Free resources

Roadside guides you can use.

Short driver-focused walkthroughs of the breakdown jobs every El Paso driver should know. Each guide comes with step-by-step instructions and a clear line on when to stop and call a tow.

All guides

What roadside fixes can you handle yourself?

Driver using a lug wrench to loosen wheel bolts on a parked vehicle in a safe pullout area in the El Paso metro
7 min watch
Safety

Change a flat tire on the side of the road

The difference between a 20-minute shoulder stop and an hour on the phone with a tow company is knowing where the spare and jack live before you need them.

Off-road vehicle stuck in loose sand with visible wheel ruts near a desert access road outside El Paso
5 min watch
Troubleshooting

What to do when stuck in sand or mud

Red Sands, the Hueco Tanks back roads, and the Rio Grande arroyos eat vehicles weekly. The first thing to do is stop making it worse.

Driver walking around their vehicle making notes before a scheduled tow in an El Paso residential street
4 min watch
Prevention

Prepare your vehicle for a tow

A few minutes of prep before the tow truck arrives saves time, avoids damage, and makes the whole call go faster.

Driver checking dashboard warning lights on a parked car in an El Paso driveway
6 min watch
Troubleshooting

Car will not start - what to check first

Before calling for a tow, there are five things to check. Most of the time the car is fine and you just need a boost, a fuse, or a key that actually talks to the transponder.

Side-by-side comparison of a flatbed tow truck and a wheel-lift tow truck loading vehicles in an El Paso service yard
5 min read
Basics

Flatbed vs wheel-lift towing: which is safer?

Both are legitimate tow methods, but the wrong one can wreck your car. Here is the plain-English answer to which method belongs on which vehicle, and when you should refuse a wheel-lift even if the operator says it is fine.

El Paso tow operator and customer discussing service options on a freeway shoulder
6 min read
Safety

Can a tow truck refuse to take my car in Texas?

Yes - but only in specific situations defined by Texas law and tow-operator policy. Here is exactly when an operator can walk away, what your rights are, and what to do if you are refused service in El Paso.

Customer checking a tow operator credentials and TDLR license number on a smartphone in an El Paso parking lot
5 min read
Basics

How to verify an El Paso tow company is licensed

Anyone can buy a flatbed and a phone number. Verifying a tow operator's TDLR license, USDOT number, and insurance takes 5 minutes and protects you from the predatory operators that make local news every year.

Red flags

When should you stop and call a tow truck?

Six signs that the problem is past DIY. Turn the system off and pick up the phone - running a system with these issues turns cheap repairs into expensive replacements.

  • You are on the shoulder of a busy freeway

    I-10, US-54, and Loop 375 shoulders are among the most dangerous places to stand in El Paso. Stay in the vehicle with seatbelts on and call for a tow.

  • The vehicle was in any collision

    Even light collisions can damage suspension, brakes, or the steering rack in ways you cannot see. Drive it after an accident only if law enforcement clears the scene and the vehicle is visibly intact.

  • Ignition or dashboard is smoking

    Electrical fires can progress from smoke to flames in under a minute. Pull over if you can, turn the engine off, get out, and call 911 plus a tow.

  • Smoke or steam from under the hood

    Overheating or a serious oil/coolant leak. Continuing to drive can cause a seized engine - a $4,000+ repair. Pull over safely and call for a tow.

  • Vehicle is AWD, 4WD, or electric and the drive wheels will not spin freely

    Dragging an AWD or EV on a wheel lift destroys the drivetrain. Always flatbed - no exceptions. Tell the dispatcher your make and model when you call.

  • Water, mud, or sand up to the door sills

    Water-damaged electrical systems start unpredictable fires. Do not try to start the car. Flatbed out of the terrain, tow to a shop for a proper assessment.

Serving the El Paso metro

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