Winslow, AZ.
Winslow sits on I-40 in northern Navajo County, the historic Route 66 town and BNSF Railway mainline yard. The freight rhythm is defined by trans-continental I-40 truck volume between Albuquerque New Mexico and Flagstaff, plus the BNSF intermodal activity and the Navajo Generating Station coal-and-gas operations corridor. Winter snow advisories and ADOT chain-up enforcement on the high-altitude I-40 corridor are routine, and the Petrified Forest National Park traffic adds seasonal recreational volume.
Every roadside service we run in Winslow
Featured Winslow Service Providers
Insurance-current network rescuers with verified compliance, equipment, and live availability status.
Winslow AZ Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage
Each corridor has a dedicated breakdown landing page with service zones, exits, and recent dispatched jobs.

Interstate 40
5 exits in Winslow
The trans-continental east-west backbone through Winslow at 4,879 feet. Heaviest service-call volume between Exit 252 (North Park Drive) and Exit 257 (Transcon Lane). Winter chain-up enforcement defines the seasonal operational pattern.

Historic Route 66
3 exits in Winslow
The historic east-west corridor through downtown Winslow. Carries tourist and rural distribution traffic; useful as I-40 detour during winter closures.

Arizona Highway 87
2 exits in Winslow
The north-south state corridor from Winslow south toward Payson and the Mogollon Rim. Heavy summer recreational vehicle traffic.

US Route 180
0 exits in Winslow
Reached via I-40 east, the corridor through Holbrook toward the Petrified Forest and St Johns. Carries recreational and trans-state traffic.
Winslow AZ Trucking & Freight Industry Overview
Winslow sits on I-40 in northern Navajo County, the historic Route 66 town and BNSF Railway mainline yard. The freight rhythm is defined by trans-continental I-40 truck volume between Albuquerque New Mexico and Flagstaff, plus the BNSF intermodal activity and the Navajo Generating Station coal-and-gas operations corridor. Winter snow advisories and ADOT chain-up enforcement on the high-altitude I-40 corridor are routine, and the Petrified Forest National Park traffic adds seasonal recreational volume.
Winslow is a city in Navajo County, Arizona, United States. According to the 2020 census, the population of the city is 9,005. It is approximately 57 miles (92 km) southeast of Flagstaff, 240 miles (390 km) west of Albuquerque, New Mexico, and 329 miles (529 km) southeast of Las Vegas.
Winslow anchors the I-40 corridor in northern Navajo County and is the historic Route 66 town immortalized in the Eagles song. The freight rhythm here is defined by trans-continental I-40 truck volume between Albuquerque and Flagstaff, plus the BNSF Railway mainline yard activity that supports daily intermodal and bulk-rail interchange. The Navajo Generating Station coal-and-gas operations corridor adds occasional heavy-haul activity. Winter chain-up enforcement on the I-40 corridor through Winslow and Holbrook is routine, and ice-and-snow incidents on the I-40 eastbound and westbound segments require coordinated dispatch with ADOT.
Dispatchers running loads through Winslow know the I-40 corridor between Holbrook east and Flagstaff west carries the heaviest service-call volume, with the high-altitude exposure and winter conditions defining the operational pattern. The AZ-87 corridor south toward Payson and the Mogollon Rim carries seasonal recreational traffic, and the BNSF intermodal yard generates daily switcher and intermodal activity. Our Winslow rescuers stage at the I-40 / Route 66 truck-stop corridor because that is where the operational volume hits.
When a Class 8 tractor breaks down on I-40 at Winslow in February with a chain-up advisory active, or a BNSF intermodal trailer loses air on the I-40 corridor, every minute the truck sits is fuel idle plus delivery schedule risk. Whether you are a fleet manager dispatching from Phoenix with a load stranded at the BNSF Winslow yard, an owner-operator on I-40 inbound from Albuquerque, or a Pacific Coast carrier westbound from the eastern I-40 corridor, the closest verified Road Rescue Network rescuer in Navajo County is reached through a single phone call.