College Station, TX.
College Station anchors the TX-6 / TX-21 cross — the Brazos Valley's primary freight intersection — channeling Texas A&M University logistics, Aggie game-day surge supply, and Houston-to-Waco long-haul through Brazos County. The Texas A&M campus drives a freight footprint larger than most cities triple its size, with research-lab supplies, athletic-facility logistics, and the 100,000-seat Kyle Field stadium driving fall Saturday surge events. Central Texas heat and surprise thunderstorm windows shape a call mix unique to the Brazos Valley.
Every roadside service we run in College Station
Featured College Station Service Providers
Insurance-current network vendors with verified compliance, equipment, and live availability status.
Aggie Mobile Diesel
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 8
- 13 years in business
- Insurance verified
Kyle Field Commercial Tire & Fleet
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 6
- 11 years in business
- Insurance verified
Sandy Point Roadside 24/7
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 9
- 8 years in business
- Insurance verified
College Station TX Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage
Each corridor has a dedicated breakdown landing page with service zones, exits, and recent dispatched jobs.

Texas State Highway 6
11 exits in College Station
The Brazos Valley's primary north-south freight artery, Houston to Waco. Through College Station, TX-6 carries A&M campus traffic, Aggie game-day surge, and the daily Bryan-Houston freight flow. Common breakdown zones at the FM-2818 and University Drive interchanges.

Texas State Highway 21
5 exits in College Station
East-west route from Bryan / College Station through Caldwell to Austin, and east to the Louisiana line. Old San Antonio Road; carries oilfield equipment outbound and Austin-bound long-haul.

Texas State Highway 30
6 exits in College Station
East-west route from College Station to Huntsville and I-45. Heavy local commercial traffic and a daily flow of Sam Houston State University and prison-system logistics freight.

Texas State Highway 47
4 exits in College Station
Bypass route around the western side of College Station and Bryan, connecting TX-21 to the TX-6 freeway. Standard alternate when the main TX-6 corridor backs up at game-day or rush-hour congestion.

US Route 190
0 exits in College Station
East-west route from the Bryan / College Station metro through Hearne and Cameron to the Killeen / Fort Cavazos area. Heavy military-freight and ag-haul corridor.

US Route 79
0 exits in College Station
Northeast-southwest route from the Brazos Valley through Hearne and Round Rock to Austin. Lower volume but a regular alternate when TX-21 closes for weather or oversize-load events.
College Station TX Trucking & Freight Industry Overview
College Station anchors the TX-6 / TX-21 cross — the Brazos Valley's primary freight intersection — channeling Texas A&M University logistics, Aggie game-day surge supply, and Houston-to-Waco long-haul through Brazos County. The Texas A&M campus drives a freight footprint larger than most cities triple its size, with research-lab supplies, athletic-facility logistics, and the 100,000-seat Kyle Field stadium driving fall Saturday surge events. Central Texas heat and surprise thunderstorm windows shape a call mix unique to the Brazos Valley.
College Station is a city in Brazos County, Texas, United States, situated in East-Central Texas in the Brazos Valley, towards the eastern edge of the region known as the Texas Triangle. It is 83 miles northwest of Houston and 87 miles (140 km) east-northeast of Austin. As of the 2020 census, College Station had a population of 120,511. College Station and Bryan make up the Bryan-College Station metropolitan area, the 15th-largest metropolitan area in Texas, with 268,248 people as of 2020.
College Station's freight economy runs on the TX-6 / TX-21 cross at the heart of the Brazos Valley, with Texas A&M University driving a logistics footprint that punches far above the city's size — daily lab-supply trucks, athletic-facility freight, and Aggie game-day surge supply moving through campus and the surrounding industrial parks. When a Class 8 breaks down at the TX-6 / FM-2818 interchange on a fall Saturday morning, the football traffic queue can stretch in three directions for an hour. Road Rescue Network's College Station vendors stage service trucks near the Bryan industrial belt and the TX-6 / TX-21 interchange, with average dispatch-to-arrival inside Brazos County clocking under 38 minutes.
Anyone who's dispatched a truck through the Brazos Valley in May knows the thunderstorm routine: severe-weather radar lights up, TX-6 turns into a parking lot, and outflow winds flip empty trailers on FM-2818. Our local mechanics work this terrain every storm cycle, with mobile recovery winches, brake-system parts, and air-line warming gear stocked at every College Station-area bay. Summer is its own challenge: triple-digit Central Texas heat dominates the August-September call mix, with cooling-system and battery-cell failures clustering in the late afternoon.
The mechanics in College Station who handle heavy-duty calls know A&M home-football routing, Brazos County ag freight, and Sanderson Farms refrigerated outbound like the back of their hand. Whether you're a fleet manager dispatching from Houston with a truck stranded at the Bryan TA, an owner-operator on TX-21 outside Caldwell, or a charter bus that lost air east of campus, the closest insurance-current vendor in our College Station network is reached through a single phone call.