Irving, TX.
Irving sits directly against DFW International Airport, making it one of the most air-cargo-intensive freight markets in the country and a corporate logistics hub within the DFW grid. TX-114, TX-183 (Airport Freeway), and the President George Bush Turnpike funnel air freight, corporate distribution, and last-mile volume around the clock. The Las Colinas business district concentrates Fortune 500 headquarters and the time-sensitive freight they generate. As an airport-edge city in North America's top inland logistics market, Irving runs heavy on expedited and just-in-time freight.
Every roadside service we run in Irving
Featured Irving Service Providers
Insurance-current network rescuers with verified compliance, equipment, and live availability status.
DFW Corridor Mobile Truck Repair
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 8
- 12 years in business
- Insurance verified
Las Colinas Heavy Recovery
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 13
- 17 years in business
- Insurance verified
Airport Freeway Commercial Tire
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 6
- 10 years in business
- Insurance verified
Carpenter Freeway Mobile Welding
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 6
- 14 years in business
- Insurance verified
Irving TX Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage
Each corridor has a dedicated breakdown landing page with service zones, exits, and recent dispatched jobs.

State Highway 114 (John W. Carpenter Freeway)
7 exits in Irving
The Carpenter Freeway running through Las Colinas and into DFW Airport's north entrance, Irving's primary air-cargo artery. Breakdowns cluster at the TX-114/TX-161 interchange and the airport-entrance ramps.
State Highway 183 (Airport Freeway)
6 exits in Irving
The Airport Freeway, the dense east-west corridor along Irving's southern edge linking DFW to downtown Dallas. Heavy with air-cargo drayage and last-mile freight; frequent congestion at the Loop 12 and MacArthur Blvd ramps.
President George Bush Turnpike (SH-161)
5 exits in Irving
The Bush Turnpike, the tolled north-south corridor on Irving's west side feeding DFW's south entrance and the Grand Prairie distribution belt. A relief valve for airport freight dodging the 114/183 jams.

Interstate 635 (LBJ Freeway)
4 exits in Irving
The LBJ Freeway crossing north Irving, connecting the airport corridor to the wider DFW loop. The I-635/TX-114 interchange near the airport is a major freight convergence and recovery zone.
Loop 12 (Walton Walker Boulevard)
5 exits in Irving
Walton Walker Boulevard along Irving's east edge, a freight loop linking the Airport Freeway down toward I-30 and the Dallas industrial belt. Steady box-truck and drayage volume.

Interstate 35E (Stemmons Freeway)
0 exits in Irving
The Stemmons Freeway just east of Irving, the long-haul north-south backbone our rescuers reach for cross-country breakdowns feeding the airport corridor and the Dallas Market Center district.
Irving TX Trucking & Freight Industry Overview
Irving sits directly against DFW International Airport, making it one of the most air-cargo-intensive freight markets in the country and a corporate logistics hub within the DFW grid. TX-114, TX-183 (Airport Freeway), and the President George Bush Turnpike funnel air freight, corporate distribution, and last-mile volume around the clock. The Las Colinas business district concentrates Fortune 500 headquarters and the time-sensitive freight they generate. As an airport-edge city in North America's top inland logistics market, Irving runs heavy on expedited and just-in-time freight.
Irving is a city in Dallas County, Texas, United States. It is part of the Mid-Cities region of the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex and is an inner city suburb of Dallas. The city had a population of 256,684 according to the 2020 United States census, making it the twelfth-most populous city in Texas, and the 91st most populous in the U.S. Irving includes the Las Colinas mixed-use master-planned community and part of the Dallas Fort Worth International Airport.
Irving's location at the doorstep of DFW International Airport makes it one of the busiest air-cargo freight markets in the country, where an expedited load that misses its window costs real money fast. When a tractor goes down on TX-114 or the Airport Freeway feeding that cargo, Road Rescue Network's verified mobile rescuers are staged across the airport-edge corridors to respond. Average dispatch-to-arrival in Irving beats the DFW benchmark even in the relentless afternoon rush.
Irving sits at the convergence of TX-114, TX-183, and the Bush Turnpike, a freight grid built around the airport and the Las Colinas corporate district, where just-in-time and expedited freight dominate. The breakdown patterns follow the climate: 100-plus North Texas summers that cook tires and cooling systems on the elevated airport ramps, and the occasional ice storm that glazes those same ramps overnight. Our network is built around mechanics who work the airport freight lanes daily and handle both extremes.
Whether you're a fleet manager moving air cargo off DFW or an owner-operator down on the Bush Turnpike near the Las Colinas exits, the closest insurance-current rescuer in our Irving network is one phone call away. Coordination, dispatch, and live ETA confirmation run through Road Rescue Network's 24/7 operations team, so a dispatcher in Seattle gets the same fast response a local DFW air-freight broker would.