Nevada
City Coverage

Paradise, NV.

Paradise is the unincorporated Clark County township that holds the Las Vegas Strip, Harry Reid International Airport, and the convention corridor, which makes it one of the highest-volume hospitality-freight zones in the West. Beverage, food-service, linen, and trade-show freight pour in around the clock to keep the resorts and the airport running. I-15 along the township's western edge carries the entire Southern California-to-Las Vegas truck flow, and the air-cargo ramps at Harry Reid add a second freight pulse.

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

Paradise NV Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage

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

City Profile

Paradise NV Trucking & Freight Industry Overview

Paradise is the unincorporated Clark County township that holds the Las Vegas Strip, Harry Reid International Airport, and the convention corridor, which makes it one of the highest-volume hospitality-freight zones in the West. Beverage, food-service, linen, and trade-show freight pour in around the clock to keep the resorts and the airport running. I-15 along the township's western edge carries the entire Southern California-to-Las Vegas truck flow, and the air-cargo ramps at Harry Reid add a second freight pulse.

Paradise is an unincorporated town and census-designated place (CDP) in Clark County, Nevada, United States, adjacent to the city of Las Vegas. It was formed on December 8, 1950. Its population was 191,238 at the 2020 census, making it the fifth-most-populous CDP in the United States; if it were an incorporated city, it would be the fifth-largest in Nevada. As an unincorporated town, it is governed by the Clark County Commission with input from the Paradise Town Advisory Board.

Every casino kitchen, convention hall, and airport gate on the Strip depends on a steady wall of delivery trucks that cannot afford to sit broken at a loading dock, and that wall never stops moving in a town built around the clock. Road Rescue Network's Paradise rescuers stage near the I-15 Tropicana and Flamingo interchanges and along Paradise Road so a disabled rig behind a property doesn't stall a whole receiving operation. Average dispatch-to-arrival beats the regional benchmark by double digits.

Anyone who's dispatched a truck through Las Vegas in July knows the desert is the real adversary here. Ambient heat past 110°F cooks tires on the I-15 shoulder, stresses cooling systems idling in the dock queue, and kills marginal batteries by mid-afternoon. Our mechanics work this heat every summer, they carry extra coolant, the common tire sizes, and battery stock because a Vegas afternoon turns a small fault into a roadside emergency faster than almost anywhere in the country.

Whether you're a beverage fleet manager working the back of the Strip resorts or an owner-operator who blew a steer tire on I-15 coming in from Primm, the closest verified, insurance-current rescuer in our Paradise network is one phone call or service request away. Dispatch, ETA confirmation, and coordination for work behind the gated resort docks are handled by Road Rescue Network's 24/7 operations team.