Myrtle Beach, SC.
Myrtle Beach anchors the Grand Strand, a 60-mile resort corridor where freight volume triples between Memorial Day and Labor Day. US-501 funnels every truckload of food-service, hospitality linen, hotel-supply, and amusement-park inbound from I-95 at Florence; SC-31 (the Carolina Bayshore Parkway) handles the bypass freight; US-17 carries the long-haul beachfront grocery, beverage, and construction supply south from Wilmington. Hurricane evacuation orders shut the corridor down twice a season on average, putting our network into rapid pre-staging mode.
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Insurance-current network vendors with verified compliance, equipment, and live availability status.
Myrtle Beach SC Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage
Each corridor has a dedicated breakdown landing page with service zones, exits, and recent dispatched jobs.

US Route 501
9 exits in Myrtle Beach
The primary inland artery from Florence and I-95 east into the heart of the Grand Strand. Heaviest summer-Saturday turnover-day congestion runs from the SC-22 interchange east through the Conway Bypass; common service points at Carolina Forest Boulevard and the SC-31 split.

South Carolina Highway 31
7 exits in Myrtle Beach
The Carolina Bayshore Parkway, a limited-access bypass running parallel to US-17 inland of the Grand Strand. Designated southbound hurricane-evacuation route; heavy commercial fleet, beverage, and construction freight bypassing oceanfront congestion.

US Route 17
12 exits in Myrtle Beach
The Atlantic Coast Highway running the Grand Strand from North Myrtle Beach south through Murrells Inlet to Georgetown. Carries the long-haul grocery, beverage, and oceanfront-construction freight; heavy peak-summer congestion at the 38th Avenue and 21st Avenue traffic-light corridors.

South Carolina Highway 22
5 exits in Myrtle Beach
The Conway Bypass, a limited-access freight route from US-501 east to US-17 north of the city. Primary truck route for fleets bypassing downtown Conway; service-call hot spot at the US-501 interchange during shift-change windows.

South Carolina Highway 9
6 exits in Myrtle Beach
East-west route from I-95 at Dillon east to North Myrtle Beach via Loris. Heavy tobacco-belt agricultural and outlet-mall freight; common breakdown zone in the Loris stretch where shoulder width narrows.

US Route 15
4 exits in Myrtle Beach
North-south corridor inland from the coast carrying timber, agricultural, and Conway-bound freight. Service points cluster around the SC-9 junction at Tabor City NC just over the state line.
Myrtle Beach SC Trucking & Freight Industry Overview
Myrtle Beach anchors the Grand Strand, a 60-mile resort corridor where freight volume triples between Memorial Day and Labor Day. US-501 funnels every truckload of food-service, hospitality linen, hotel-supply, and amusement-park inbound from I-95 at Florence; SC-31 (the Carolina Bayshore Parkway) handles the bypass freight; US-17 carries the long-haul beachfront grocery, beverage, and construction supply south from Wilmington. Hurricane evacuation orders shut the corridor down twice a season on average, putting our network into rapid pre-staging mode.
Myrtle Beach is a resort city in Horry County, South Carolina, United States. It is located in the center of a long and continuous 60-mile (97 km) stretch of beach known as the "Grand Strand” in the northeastern part of the state, on the East Coast of the United States. Its year-round population was 35,682 as of the 2020 census, making it the 13th-most populous city in South Carolina.
Anyone who's dispatched a truck through the Grand Strand in July knows the punchline: the same US-501 corridor that runs empty in January carries the food-service, beverage, and hotel-supply weight of a city ten times Myrtle Beach's permanent population by the second week of June. A breakdown at the SC-31 / US-501 interchange on a Saturday turnover-day, with a chiller load of seafood for the oceanfront restaurants, can spoil a six-figure load by sundown if dispatch sits on its hands. Road Rescue Network's Myrtle Beach vendors are pre-positioned along both the US-501 bottleneck and the SC-31 bypass, with a season-keyed dispatch protocol that scales response capacity from May through September.
Myrtle Beach freight runs in a salt-air corrosion envelope that punishes any truck not maintained for a coastal climate. Air-system fittings, brake-line steel, electrical grounds, and ABS sensors fail at two to three times the inland rate, and the trailer fleets running US-17 and US-501 daily show it. Layer in the hurricane corridor, where Florence (2018), Matthew (2016), and Ian (2022) each forced full Grand Strand evacuations that kicked freight onto SC-22 and US-501 westbound contraflow, and you have a market that punishes any vendor without a real coastal playbook. Our Myrtle Beach mechanics work in this envelope every day and stock corrosion-resistant parts on every service truck.
Whether you're a fleet manager dispatching from Charlotte with a load stranded at the Carolina Forest exit on US-501, or an owner-operator hauling a snowbird's RV down US-17 toward a Memorial Day check-in deadline, the closest verified, insurance-current vendor in our Myrtle Beach network is reached through a single phone call or service request. Coordination, dispatch, and ETA confirmation are handled by Road Rescue Network's 24/7 operations team, with hurricane-season escalation protocols active from June 1 through November 30.