
San Ramon Heavy Duty Towing serves Concord with 24/7 towing, accident recovery, and roadside assistance on I-680, Highway 4, and throughout the city. We have operated in the Diablo Valley since 2019 and our operators know the Concord road network from Willow Pass Road to Clayton Road.

I-680 and Highway 4 carry traffic through Concord at every hour of the day and night, and breakdowns and accidents happen on both corridors well outside business hours. Our 24 hour towing service dispatches around the clock so Concord drivers are never left waiting on a freeway shoulder or a dark residential street.
The I-680 and Highway 4 interchange near Concord is one of the busier freeway junctions in Contra Costa County, and collision scenes there require equipment and operators who know how to work in high-traffic conditions safely. We respond to accident recovery calls throughout Concord and coordinate with CHP when rotation dispatch is required.
Concord's inland valley location means summer temperatures regularly push into the 90s, which accelerates battery drain and tire pressure swings faster than coastal Bay Area cities. Jump-starts, lockouts, and flat tire changes across Concord's residential neighborhoods and commercial corridors are calls we handle without a full tow when that is all that is needed.
Newer vehicles with all-wheel drive or low ground clearance, plus vehicles disabled in crash-damaged condition, need flatbed transport to protect the drivetrain and undercarriage during the haul. We use flatbed equipment as the default for any vehicle where wheel-lift contact with the road would cause additional damage.
Commercial vehicles serving Concord's retail corridors along Willow Pass Road and the industrial and warehouse zones near Highway 4 occasionally need heavy-duty towing when a loaded truck or commercial van is disabled. Our heavy-duty equipment handles those loads without needing to transfer cargo first.
Clay soils throughout Concord swell and soften after winter rains, and vehicles that leave paved surfaces - whether in a driveway, a construction zone, or off an embankment - can sink quickly. Rated winch equipment allows recovery without dragging the vehicle across the surface and causing additional body damage.
Concord is the largest city in Contra Costa County, covering roughly 30 square miles of inland valley between I-680 to the west and the open hillside to the east. That geography puts a significant share of daily towing demand on two freeway corridors, and a towing operator who does not regularly work those corridors will waste time figuring out access points and CHP coordination on the fly. Highway 4 links Concord east toward Antioch and west toward Pleasant Hill - any breakdown on that stretch falls within busy commute-hour traffic and needs quick, organized dispatch. Most of Concord's housing stock was built between the 1950s and 1970s, when tract home construction filled the valley floor with single-family homes on concrete slab foundations.
The clay soils under Concord expand when saturated in winter and shrink back during the long dry summer. That seasonal cycle cracks driveways, heaves curb cuts, and shifts fence posts in the postwar neighborhoods - which in turn creates flat-tire and roadside calls as cracked pavement causes blowouts and wheel damage. Summer inland heat regularly breaks 90 degrees and occasionally exceeds 100 degrees, draining batteries and causing tire pressure fluctuation faster than most drivers realize until they are already stranded. The U.S. Geological Survey documents the Concord Fault running close to the city - seismic activity is a real background factor for any business operating in this part of Contra Costa County.
Our crew works throughout Concord regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect towing work here. The City of Concord handles local ordinance and code matters for business operating within city limits, and we stay current on the permit and documentation requirements that apply to non-consensual tows and vehicle storage in this jurisdiction.
Willow Pass Road and Clayton Road are the two main surface arteries that cross the city, and both carry heavy daytime traffic through a mix of commercial strips and residential neighborhoods. Todos Santos Plaza in downtown Concord is the community center most locals use as a reference point. The Concord BART station and the North Concord/Martinez BART station both generate significant pedestrian and vehicle traffic in their surrounding blocks, and the area near the former Naval Weapons Station on the north side of the city is a large land mass that remains largely undeveloped.
Concord connects south to Walnut Creek, CA via I-680, and many freeway calls fall across that boundary. We also serve Antioch, CA to the east along the Highway 4 corridor, giving us continuous coverage across the Contra Costa County freeway network.
Call us at any hour and describe where you are - milepost, exit name, cross-street, or landmark. We confirm your location, get the job details, and dispatch the right equipment before we end the call.
We give you a firm quote before the truck rolls. The price we quote covers the job as described - we do not add surprise fees at the drop zone. If conditions on scene change the scope, we tell you before doing additional work.
Our operator assesses the vehicle on scene, confirms the plan, and handles the load with the right equipment for that vehicle type. You do not need to be present for a roadside or freeway tow, but you are welcome to observe.
We deliver the vehicle to your chosen shop or storage location and provide itemized documentation. If the tow involves a vehicle hold or storage, we walk you through the release process and what to expect next. Questions after the job get a reply within one business day.
We serve all of Concord, CA - from the I-680 and Highway 4 corridors to every residential neighborhood. Call us for a real ETA and an upfront price.
(925) 678-6684Concord is the most populous city in Contra Costa County, home to roughly 120,000 to 125,000 people across about 30 square miles of Diablo Valley floor. The city grew rapidly after World War II when large tracts of single-family homes were built through the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s. Those neighborhoods - stucco-exterior ranch homes on concrete slab foundations with concrete or asphalt driveways - still make up the majority of Concord's housing stock today. Downtown anchors around Todos Santos Plaza, a full city-block public plaza known for its farmers market and community events. The area near the Concord BART and North Concord/Martinez BART stations has seen more recent apartment and mixed-use development as the city has encouraged transit-adjacent density.
Concord sits in a geographic basin defined by Mount Diablo to the southeast - the 3,849-foot peak is visible from most of the city and is a landmark that most residents use to orient themselves. I-680 runs along the western edge while Highway 4 cuts east to west through the heart of the city, connecting it to Pittsburg and Antioch on one end and Pleasant Hill on the other. Neighboring Walnut Creek, CA sits just south on I-680, and the communities of Antioch, CA and Pittsburg are reachable east along Highway 4 - we serve all of those areas and the corridors connecting them.
Specialized transport for heavy machinery and construction equipment.
Learn MoreCall San Ramon Heavy Duty Towing now for a real ETA and an upfront price. Every hour you wait on the side of the road is an hour you do not have to.