
San Ramon Heavy Duty Towing delivers heavy duty towing, flatbed transport, and emergency roadside response across San Ramon, CA. Serving the Tri-Valley since 2019, we operate around the clock on I-680, Crow Canyon Road, and every neighborhood in the city.

San Ramon's hillside neighborhoods and the I-680 corridor see more than their share of oversized loads and disabled commercial vehicles. Our heavy duty towing equipment handles the heaviest rigs on Crow Canyon Road and Bishop Ranch access points, keeping the road clear and your vehicle protected.
Breakdowns on I-680 through San Ramon happen fast, and the shoulder can be a dangerous place to wait. We dispatch around the clock so you get a truck on site quickly, whether you are stuck on the freeway or on a surface street in the dark.
San Ramon has a high concentration of all-wheel-drive SUVs and EVs - vehicles that should not be towed with a wheel-lift. Our flatbed trucks keep all four wheels off the ground and protect your drivetrain from additional damage during transport.
The graded hillside lots on San Ramon's east and west edges create real off-road hazards, especially after seasonal rain softens the ground. We recover vehicles from ditches, embankments, and hillside situations with rated rigging and care.
Businesses at Bishop Ranch and along the Camino Ramon corridor depend on their vehicles staying in service. When a commercial vehicle goes down, we respond fast to minimize the impact on your operations and deliveries.
Breakdowns and accidents in San Ramon do not follow business hours. Our 24 hour dispatch covers every hour of every day - including the late-night I-680 incidents and early-morning commuter emergencies that other operators miss.
San Ramon sits where the valley floor meets the Diablo Range foothills, and that geography shapes the driving conditions here. I-680 carries heavy commercial and commuter traffic through the city daily, and breakdowns on that corridor create real hazards at speed. Crow Canyon Road and Bollinger Canyon Road connect the valley floor to hillside neighborhoods, and the grades on those streets demand different recovery techniques than flat urban towing. The same clay-rich soils that shift after wet winters can drop vehicles into ditches on hillside lots with little warning.
The Tri-Valley's summer heat - regularly pushing into the 90s - stresses tires, batteries, and cooling systems, meaning more roadside calls from late May through September. A large share of San Ramon's workforce commutes, so peak-hour incidents on the I-680 on-ramps near Bishop Ranch require fast response to keep traffic moving. Understanding these local patterns is why local operators, not a regional dispatch center hundreds of miles away, serve this community best.
Our crew works throughout San Ramon regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect towing work here. The business park on the west side of the city, the hillside neighborhoods east of Alcosta Boulevard, and the dense residential streets off Bollinger Canyon Road each require different approaches. We know which access points to use at Bishop Ranch and which routes avoid the worst I-680 backups during morning and evening peaks.
The Iron Horse Regional Trail corridor runs north-south through the city, and many residential streets near that corridor have parking and access constraints our operators already know. Mount Diablo is visible from most of the city, and the eastern hillside neighborhoods that face those slopes tend to have longer driveways and tighter lot access - details that matter when positioning a heavy truck. Drivers heading south from Walnut Creek on I-680 often encounter our trucks clearing incidents before they reach the Crow Canyon Road interchange.
We also serve the neighboring city of Dublin, CA, directly to the south on I-680 - so when incidents cross city lines near the I-580 interchange, we can respond to both sides. Danville is another close community we cover regularly, and its Sycamore Valley Road corridor connects directly to San Ramon's southern residential neighborhoods.
Call (925) 678-6684 and tell us your location and vehicle type. We confirm the right equipment for your job before dispatching, so there are no surprises on arrival.
When we arrive, we assess the vehicle, road conditions, and any access constraints. We give you the cost before any work begins - no billing surprises once the job is done.
We load and secure the vehicle using the correct method for its type - flatbed for AWD or EVs, wheel-lift or hook for others. Your vehicle goes to your preferred shop, storage facility, or any other destination.
Once the vehicle is delivered, we confirm receipt. For estimate requests sent via our contact form, we respond within 1 business day with a detailed quote tailored to your job.
We dispatch 24/7 across San Ramon, CA - call us directly for the fastest response, or fill out the form and we will get back to you within 1 business day with a free estimate.
(925) 678-6684San Ramon is a city of roughly 85,000 residents in Contra Costa County, located about 34 miles east of San Francisco in the San Ramon Valley. The city incorporated in 1983 and grew quickly through the late 1980s and 1990s, so most of its housing stock - single-family homes with stucco exteriors, attached garages, and concrete driveways - dates from that era. The valley floor is relatively flat, while the east and west edges of the city climb into the foothills of the Diablo Range, creating a mix of flat suburban streets and hillside neighborhoods. Bishop Ranch, on the west side near I-680, is one of the largest office and mixed-use business parks in the Bay Area and a major employment hub for the Tri-Valley. You can learn more about the city at the official City of San Ramon website.
Interstate 680 is the main highway spine, running north-south through the city and connecting San Ramon to Walnut Creek in the north and to the I-580 interchange in the south near Dublin, CA. Bollinger Canyon Road and Crow Canyon Road are the primary east-west surface streets, and the Iron Horse Regional Trail runs north-south through the center of the city along the historic railroad corridor. The surrounding open grasslands and oak-covered hills - visible from nearly every neighborhood - give San Ramon much of its character and also define the community's awareness of wildfire risk on its urban edges. To the north, the Tri-Valley connects seamlessly to Danville, another community we serve regularly.
Specialized transport for heavy machinery and construction equipment.
Learn MoreWhether you are stuck on I-680, off a hillside road, or need a commercial tow in San Ramon - call us now and we will be there fast.