Texas
City Coverage

McKinney, TX.

McKinney anchors the northern edge of the Dallas-Fort Worth freight market in fast-growing Collin County, where US-75 (Central Expressway), SR-121 (Sam Rayburn Tollway), and US-380 move goods between the metroplex and North Texas. The city's explosive residential growth feeds heavy building-materials and consumer-goods trucking, while the corporate-relocation boom along the tollway has pulled distribution and light manufacturing north out of Dallas. McKinney National Airport adds general-aviation and light-cargo traffic to the mix.

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

McKinney TX Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage

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

US Route 75 (Central Expressway) shield

US Route 75 (Central Expressway)

6 exits in McKinney

Central Expressway is McKinney's main north-south freight artery, carrying metroplex traffic up from Dallas through Plano and Allen. The US-380, SR-121, and Eldorado Parkway interchanges are heavy merge zones and frequent breakdown points.

State Highway 121 (Sam Rayburn Tollway) shield

State Highway 121 (Sam Rayburn Tollway)

4 exits in McKinney

The Sam Rayburn Tollway runs along McKinney's southwest, the high-speed freight and commuter link across the northern metroplex toward DFW Airport and Fort Worth. The US-75 interchange carries dense distribution traffic.

US Route 380 (University Drive) shield

US Route 380 (University Drive)

5 exits in McKinney

US-380 is the east-west route across the north of McKinney, a rapidly widening corridor carrying building-materials and consumer-goods trucks between Denton, the city, and Princeton. Construction zones make it a frequent service-call area.

State Highway 5 (McDonald Street) shield

State Highway 5 (McDonald Street)

0 exits in McKinney

SH-5 runs parallel to US-75 through the older industrial east side of McKinney, a steady route for local freight, ready-mix, and the rail-served distribution near the BNSF line.

LOOP

Outer Loop / SH-121 corridor

0 exits in McKinney

The developing Collin County Outer Loop and the SH-121 surface corridor carry growth-driven construction and materials freight around the eastern edge of McKinney toward the new logistics developments.

State Highway 78 shield

State Highway 78

0 exits in McKinney

Reached southeast via US-75 and SH-5, SH-78 carries freight toward Wylie, Sachse, and the eastern metroplex industrial areas, a route for distribution and building-products trucks.

City Profile

McKinney TX Trucking & Freight Industry Overview

McKinney anchors the northern edge of the Dallas-Fort Worth freight market in fast-growing Collin County, where US-75 (Central Expressway), SR-121 (Sam Rayburn Tollway), and US-380 move goods between the metroplex and North Texas. The city's explosive residential growth feeds heavy building-materials and consumer-goods trucking, while the corporate-relocation boom along the tollway has pulled distribution and light manufacturing north out of Dallas. McKinney National Airport adds general-aviation and light-cargo traffic to the mix.

McKinney is a city in and the county seat of Collin County, Texas, United States. It is Collin County's third-largest city, after Plano and Frisco. A suburb of the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, McKinney is about 32 miles (51 km) north of Dallas.

McKinney sits at the convergence of US-75, the Sam Rayburn Tollway, and US-380, the freight spine of booming northern Collin County, and a truck down on Central Expressway during the DFW build-out can stall a building-materials run feeding a dozen job sites. Road Rescue Network's McKinney rescuers dispatch 24/7 and know the growth-corridor traffic cold, with response times built for a metroplex that adds lanes and warehouses faster than the maps keep up. The nearest verified mechanic is rolling before the dispatcher confirms the milepost.

Anyone who's dispatched a truck through McKinney knows North Texas weather doesn't negotiate, spring brings violent thunderstorms and hail that hammer rigs on US-75, and winter ice storms can shut the tollway with no warning. Our local technicians and recovery operators work this whiplash climate every season and carry the gear for both the hail-season electrical and glass calls and the ice-storm recoveries. That weather readiness is something an out-of-region operator simply can't fake.

Whether you're a fleet manager hauling materials into the Collin County growth corridor or an owner-operator caught on US-380 east toward Princeton, the closest insurance-current rescuer in our McKinney network is one phone call away. Road Rescue Network's 24/7 operations team owns the dispatch, coordination, and ETA confirmation so you stay on the load and the build schedule.