San Antonio, TX.
San Antonio is the southern anchor of I-35 and the inland staging point for NAFTA freight running between Laredo and the rest of the US. The Toyota Tundra/Tacoma plant on the south side generates a constant inbound auto-parts cycle, the I-410 and I-1604 loops absorb every drayage move heading north out of the border, and the H-E-B corporate distribution network out of San Antonio supplies most of South Texas. Summer 105-degree heat punishes tires and cooling systems for four months straight, and the I-35 chokepoint between San Antonio and Austin is one of the most operationally significant freight corridors in the country.
Every roadside service we run in San Antonio
Featured San Antonio Service Providers
Insurance-current network vendors with verified compliance, equipment, and live availability status.
Alamo Mobile Truck Repair
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 10
- 13 years in business
- Insurance verified
Mission Tire & Service
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 7
- 10 years in business
- Insurance verified
NAFTA Corridor 24/7 Recovery
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 12
- 12 years in business
- Insurance verified
San Antonio TX Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage
Each corridor has a dedicated breakdown landing page with service zones, exits, and recent dispatched jobs.

Interstate 35
23 exits in San Antonio
The NAFTA-corridor north-south spine running from Laredo through San Antonio up to Austin. Heavy congestion and continuous construction through the I-410 and I-1604 splits; common breakdown zones at the Selma and Schertz exits.

Interstate 10
17 exits in San Antonio
The southern transcontinental corridor running through San Antonio between Houston and El Paso. Heavy fleet traffic at the I-410 and I-1604 splits; common service zone at the I-37/I-10 stack downtown.

Interstate 37
14 exits in San Antonio
The corpus-Christi-to-San-Antonio south corridor. Toyota plant inbound and Eagle Ford energy-sector freight; common breakdown zone at the Loop 410 South split and the Brooks City Base interchange.

Interstate 410
26 exits in San Antonio
The inner Loop 410 around San Antonio, 53 miles. Heavy fleet traffic at every interstate intersection; standing breakdown clusters at the I-35/I-410 north and the I-37/I-410 south interchanges.

US Route 281
13 exits in San Antonio
The north-south route from McAllen through San Antonio to the Hill Country. Heavy box-truck and last-mile delivery volume; common service zone at the US-281/Loop 1604 stack on the city's north side.

US Route 90
11 exits in San Antonio
The east-west route from Houston through San Antonio out to Del Rio. Heavy military and federal-contract freight feeding Lackland AFB and Joint Base San Antonio; tight curves at the I-410 west split.
San Antonio TX Trucking & Freight Industry Overview
San Antonio is the southern anchor of I-35 and the inland staging point for NAFTA freight running between Laredo and the rest of the US. The Toyota Tundra/Tacoma plant on the south side generates a constant inbound auto-parts cycle, the I-410 and I-1604 loops absorb every drayage move heading north out of the border, and the H-E-B corporate distribution network out of San Antonio supplies most of South Texas. Summer 105-degree heat punishes tires and cooling systems for four months straight, and the I-35 chokepoint between San Antonio and Austin is one of the most operationally significant freight corridors in the country.
San Antonio is a city in the U.S. state of Texas. It is the seventh-most populous city in the United States, the second-most populous city in Texas, and the second-most populous city in the Southern U.S., with a population of 1.43 million at the 2020 census. The Greater San Antonio metropolitan area, with an estimated 2.76 million residents, ranks as the third-largest metropolitan area in Texas and the 24th-largest in the nation. It is the county seat of Bexar County.
San Antonio's freight economy runs on the NAFTA freight surge out of Laredo, the Toyota plant's continuous inbound auto-parts cycle, and a summer heat that turns I-410 and I-1604 into tire-failure highways from June through September. Road Rescue Network's San Antonio vendors plan around all of it. Our dispatch averages beat regional benchmarks because our mechanics already know which I-35 truck stops between Selma and Schertz cluster the cross-border breakdowns and which Toyota plant gates accept after-hours service trucks.
Anyone who has dispatched a truck up I-35 from Laredo to San Antonio knows the line of trucks at the FAST/SENTRI inspection points stretches for miles on heavy days, and a breakdown anywhere in that line backs up cross-border freight for hours. Our Laredo-corridor service trucks are pre-staged to respond inside 30 minutes from anywhere between exits 144 and 165. Add the perpetual San Antonio summer at 105 degrees and the operational reality of hauling NAFTA freight during the inland heat soak, and you have a service-call pattern unique to the Texas-Mexico corridor.
Whether you are running a Toyota inbound from Mexico, hauling H-E-B grocery freight up I-35 to Austin, or running a Joint Base San Antonio defense contract from Randolph to Fort Sam, the closest verified, insurance-current vendor in our San Antonio 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.