Kendall, FL.
Kendall is one of South Florida's largest suburban distribution zones, where the Florida Turnpike, the Don Shula Expressway, and the Snapper Creek Expressway converge to feed retail, grocery, and big-box freight across southwest Miami-Dade. Dadeland's commercial core and the warehouse clusters along Kendall Drive and SW 137th Avenue keep delivery box trucks, reefers, and LTL carriers running constantly. The dense grid means a breakdown on a key arterial backs up freight for miles.
Every roadside service we run in Kendall
Featured Kendall Service Providers
Insurance-current network rescuers with verified compliance, equipment, and live availability status.
Dadeland Mobile Truck Repair
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 7
- 12 years in business
- Insurance verified
West Kendall Commercial Tire
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 5
- 9 years in business
- Insurance verified
Tamiami Mobile Welding & Fleet
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 6
- 8 years in business
- Insurance verified
Kendall FL Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage
Each corridor has a dedicated breakdown landing page with service zones, exits, and recent dispatched jobs.

Florida's Turnpike (HEFT)
4 exits in Kendall
The Homestead Extension runs the western edge of Kendall, the main high-speed freight route through southwest Miami-Dade. Heavy congestion and frequent service calls at the Kendall Drive (SW 88th St) and SW 120th St interchanges.

Don Shula Expressway (FL-874)
2 exits in Kendall
Connects the Palmetto Expressway to the Turnpike across central Kendall, a key reliever for retail and commuter freight. Toll-gantry merge zones are common breakdown points.

Snapper Creek Expressway (FL-878)
1 exits in Kendall
Short east-west expressway linking the Don Shula to US-1 near Dadeland. Dense daytime delivery traffic serving the mall and medical district.

US Route 1 (South Dixie Hwy)
0 exits in Kendall
The historic surface artery along Kendall's eastern edge through Dadeland, paralleled by the Metrorail. Heavy local-delivery box-truck and retail-resupply traffic.

Palmetto Expressway (FL-826)
0 exits in Kendall
The Palmetto skirts north Kendall, connecting to the Don Shula and the broader Miami freight network. One of the busiest urban freeways in Florida; recurrent congestion-related calls.

Kendall Drive (SW 88th St)
0 exits in Kendall
The principal east-west arterial through the heart of Kendall, lined with retail centers and grocery freight. Constant box-truck delivery activity; flooding at the Turnpike underpass in summer.
Kendall FL Trucking & Freight Industry Overview
Kendall is one of South Florida's largest suburban distribution zones, where the Florida Turnpike, the Don Shula Expressway, and the Snapper Creek Expressway converge to feed retail, grocery, and big-box freight across southwest Miami-Dade. Dadeland's commercial core and the warehouse clusters along Kendall Drive and SW 137th Avenue keep delivery box trucks, reefers, and LTL carriers running constantly. The dense grid means a breakdown on a key arterial backs up freight for miles.
Kendall is an unincorporated area and census-designated place in Miami-Dade County, Florida, United States. It is a principal city in the Miami metropolitan area. At the 2020 census, the area had a population of 80,241.
Kendall sits at the convergence of the Florida Turnpike, the Don Shula Expressway, and the Snapper Creek Expressway, the three roads that carry nearly all of southwest Miami-Dade's retail and grocery freight. When a delivery truck loses air or a reefer faults on the Turnpike near the Kendall Drive interchange at rush hour, the backup ripples across the whole grid. Road Rescue Network's Kendall rescuers stage near the Dadeland commercial core and the SW 137th Avenue warehouse belt, and our 24/7 operations team confirms ETA on every call.
Anyone who's dispatched a truck through Kendall during a summer afternoon knows the drill: South Florida's daily thunderstorms flood the low underpasses on the expressways, drop visibility to nothing, and turn the evening freight push into a crawl. Our network is built around mechanics who know which Kendall interchanges flood first and who carry the electrical and water-displacement gear that storm-season stalls demand.
Whether you are a fleet manager routing grocery freight to the Publix stores along Kendall Drive or an owner-operator pulling LTL off the Turnpike into the West Kendall warehouses, the nearest verified, insurance-current rescuer in our network is one phone call away. We dispatch around the clock with no after-hours surcharge.