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.