Plano, TX.
Plano sits on the north edge of the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, where US-75 (Central Expressway), the Sam Rayburn Tollway (SH-121), and US-380 carry the corporate-campus freight of one of the densest business districts in Texas. The Legacy and Legacy West districts, home to Toyota, JPMorgan, and Frito-Lay headquarters, drive constant supplier, e-commerce, and last-mile delivery volume. As DFW's affluent north spills into Collin County, Plano has become a major distribution and last-mile node.
Every roadside service we run in Plano
Featured Plano Service Providers
Insurance-current network rescuers with verified compliance, equipment, and live availability status.
Plano TX Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage
Each corridor has a dedicated breakdown landing page with service zones, exits, and recent dispatched jobs.

US Route 75 / Central Expressway
11 exits in Plano
Central Expressway, Plano's main north-south freight artery linking downtown Dallas to McKinney and the Oklahoma line. The elevated segment through the Plano corporate district and the SH-121 interchange are constant service zones.

State Highway 121 / Sam Rayburn Tollway
7 exits in Plano
The Sam Rayburn Tollway, the east-west corridor serving Legacy West, Frisco, and the DFW airport approaches. Heavy corporate-supplier and e-commerce truck traffic through the Legacy and Preston Road interchanges.

US Route 380
5 exits in Plano
The northern east-west route through McKinney and Prosper, the fast-growing warehouse and distribution belt feeding Collin County. Common service points near the Custer Road and Coit Road corridors.

State Highway 289 / Preston Road
6 exits in Plano
Preston Road, the commercial spine through west Plano and Legacy, carrying dense box-truck and delivery traffic to the retail and office corridors. Stop-and-go conditions punish clutches and cooling in summer.

Interstate 635 / LBJ Freeway
4 exits in Plano
The LBJ Freeway loop south of Plano, the route metroplex freight uses to reach the I-35E and I-30 mainlines. The US-75 interchange at the High Five is one of the most complex in Texas.

Interstate 35E connector
3 exits in Plano
The Stemmons corridor reached via the tollway and LBJ, the long-haul mainline Plano freight uses for north-south interstate runs. The Lewisville and Denton approaches feed the regional DCs.
Plano TX Trucking & Freight Industry Overview
Plano sits on the north edge of the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, where US-75 (Central Expressway), the Sam Rayburn Tollway (SH-121), and US-380 carry the corporate-campus freight of one of the densest business districts in Texas. The Legacy and Legacy West districts, home to Toyota, JPMorgan, and Frito-Lay headquarters, drive constant supplier, e-commerce, and last-mile delivery volume. As DFW's affluent north spills into Collin County, Plano has become a major distribution and last-mile node.
Plano is a city in the U.S. state of Texas, where it is the largest city in Collin County. A small portion of Plano is located in Denton County. Plano is one of the principal suburbs of the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex. With a population of 285,494 at the 2020 census, it is the ninth most-populous city in Texas, and, respectively, the 74th most populous city in the United States.
Plano's freight economy runs on corporate campuses and the supplier-and-delivery traffic they generate, Toyota and Frito-Lay headquarters, the Legacy West towers, and the e-commerce surge into one of the wealthiest ZIP-code clusters in Texas. When a Class 8 truck breaks down on US-75 at the Sam Rayburn Tollway interchange in the afternoon, the backup ripples across the whole north metroplex. Road Rescue Network's Plano rescuers are on-call 24/7 with average dispatch-to-arrival times that beat the DFW benchmark.
The mechanics in Plano who handle heavy-duty calls know the city's rhythm: tight surface-street delivery routes through the Legacy office parks, high-speed shoulder work on the elevated Central Expressway, and the warehouse runs along US-380 toward McKinney and Frisco. Our network stages parts and trucks for each pattern, so a lift-gate failure at a Legacy West dock and a blown steer tire on the tollway get matched to the right responder.
Anyone who's dispatched a truck through Plano in August knows the Texas heat is the silent killer, 100-plus-degree afternoons that cook cooling systems, blow tires on superheated pavement, and drain batteries before their time. Whether you're a fleet manager routing supplier freight to Toyota or an owner-operator stuck at the Love's up in Anna, the closest verified, insurance-current rescuer in our Plano network is one call away. Dispatch and ETA confirmation run through Road Rescue Network's 24/7 operations team.