Virginia
City Coverage

Virginia Beach, VA.

Virginia Beach anchors the eastern half of Hampton Roads, one of the deepest natural harbors on the East Coast and home to the Port of Virginia, the largest US East Coast container port for non-NY/NJ TEU growth. Drayage from the Norfolk International Terminals, Virginia International Gateway in Portsmouth, and the Newport News Marine Terminal feeds I-64, I-264, and I-664, while the dense Naval Norfolk military-cargo footprint creates a constant base of military-spec freight. Hurricane season, the Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel height and HAZMAT restrictions, and oceanfront resort surge weeks all impose freight constraints unique to this market.

4
Vendors on-call now
40 min
Average dispatch ETA
120
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Interstate Coverage

Virginia Beach VA Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage

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

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Interstate 64

14 exits in Virginia Beach

The primary east-west corridor through Hampton Roads, running from Richmond through Norfolk to Virginia Beach. Crosses the Chesapeake Bay via the Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel (HRBT), the only direct above-water route between Norfolk and the Peninsula. HRBT height restrictions (13'6 clearance) and HAZMAT prohibition divert oversize and hazmat freight to alternate corridors.

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Interstate 264

11 exits in Virginia Beach

The Virginia Beach-Norfolk Expressway, running from the I-64 cross at Norfolk east to the Virginia Beach oceanfront. Heavy resort-surge truck volume from Memorial Day through Labor Day; common service-call zones at the Witchduck Rd interchange and the Independence Blvd cluster.

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Interstate 664

9 exits in Virginia Beach

The Hampton Roads bypass, running from I-64 in Hampton through the Monitor-Merrimac Memorial Bridge-Tunnel (MMMBT) to Suffolk. Carries heavy drayage from the Newport News Marine Terminal and the Suffolk warehouse cluster; common breakdown zones at the MMMBT southern portal and the Bowers Hill stack interchange.

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US Route 13

7 exits in Virginia Beach

The Eastern Shore corridor, running from Norfolk across the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel (CBBT) to the Delmarva Peninsula. CBBT toll structure and weather-based wind closures create chronic dispatch constraints; common service-call zones at the southern CBBT toll plaza and the Northampton County mainland approach.

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US Route 17

8 exits in Virginia Beach

The coastal connector running from Yorktown through Newport News and across the James River Bridge to Suffolk. Heavy military and refrigerated-seafood truck volume; common breakdown spots at the James River Bridge (height 65 ft) approach and the Bowers Hill / I-664 interchange.

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US Route 58

12 exits in Virginia Beach

The southern Tidewater corridor, running from Virginia Beach (Atlantic Ave terminus) west through Suffolk and Emporia toward Bristol. Heavy oceanfront resort and drayage truck volume on the eastern Virginia Beach segment; weight and width restrictions on the resort district segments during summer event weekends.

City Profile

Virginia Beach VA Trucking & Freight Industry Overview

Virginia Beach anchors the eastern half of Hampton Roads, one of the deepest natural harbors on the East Coast and home to the Port of Virginia, the largest US East Coast container port for non-NY/NJ TEU growth. Drayage from the Norfolk International Terminals, Virginia International Gateway in Portsmouth, and the Newport News Marine Terminal feeds I-64, I-264, and I-664, while the dense Naval Norfolk military-cargo footprint creates a constant base of military-spec freight. Hurricane season, the Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel height and HAZMAT restrictions, and oceanfront resort surge weeks all impose freight constraints unique to this market.

Virginia Beach is the most populous city in the U.S. commonwealth of Virginia. The city is located on the Atlantic Ocean at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay in southeastern Virginia. It is the sixth-most populous city in the Mid-Atlantic, ninth-most populous in the Southeast, and the 42nd-most populous city in the U.S. with a population of 459,470 at the 2020 census. Virginia Beach is a principal city in the Hampton Roads metropolitan area, which has more than 1.8 million inhabitants and is the 37th-largest metropolitan area in the U.S.

Hampton Roads runs on drayage. A breakdown on I-64 at the western Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel during a 6 a.m. NIT outbound surge can shut down the only above-water alternative for the western Peninsula and ripple back through the Norfolk International Terminals chassis pool by 9 a.m. Road Rescue Network's Virginia Beach vendors are pre-positioned across Virginia Beach, Norfolk, Portsmouth, Chesapeake, and Newport News, with response times built around the reality that Hampton Roads tunnel restrictions and HAZMAT routing leave drayage carriers with very few alternates when a crossing closes.

Virginia Beach freight has a hurricane and salt-air envelope you do not see in inland Virginia. From June through November the Atlantic hurricane track puts the metro inside an evacuation contraflow zone three to four times per decade, and salt-air corrosion accelerates frame rust, brake-line failure, and electrical fault rates well above mid-Atlantic norms. Layer in the oceanfront resort surge from Memorial Day through Labor Day, with US-58 and the Atlantic Avenue corridor closed to truck routing on event weekends, and you have a freight market that punishes any equipment that is not maintained for coastal duty.

Whether you are a fleet manager dispatching from Atlanta with a truck stranded at the NIT outbound queue during a Friday container peak, or an owner-operator on US-13 north toward the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel, the closest verified, insurance-current Road Rescue Network vendor 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.