Ponca City sits at the intersection of US-60, US-77, and US-177 in Kay County, north-central Oklahoma, and the freight pivot is the Phillips 66 refinery, a complex that ships refined product across a multi-state distribution radius. The metro pulls heavy refinery-service freight, agricultural inbound from the wheat and cattle country surrounding the city, and contract logistics from Conoco's heritage facilities. Outbound runs heavy on petroleum products, agricultural commodity, and feed/livestock. The US-77 corridor north to Arkansas City and south to Stillwater carries the bulk of long-haul through traffic.
Ponca City is a city in Kay County in the U.S. state of Oklahoma. The city was named after the Ponca tribe. Ponca City had a population of 24,424 in the 2020 census, down from 25,387 at the time of the 2010 census.
Ponca City sits roughly halfway between Oklahoma City and Wichita on US-77, and the freight rhythm here is built around two things: the Phillips 66 refinery on the east side of the city and the wheat-and-cattle traffic that runs through Kay County year-round. The refinery anchors heavy outbound petroleum-product loads to Tulsa, Oklahoma City, Wichita, and the rural Kansas-Oklahoma agricultural belt, plus inbound crude and feedstock that keeps a steady tanker presence on the US-60 corridor. Spring brings the agricultural surge through Kay County and the rural shoulder calls that mark Oklahoma planting season. Winter brings ice-storm calls on the US-77 viaduct bridges and the rural shoulder recoveries that the OHP traffic team coordinates.
Dispatchers running loads through Ponca City know the US-60 east corridor toward Bartlesville and the US-77 south stretch toward Stillwater each have their own breakdown pattern. The refinery gate areas at the Phillips 66 plant see weekly hazmat-aware service calls plus contractor-vehicle dispatch for refinery turnaround season. The Sinclair Truck Stop and Love's on the south side of town stage the metro's commercial-tire and roadside dispatch capacity. Our Ponca City rescuers work the corridor every day.
When a Class 8 tanker stalls at the Phillips 66 plant entrance during a turnaround week, or a wheat-bound carrier loses air on US-60 east near the Arkansas River bridge, every minute the truck sits is fuel cost plus refinery contractor liability cost. Whether you are a fleet manager dispatching from Tulsa with a load stuck at the refinery gate, an owner-operator on US-77 inbound from Arkansas City, or a Permian-bound carrier on US-60 west toward Enid, the closest verified Road Rescue Network rescuer is reached through a single phone call. Coordination and direct handoff to the responding tech run through our 24/7 dispatch desk.