Burns, OR.
Burns is the only sizable commercial service stop in Harney County, the largest county by area in Oregon and one of the largest in the lower 48. US-20 east-west and US-395 north-south cross here, making Burns the unavoidable crossroads for any truck moving between Bend or Boise on US-20 and between John Day or Lakeview on US-395. There is essentially no other commercial service for 70 to 130 miles in any direction. Ranching freight, cattle haulers, hay and grain trucks, and BLM and Forest Service contractor freight all depend on Burns for fuel, food, and roadside service.
Every roadside service we run in Burns
Featured Burns Service Providers
Insurance-current network rescuers with verified compliance, equipment, and live availability status.
Burns OR Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage
Each corridor has a dedicated breakdown landing page with service zones, exits, and recent dispatched jobs.

US Route 20
4 exits in Burns
The Central Oregon Highway, east-west spine from Bend through Burns to Vale and the Idaho border. Through Burns, US-20 is the primary commercial freight artery. Stinkingwater Pass east of town brings winter chain control. Wide open stretches with severe wind exposure.

US Route 395
3 exits in Burns
The Eastern Sierra spine continuing north from California through Burns to John Day and Pendleton. Rural commercial freight, BLM contractor traffic, recreational and timber freight.
Oregon Route 78
1 exits in Burns
Southeast from Burns through the Steens Mountain country toward Crane and the Owyhee. Rural ranching freight, BLM contractor traffic, very limited service.
Burns OR Trucking & Freight Industry Overview
Burns is the only sizable commercial service stop in Harney County, the largest county by area in Oregon and one of the largest in the lower 48. US-20 east-west and US-395 north-south cross here, making Burns the unavoidable crossroads for any truck moving between Bend or Boise on US-20 and between John Day or Lakeview on US-395. There is essentially no other commercial service for 70 to 130 miles in any direction. Ranching freight, cattle haulers, hay and grain trucks, and BLM and Forest Service contractor freight all depend on Burns for fuel, food, and roadside service.
Burns is a city in and the county seat of Harney County, in the U.S. state of Oregon. According to the 2020 census, the population was 2,730. Burns and the nearby city of Hines are home to about 60 percent of the people in the sparsely populated county, by area the largest in Oregon and the tenth largest in the United States.
Burns is a true high-desert crossroads. Population under 3,000 but the only commercial service for 70 miles in any direction, and the only stop where US-20 and US-395 meet between the Cascades and Idaho. When a cattle hauler running US-20 east toward Boise loses an air system 30 miles outside town, Burns is the dispatch hub. Road Rescue Network stages techs in Burns so the response window is hours, not days. Truckers in eastern Oregon and the high-desert ranching country know the value of having someone willing to come help in this country.
The Burns freight pattern is shaped by extreme distance and weather. Winters bring black ice and wind on the open US-20 stretches between Burns and Bend, plus chain-control on the Stinkingwater Pass east of town. Summers bring brake-fade descents off the Steens. Cattle haulers, hay and grain trucks, and BLM contractor freight all run through here daily during their respective seasons. Our local mechanics know the chassis types running these loads and stock parts that hold up to the temperature swings, including extra coolant capacity, heat and cold-rated air-line fittings, and cattle-trailer-specific repair stock.
Whether you are a fleet manager dispatching a hay truck from Burns to Portland, or an owner-operator running US-395 north toward John Day, the closest verified, insurance-current rescuer in our Burns network is reached through a single phone call or service request. Dispatch and ETA confirmation are handled by our 24/7 operations team.