Daphne anchors the Eastern Shore of Mobile Bay at the I-10 and US-98 cross, the freight pivot between Mobile, Pensacola, and the Gulf Shores beach corridor. The Daphne-Fairhope-Foley MSA pulls heavy seasonal freight from beach-resort distribution, gulf-coast tourism supply, and the AGC Genuine Parts and Continental Motors aviation cluster. Outbound freight runs heavy on contract distribution out of the US-98 / Highway 181 belt, and the city is a critical staging point for hurricane evacuation and post-storm response logistics on the Alabama coast.
Daphne is a city in Baldwin County, Alabama, United States, on the eastern shoreline of Mobile Bay. The city is located along I-10, 11 miles east of Mobile and 170 miles southwest of the state capital of Montgomery. The 2020 United States census lists its population as 27,462, making Daphne the most populous city in Baldwin County. It is a principal city of the Daphne-Fairhope-Foley metropolitan area, which includes all of Baldwin County.
Daphne sits at the convergence of I-10, US-98, and AL-181 on the Eastern Shore of Mobile Bay, a hurricane corridor that defines every dispatch decision from June through November. Salt-air corrosion eats brake-line fittings and air-system components year-round; tropical storm and hurricane evacuations turn I-10 eastbound into a 200-mile parking lot in the wrong wind; and beach-resort weekend surge across the Foley and Gulf Shores corridor doubles the truck count on US-98. Road Rescue Network's Daphne vendors work this stretch of the Gulf Coast every day.
Anyone who's dispatched a truck across the Mobile Bay Bridge at Battleship Memorial Park during a Gulf squall knows the rhythm changes when the wind shifts onshore. Visibility drops, the eastbound I-10 climb out of Mobile fights heavy gusts, and any breakdown on the elevated causeway is a fully shoulder-restricted recovery operation. Our local mechanics know the safe pull-off zones at the Daphne and Spanish Fort exits, and they carry salt-rated parts kits because every truck on this corridor lives in chloride spray.
When a Class 8 truck breaks down on I-10 at the Daphne / US-98 exit during a Saturday morning beach-rush, every minute the truck sits is a downstream cascade of refrigerated freight, beach-resort supply, and weekend tourism logistics. Whether you're a fleet manager dispatching from Atlanta with a truck stranded at the AGC plant in Fairhope, an owner-operator on AL-181 toward Loxley, or a contract carrier on US-98 toward Foley, the closest verified Road Rescue Network vendor is reached through a single phone call. Coordination, dispatch, and hurricane-evacuation routing are handled by our 24/7 ops team.