub for a vast stretch of West Texas oil and ranch country with no other city of size for a hundred miles around. When a truck goes down out on those open highways, the nearest real help is usually right here. Road Rescue Network's Concho Valley rescuers run 24/7 and cover the long empty corridors most providers won't touch, so a breakdown in the West Texas distances still gets answered fast.
Anyone who's dispatched a truck through the Concho Valley knows the freight here is rough on equipment, heavy oilfield loads, caliche-dusted ag haulers, and wide wind-turbine components grinding across the plains in relentless heat and wind. Our local mechanics work this punishing environment every day and stock the heat-grade tires and cooling parts the West Texas summer chews through. They cover the distance and they carry what the desert plains demand.
Whether you're a fleet manager moving steel out of the Hirschfeld fabrication yard, or an owner-operator whose tire let go on the long US-87 pull toward Big Spring, the closest verified, insurance-current rescuer in our San Angelo network is one call away. Road Rescue Network's operations team coordinates the dispatch and the ETA, and our rescuers are built to run the West Texas miles.