Laredo, TX Coverage

Heavy-Duty Towing in Laredo, TX.

Network of 5 verified laredo-area providers. Average dispatch under 40 minutes. Insurance-current vendors. 24/7 dispatch from a single point of contact.

4 vendors on-call right now
Aerial view of the World Trade Bridge cargo crossing connecting Laredo, Texas to Nuevo Laredo, Mexico
4
Vendors on-call now
43 min
Average dispatch ETA
167
Calls last 30 days
24/7
Always available
Vendor Network

Featured Laredo Service Providers

Insurance-current network vendors with verified compliance, equipment, and live availability status.

Response Times

Average Heavy-Duty Towing Response Times in Laredo

Rolling 30-day average dispatch-to-arrival, by service type, across the local vendor network.

Mobile Truck Repair
36 min
Heavy-Duty Towing
43 min
Tire Service
28 min
Commercial Tire Repair
31 min
Mobile RV Repair
58 min
Mobile Welding
46 min
Mobile Bus Repair
60 min
Fuel Delivery
25 min
Lockout Service
21 min
Battery Jumpstart
23 min
Winching & Recovery
51 min
Trailer Repair
42 min
Live Coverage Map

Laredo, TX vendor coverage map

A live map of every Road Rescue Network vendor across the Laredo metro, with real-time positions, ETAs, and dispatch status — available inside your dashboard.

Map of Laredo, TX metro vendor coverage area
4 on-call · Laredo metro
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Sign in to track network vendors across Laredo in real time, dispatch jobs, and confirm ETA before the truck rolls.

Interstate Coverage

Laredo TX Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage

Each corridor has a dedicated breakdown landing page with service zones, exits, and recent dispatched jobs.

Interstate 35 shield

Interstate 35

14 exits in Laredo

The Mexico-to-Minnesota north-south backbone, with its US southern terminus at the Laredo bridge crossing. The single most-traveled freight artery in the NAFTA / USMCA corridor; common service points at the US-59 split, the Loop 20 stack, and the IH-35 / FM-1472 (Mines Road) interchange.

US Route 59 shield

US Route 59

9 exits in Laredo

The corridor from Houston northwest to Laredo via Victoria; future I-69 alignment. Heavy maquiladora and customs-broker freight; service-call hot spots at the Loop 20 interchange and the Free Trade Bridge approach.

US Route 83 shield

US Route 83

8 exits in Laredo

The Rio Grande Valley north-south corridor running south to McAllen and Brownsville. Heavy agricultural, oilfield, and Eagle Ford-shale freight; common breakdown zones in the South Laredo / Rio Bravo stretch.

Texas Loop 20 shield

Texas Loop 20

12 exits in Laredo

The Bob Bullock Loop encircling Laredo, the primary truck bypass for through-freight and the connector between the World Trade Bridge approach and I-35. Service points cluster around the I-35 stack and the US-59 / US-83 interchanges.

Texas State Highway 359 shield

Texas State Highway 359

5 exits in Laredo

East-west route from Laredo east toward Hebbronville and Alice. Heavy oilfield-services and Eagle Ford-shale freight; service points at the Loop 20 and Cuatro Vientos interchanges.

FM 1472 (Mines Road) shield

FM 1472 (Mines Road)

8 exits in Laredo

The Mines Road customs-broker corridor running northwest from I-35 to the World Trade Bridge approach. Lined with hundreds of broker yards, in-bond warehouses, and freight-forwarder facilities; the highest-density freight corridor in the city.

Local Breakdown Patterns

Common Heavy-Duty Towing Issues in Laredo

Patterns observed across recent dispatch data in this metro, by service type and corridor.

World Trade Bridge queue tire blowout in 105-degree afternoon heat

When a customs broker has a flatbed staged for a 1500 bridge-crossing window with a customs cutoff at 1700, a tire blowout in the bridge queue or on Mines Road is a hard-deadline event. Pavement and tire temperatures regularly hit 130 degrees in July and August, and sidewall failures on under-inflated trailer tires are a daily occurrence. Our Laredo dispatchers run a Mines Road tire-service protocol with multiple commercial-tire trucks pre-positioned along FM-1472 during peak afternoon windows. Average response inside the corridor during these windows holds at 25 minutes.

Dust-storm zero-visibility event on I-35 north of Encinal

When a Coahuila Plateau dust event (locally called a haboob) rolls northeast across the brush country, I-35 between Cotulla and Laredo can drop to less than 100 feet of visibility for 30 to 60 minutes. TxDOT recommends pulling fully off the shoulder; vendors who don't know the dust-storm protocol run multiple-vehicle pile-up risk. Our Laredo network maintains a dust-event playbook with pre-staged service trucks at TA Encinal so we can dispatch immediately once visibility clears. We carry surplus air-cleaner cartridges and turbo-intake gaskets year-round for post-storm air-system fixes.

Mid-July A/C compressor seizure on Loop 20

Late July in Laredo runs 105 to 110 degrees with overnight lows in the high 70s, and trucks running Loop 20 with cab A/Cs cycling continuously see compressor seizures and electric-fan motor burnouts daily. The closed-cab heat-soak inside the trailer broker yards on Mines Road regularly hits 140 degrees, which kills any plastic A/C-system component near its design limit. Our Laredo service trucks carry compressor-rebuild kits, R-134a and R-1234yf charging gear, and surplus electric fan motors as standing inventory year-round.

City Profile

Laredo TX Trucking & Freight Industry Overview

Laredo is the busiest land port in the United States. The World Trade Bridge handles over 16,000 commercial-truck crossings on a peak day, more than any other US-Mexico crossing combined, and the city's I-35 corridor is the single most-traveled freight artery between the maquiladora belt of northern Mexico and the US distribution networks of Dallas, Kansas City, Chicago, and Detroit. The Texas Mexican Railway and the Kansas City Southern de Mexico intermodal yards layer rail volume on top, and the customs brokerage cluster along Mines Road and US-83 carries thousands of in-bond and consumed-entry loads daily.

Laredo is a city in the U.S. state of Texas and the county seat and largest city of Webb County, on the north bank of the Rio Grande in South Texas, across from Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, Mexico. Founded in 1755, Laredo grew from a village to the capital of the short-lived Republic of the Rio Grande to the largest inland port on the Mexican border. Laredo's economy is primarily based on international trade with Mexico, and as a major hub for three areas of transportation: land, rail, and air cargo. The city is on the southern end of I-35, which connects manufacturers in northern Mexico through Interstate 35 as a major route for trade throughout the U.S. It has four international bridges and two railway bridges.

Laredo's freight economy is the World Trade Bridge clock. Sixteen thousand commercial trucks cross the bridge on a peak day, each one carrying $50,000 to $250,000 worth of freight, and every minute a truck spends idling in the bridge queue or stranded on Mines Road is money cooking off in the South Texas sun. A breakdown anywhere between the Free Trade Bridge approach on US-59 and the customs broker yards on Mines Road during a Tuesday afternoon, with the bridge running a 90-minute wait, can cost a logistics-services company a five-figure detention charge by the next day. Road Rescue Network's Laredo vendors are pre-positioned along the Mines Road corridor and at the Loop 20 / I-35 stack with response capacity calibrated for the daily reality that bridge freight runs to a customs clock, not a shipping clock.

Laredo's mechanics work in a heat envelope that few US cities match. June through September runs 100 to 110 degrees daily, with overnight lows in the high 70s and ground-radiated heat that holds tire-and-pavement temperatures at 130 degrees through midnight. Tire blowouts, A/C compressor seizures, brake-hose failures, and electrical-ground corrosion (from sweat-soaked under-cab wiring) run year-round, with peak call volume in July and August. Layer in the dust storms that roll up from the Coahuilan Plateau and the rare but disruptive Gulf-rooted thunderstorm flooding around the Zacate Creek crossing, and you have a market with a service-call rhythm that does not stop.

Whether you're a fleet manager dispatching from Dallas with a load stranded at the Mines Road customs broker corridor, or an owner-operator on US-83 trying to make a Free Trade Bridge crossing window before a customs cutoff, the closest verified, insurance-current vendor in our Laredo 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 bridge-window and customs-broker-cluster escalation protocols active around the clock.

Customer Reviews

Verified Heavy-Duty Towing Reviews & Ratings, Laredo

Reviews collected from fleet customers and drivers after completed service calls in this metro.

Sidewall blew on a flatbed in the Mines Road broker yard at 1430 with a 1700 customs cutoff. RRN tire truck rolled in 22 minutes with the right size, swapped it on the asphalt with a heat shield mat. We made the cutoff with 45 minutes to spare. This is what response time looks like in summer Laredo.

Eduardo R., customs broker logisticsCommercial Tire Repair ·

A/C compressor seized on I-35 northbound near the Loop 20 stack at 1430, 108 degrees outside. Tech was there in 30 minutes with a rebuild kit. Worked through the heat, got me cold air and rolling. Polite, professional, fair invoice. Saved me from a heat-stroke run to Cotulla.

Marisol G., owner-operatorMobile Truck Repair ·

Tractor lost transmission on Loop 20 east near the airport. Wrecker was professional, got us pulled to the FleetPride yard cleanly. One star off because the original ETA was 40 min and it took 55, but the operator knew the loop layout and the tow itself was solid.

Hector V., fleet supervisorHeavy-Duty Towing ·
FAQ

Heavy-Duty Towing Laredo FAQ. Pricing, Coverage & Response Time

How fast can a mobile mechanic reach me in Laredo?

Average dispatch-to-arrival in Laredo is 36 minutes for mobile truck repair. Inside the I-35 / Loop 20 / Mines Road triangle you'll see closer to 22 minutes; calls south to Rio Bravo or out the TX-359 corridor toward Hebbronville add 20-30 minutes. We track every call and post real averages, not marketing fluff.

Do you cover the World Trade Bridge approach and Mines Road?

Yes. The Mines Road / FM-1472 customs-broker corridor is the densest service zone in our network, with multiple commercial-tire and mobile-truck-repair trucks pre-positioned along the corridor during peak afternoon bridge-crossing windows.

Are the vendors in your Laredo network insurance-verified?

Every Road Rescue Network vendor in Laredo is required to maintain current general liability, automobile liability, workers comp, and (where applicable) garage-keepers insurance. We re-verify every renewal cycle. Expired insurance equals automatic suspension from dispatch.

Do you work with national fleet accounts and customs brokers?

Yes. We service national accounts and Laredo customs brokers with consolidated invoicing, fleet-card billing, and a single point of contact. Most accounts onboard in under 48 hours. Reach out via the form on this page or call our dispatch line.

What hours are you available?

24/7/365. There is no after-hours surcharge in our Laredo network; vendors quote the same rate at 3am as at 3pm.

Do you have a summer-heat protocol for tire and A/C calls?

Yes. From May 15 through October 1 our Laredo network runs an extreme-heat protocol with multiple commercial-tire trucks pre-positioned along Mines Road during 1300-1900 windows and surplus A/C-compressor and electric-fan inventory on every primary truck.

Which truck stops near Laredo do you service at?

We dispatch routinely to Pilot #303 (I-35 Exit 13), Love's #444 (I-35 Exit 18), Flying J #677 at Killam (I-35 Exit 12), and TA Encinal (I-35 Exit 50) for north-of-Laredo staging. For drivers in the broker corridor we also dispatch directly to FM-1472 / Mines Road yards.

Do you handle DPF and after-treatment work roadside?

Most DPF regen issues we resolve roadside with a forced regen and a cleaning of the differential pressure sensor. Full DPF removal/cleaning happens at our partner shops along Killam Industrial. We tell you upfront which path we are taking.

What's the price range for a service call in Laredo?

Standard service-call dispatch fee runs $150-220 in the Laredo metro depending on time of day and service type. Heavy-duty towing starts around $450 for in-city moves; bridge-corridor calls during peak windows run higher. We give a confirmed quote before the truck rolls.

Can I get a recurring fleet preventive-maintenance schedule?

Yes. Several of our Laredo vendors run fleet-PM programs with scheduled visits to your yard or terminal, including customs-broker corridor PM packages with extreme-heat tire and A/C inspections. Tell us your fleet size and DOT inspection cadence and we'll match you with the right shop.

Recent Dispatches

Recent Heavy-Duty Towing Service Calls in Laredo

Sample of recent dispatched service calls in this metro. Customer details removed; locations and response times preserved.

WhenServiceLocationResponse
Tuesday 14:38 CTCommercial Tire RepairFM-1472 Mines Rd customs broker yard24 min
Monday 22:14 CTMobile Truck RepairI-35 N Killam Industrial exit33 min
Monday 11:45 CTHeavy-Duty TowingLoop 20 N near US-59 split46 min
Sunday 09:18 CTMobile RV RepairLake Casa Blanca International RV park58 min
Saturday 19:51 CTMobile WeldingKCS de Mexico intermodal yard47 min
Saturday 03:27 CTMobile Bus RepairEl Metro transit base64 min
Friday 16:09 CTFuel DeliveryI-35 S near Loop 20 ramp24 min
Thursday 12:33 CTBattery JumpstartWorld Trade Bridge inspection lot22 min
Nearby Coverage

Heavy-Duty Towing Service Coverage Near Laredo

Coverage in surrounding cities and metros across the same network of verified vendors.

Service Catalog Deep-Dive

Every Mobile Truck Repair Service Available in Laredo

The full menu of what our network handles roadside and at partner shops across the Laredo metro. Click any category to expand the service list for that system.

01Engine & Drivetrain

Diesel engine diagnostics

Roadside diagnostic plug-in and live data review for Cummins, Detroit, Paccar MX, and Volvo D-series engines across the Laredo corridor.

Coolant + thermostat service

Cooling-system flush, hose replacement, and thermostat swap on-scene. Common Laredo summer call from grade-climbing trucks.

Fuel-injector + lift-pump

Injector swap and lift-pump replacement roadside. Most fuel-related no-starts in Laredo are resolved without a tow.

DEF + emissions diagnostics

DEF doser, NOx sensor, and SCR fault clearing. Long-haul refueling across the Laredo metro generates frequent DEF-related faults.

Turbocharger + exhaust

Turbo inspection, actuator replacement, and exhaust-leak repair. Heavy load corridors in Laredo stress turbo bearings; common fall service call.

Clutch + transmission

Clutch adjustment, hydraulic-line repair, and minor transmission service. Major rebuilds route to Laredo partner shops.

02Brakes & Suspension

Air brake system service

Slack-adjuster, valve, and chamber replacement on-scene. Air-system events are the #1 brake call in Laredo, especially November-February.

Brake pad + drum service

Pad and drum replacement at the shoulder when conditions allow. Laredo corridor descent grades drive frequent brake-fade events.

Air dryer + compressor

Dryer rebuild, compressor inspection, and moisture-trap service. Winter freeze-ups in Laredo are weekly calls between December and February.

ABS + ECM diagnostics

Anti-lock brake faults, sensor replacement, and ECM fault-clearing. Common after long-distance hauls into the Laredo metro.

Air bag + leveling-valve

Air-bag replacement and ride-height valve service. Laredo pothole season generates a steady volume of suspension calls.

Shock + steering

Shock absorbers, drag link, and steering damper replacement. Important for heavy-duty trucks operating across Laredo on a daily basis.

03Electrical & A/C

Battery + alternator

Battery test, replacement, and alternator service on-scene. Cold-start failures across the Laredo metro generate disproportionate winter call volume.

Starter motor service

Starter replacement, solenoid service, and battery cable repair. Common Laredo no-start cause when the battery tests good.

Wiring + lighting

Trailer-cable repair, marker-light replacement, and 7-pin connector service. Required for DOT compliance across Laredo corridors.

HVAC + cab climate

Compressor inspection, refrigerant recharge, blower-motor replacement. Important year-round for sleeper trucks parked overnight in Laredo.

ECM + body-control

Body-control module fault clearing, parameter resets, and software flashes when supported. Laredo dispatch coordinates with OEM dealers as needed.

Inverter + APU service

Auxiliary power unit and inverter diagnostics. Sleeper trucks idling overnight in Laredo rely on APUs to avoid main-engine fuel burn.

04Wheels, Tires & Trailer

Mobile tire replacement

On-scene tire replacement for steer, drive, and trailer positions. Laredo metro response under 35 minutes; long-haul refueling stops the fastest.

Tire repair + inflation

Plug, patch, and inflation service when tire is repairable. Common after construction-debris incidents on Laredo corridors.

Wheel-end + bearing service

Wheel-end seal, bearing replacement, and oil-bath service when conditions allow roadside. Heavy work routes to a Laredo-area shop.

Trailer landing-gear

Landing-gear repair and crank-handle replacement. Important when the trailer drops a leg in a Laredo yard or rest area.

Reefer unit + thermostat

Refrigeration unit diagnostics, belt service, and thermostat replacement. Laredo produce and food-service freight relies on cold-chain integrity.

Coupling + 5th wheel

5th wheel inspection, kingpin service, and air-line repair. Laredo freight yards generate a steady volume of coupling-related calls.

OEM Coverage

Every Major Truck Manufacturer Serviced in Laredo

Network mechanics carry the diagnostic tools, parts catalog access, and OEM training to service every Class 3-8 truck on the road today across the Laredo metro.

Freightliner logo
Peterbilt logo
Kenworth logo
Mack logo
International logo
Western Star logo
Hino logo
Isuzu logo
Ford logo
Chevrolet logo
Ram logo

Whatever you drive — long-haul Class 8, medium-duty straight truck, or fleet-management box truck — our Laredo network covers it. Logos shown for identification only; not endorsements by the OEMs.

Distribution & Freight

Laredo Distribution Centers, Warehouses & Freight Hubs

Major shippers, distribution centers, and industrial freight nodes generating outbound and inbound truck volume.

World Trade Bridge customs broker cluster

FM-1472 Mines Rd, Laredo, TX 78045
FM-1472

Hundreds of customs brokers, in-bond warehouses, and freight-forwarder facilities

Free Trade Bridge cargo gate

9201 Bob Bullock Loop, Laredo, TX 78045
Loop 20 / US-59

Secondary cargo crossing, predominantly maquiladora freight

Kansas City Southern de Mexico intermodal yard

1200 Riverhill Loop, Laredo, TX 78045
I-35 / US-83

Major intermodal cluster, Mexico-US rail freight

Laredo International Airport cargo

5200 Bob Bullock Loop, Laredo, TX 78041
Loop 20

Regional cargo and customs logistics

Killam Industrial Park

Killam Industrial Blvd, Laredo, TX
I-35 Exit 12

Major distribution and customs-broker support cluster

Mines Road Industrial Corridor

FM-1472 Mines Rd, Laredo, TX
FM-1472

The densest freight corridor in the United States by truck-density per mile

How It Works

How Heavy-Duty Towing Dispatch Works in Laredo

Three steps from breakdown to back on the road. Same flow whether you call from a fleet desk or the shoulder of an interstate.

01

Call dispatch

One number reaches Road Rescue Network's 24/7 operations team. Describe the problem in plain language; we capture your location, vehicle, and need in under 60 seconds. Laredo response begins immediately.

02

We dispatch

We match the call to the closest verified, insurance-current Laredo-area provider with the right equipment. Confirmed ETA goes to you before the truck rolls — no waiting for callbacks.

03

Truck rolls

The service truck arrives at the confirmed ETA. Most Laredo calls are resolved roadside without a tow. If a tow is needed, the network coordinates it without a second response window.

Accepted Payment

Payment methods accepted across the network

Network vendors accept all major credit cards, fleet cards, and consumer payment apps. Confirmed at dispatch.

Visa logo
Mastercard logo
American Express logo
Discover logo
Comdata
EFS logo
Zelle logo
Cash App logo
Venmo logo