Towing in Socorro, TX.
Flatbed, wheel-lift, heavy-duty, and motorcycle towing plus full roadside assistance across Socorro. 24/7 dispatch, flat-rate pricing, licensed drivers. Answered by a real dispatcher - not a voicemail.
How does towing work in Socorro?
The Lower Valley runs Spanish-first, and so does our dispatch. Alameda Avenue and the Border Highway carry heavy volume through Ysleta, Socorro, and the Mission Trail towns, with older vehicles and monsoon-season flooding in the low spots. Hablamos espanol y atendemos las llamadas en su idioma. We know the corridor and give honest ETAs to the farther towns.
Socorro is the second-largest city in El Paso County, around 40,000 people, and it incorporated specifically to stop El Paso from absorbing it in 1985. There is real civic pride here. The Socorro Mission at 328 S. Nevarez Rd stands as one of the most remarkable buildings in Texas: established 1682 for Piro, Tano, and Jemez Indians displaced by the Pueblo Revolt, the present structure dates to approximately 1843 after the 1829 Rio Grande flood destroyed the earlier building and moved the river, shifting Socorro from the south bank to the north bank and redrawing the U.S.-Mexico border in this location. The massive adobe walls were stabilized in the 1990s when the community made 22,000 adobe bricks by hand. It sits on El Camino Real de Tierra Adentro, the Spanish colonial road from Mexico City to Santa Fe.
The Rio Vista Bracero Reception Center on the city's northern edge was designated a National Historic Landmark in December 2023. From 1950 to 1964 it processed more than 80,000 Mexican agricultural workers per year through the Bracero Program. The City Council approved plans in 2024 to build the nation's first Bracero History Museum there, with a 2027 opening target. Socorro High School, built in 1964, is the Socorro ISD flagship and won the 5A Texas State baseball championship in 2009. Bulldog Championship Park has a splash park and amphitheater.
FM-258, Socorro Road, is the Mission Trail artery through town. It runs as an undivided two-lane for significant stretches between intersections with no breakdown lane, so a vehicle that stalls is sitting exposed on the roadside. FM-76, North Loop Drive, is the 12.5-mile north-south connector linking Socorro to the farming areas of Clint and Fabens. The economic profile is working-class: median household income around $52,100, roughly 30 percent of families below the poverty line. Older vehicles are the norm. The community is 96 percent Hispanic and Spanish is the operating language.
How much does towing cost in Socorro?
Local towing in Socorro starts at $75 for the first 5 miles with a standard wheel-lift truck. Each additional mile adds $3-$5 depending on vehicle weight and road conditions. Flatbed towing - required for AWD, low-clearance, and damaged vehicles - runs $95-$150 base before mileage.
After-hours service (10 PM-6 AM) adds $25-$50 to the base rate. We don't do surge pricing on weekends or holidays. Every tow gets a flat-rate quote before the truck rolls - the number you hear on the phone is the number on the invoice.
Want an exact quote? Call (858) 925-5546 and we'll give you a flat rate in under 60 seconds.
What towing services are available in Socorro?
Every service is dispatched locally in Socorro - light-duty and flatbed towing, 24-hour emergency tow truck service, motorcycle and RV transport, plus roadside assistance near you. Same trucks, same drivers, same flat-rate pricing as the rest of the county. No zone surcharge.
What do Socorro residents ask about towing?
How fast can you tow in Socorro?
Average arrival in Socorro is 30-45 minutes for standard calls. Emergency and 24/7 calls get priority dispatch. Outlying towns and the New Mexico communities run a bit longer; we give real ETAs when you call.
Do you have flatbeds for Socorro?
Yes. Every city across the El Paso metro has flatbed coverage from our rotation. Flatbed is mandatory for AWD, 4WD, EVs, and low-clearance or damaged vehicles - we route the right truck automatically.
What about Socorro's Spanish-first dispatch and Alameda corridor?
Socorro Road FM-258 runs as an undivided rural highway through a 15-mile stretch with no breakdown lane, leaving vehicles on the roadside fully exposed when they stall. We account for local road conditions, traffic, and access in every dispatch decision.
How much will a tow cost in Socorro?
Light-duty hook fees start at $95 with disclosed mileage, quoted flat before we dispatch. Heavy-duty, long-distance, and specialty (motorcycle, RV, exotic) are priced separately - always written and flat. No surge pricing on nights, weekends, or holidays.
How much does a tow truck cost in Socorro?
Local towing in Socorro starts at $75 for the first 5 miles with a wheel-lift truck. Each additional mile runs $3-$5. Flatbed towing starts at $95-$150 depending on vehicle size and distance. After-hours calls (10 PM-6 AM) add $25-$50. We quote a flat rate before dispatch - no surprise fees at the drop.
Is there a tow truck near me in Socorro?
Yes. We dispatch tow trucks throughout Socorro and the surrounding Lower Valley area 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Most local calls reach you in 30-45 minutes. Call dispatch and we'll send the nearest available truck with a flat-rate quote first - light-duty, flatbed, heavy-duty, or motorcycle.
Where can I find 24 hour towing service near me in Socorro?
Right here. We run 24-hour towing service in Socorro with live dispatch - no voicemail, no answering service. That covers light-duty towing service, flatbed towing, emergency tow service, RV and motorcycle transport, and roadside assistance near you. Whatever time it is, call and the nearest available truck rolls with a flat rate quoted up front.
Where else do we tow in the Lower Valley area?
Where we work in Socorro
We serve Socorro and the surrounding area daily.
Need a tow truck in Socorro?
Call dispatch direct. Flat-rate quote before we roll.