Palm Coast, FL.
Palm Coast sits on the I-95 corridor midway between Jacksonville and the Daytona Beach area, the spine that carries Northeast Florida's long-haul freight along the Atlantic coast. Rapid residential growth keeps building-materials, concrete, and last-mile delivery trucks moving across US-1, FL-100, and the canal-laced street grid. Its barrier-island geography and direct exposure to Atlantic hurricanes shape a freight environment defined by storms and salt air.
Every roadside service we run in Palm Coast
Featured Palm Coast Service Providers
Insurance-current network rescuers with verified compliance, equipment, and live availability status.
Matanzas Mobile Truck Repair
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 6
- 12 years in business
- Insurance verified
Flagler Heavy Recovery
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 11
- 18 years in business
- Insurance verified
Palm Harbor Tire & Fleet
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 4
- 9 years in business
- Insurance verified
Palm Coast FL Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage
Each corridor has a dedicated breakdown landing page with service zones, exits, and recent dispatched jobs.

Interstate 95
3 exits in Palm Coast
The primary north-south freight artery through Palm Coast, the Jacksonville-to-Daytona coastal lane. Long stretches between Flagler exits; service calls cluster around the Palm Coast Parkway (Exit 289) and SR-100 (Exit 284) interchanges.

US Route 1
0 exits in Palm Coast
The older coastal north-south route paralleling I-95 through western Palm Coast. Mixed freight and building-supply truck traffic feeding the residential growth corridor.

State Road 100
0 exits in Palm Coast
The main east-west arterial through Palm Coast, linking I-95 and US-1 to Flagler Beach and the inland county. Heavy concrete and building-materials volume; the I-95/SR-100 interchange is a recurring breakdown zone.

State Road A1A
0 exits in Palm Coast
The oceanfront route along the Flagler barrier island toward Flagler Beach and Ormond. Salt-exposed coastal corridor; delivery and service-fleet traffic to the beach communities.

State Road 11
0 exits in Palm Coast
The inland north-south route from Bunnell toward DeLand, west of Palm Coast. Agricultural and timber-truck traffic through the rural western county.

US Route 1 / SR 5 (Bunnell)
0 exits in Palm Coast
The freight spine through neighboring Bunnell, the Flagler County seat, just west of Palm Coast. Mixed agricultural and distribution truck volume at the SR-100 junction.
Palm Coast FL Trucking & Freight Industry Overview
Palm Coast sits on the I-95 corridor midway between Jacksonville and the Daytona Beach area, the spine that carries Northeast Florida's long-haul freight along the Atlantic coast. Rapid residential growth keeps building-materials, concrete, and last-mile delivery trucks moving across US-1, FL-100, and the canal-laced street grid. Its barrier-island geography and direct exposure to Atlantic hurricanes shape a freight environment defined by storms and salt air.
Palm Coast is a city in Flagler County, Florida, United States. As of the 2020 United States census, the population was 89,258, an increase of almost 200% since the 2000 count of 32,832. The population was estimated to be 98,411 as of July 1, 2022. The Daytona Beach News-Journal reported in May 2023 that the population of Palm Coast had surpassed Deltona, Florida as the most populous city in the Deltona–Daytona Beach–Ormond Beach, FL metropolitan statistical area.
Palm Coast's freight economy runs on the I-95 corridor between Jacksonville and Daytona, with US-1 and FL-100 feeding the local distribution into a fast-growing Flagler County. Road Rescue Network's Palm Coast rescuers are on-call 24/7, with dispatch-to-arrival times built for a coastal community spread along the interstate and the canal grid. When a building-supply truck or a long-haul rig goes down, the closest verified mechanic is one call away.
The mechanics in Palm Coast who handle heavy-duty calls know two things shape the work here: the Atlantic and the I-95 distances. Salt air corrodes brake and air hardware on coastal fleets, and a breakdown on I-95 between exits can sit far from the nearest shop. Our network is built around rescuers who carry sealed connectors, corrosion-resistant fittings, and a full roadside kit so the fix holds and a tow becomes a roadside repair.
Whether you're a fleet manager moving concrete to a Palm Coast subdivision or an owner-operator running the I-95 coast through Flagler County, Road Rescue Network coordinates the response. One phone call reaches our 24/7 operations desk, which handles rescuer dispatch, ETA confirmation, and follow-through until your wheels are turning again.