Florence is the freight pivot of the Pee Dee region at the I-95 and I-20 interchange, the densest single freight crossroads on the East Coast between Richmond and Savannah. The metro pulls Northeast-to-Florida reefer convoys, Carolinas distribution out of Honda, ESAB, and Roche Carolina, and the QVC fulfillment center on I-20. The I-95 / I-20 truck-stop cluster handles thousands of overnight rigs every day, and the city is one of the most-trafficked layover points in the South.
Florence is a city in and the county seat of Florence County, South Carolina, United States. It lies at the intersection of Interstates 20 and 95 and is the eastern terminus of the former. It is the primary city within the Florence metropolitan area. The area forms the core of the historical Pee Dee region of South Carolina, which includes the eight counties of northeastern South Carolina, along with sections of southeastern North Carolina. As of the 2020 census, the population of the city was 39,899, making it the 10th-most populous city in the state.
Florence sits at the convergence of I-95 and I-20 in the South Carolina Pee Dee, and the Northeast-to-Florida freight stream pulls more truck volume through this single interchange than most Eastern Seaboard cities see in a week. The truck-stop cluster at I-95 Exit 169 alone parks 1,500+ tractors overnight, and US-76 / US-301 carry the parallel freight that bypasses the interstate when wreck closures block the corridor. Road Rescue Network's Florence vendors work this crossroads every day, with average dispatch-to-arrival times that beat the regional benchmark by double digits.
Anyone who's dispatched a truck through the Carolinas in winter knows the rhythm changes when the Pee Dee catches a freezing-rain band. The Florence metro sits in the narrow corridor where coastal-plain rain meets Piedmont cold air, and ice-storm calls on I-95 between Manning and Lumberton spike multiple times every winter. Spring and summer bring the opposite extreme, the Pee Dee tornado corridor pulls multiple severe-weather events through Florence County every year, and post-tornado debris recovery is a routine seasonal call.
When a Class 8 truck breaks down on I-95 at the Florence truck-stop cluster on a Friday night, every minute the truck sits is a downstream cascade through the Northeast-to-Florida corridor. Whether you're a fleet manager dispatching from New Jersey with a truck stranded at the Wilco-Hess at Exit 169, an owner-operator on I-20 west toward Bishopville, or a contract carrier on US-301 toward Marion, the closest verified Road Rescue Network vendor is reached through a single phone call. Coordination, dispatch, and ETA confirmation are handled by our 24/7 ops team.