
Rapid Dublin Heavy Duty Towing Service provides towing service in San Ramon, CA, covering commercial towing, heavy duty towing, and flatbed transport along I-680 and throughout the city, available 24 hours a day every day of the year.

The Bishop Ranch business campus and the Bollinger Canyon Road commercial corridor generate steady commercial vehicle traffic throughout the week. When a delivery truck, service van, or fleet vehicle breaks down at a loading dock or parking area, our commercial towing team clears it fast so the business day can keep moving.
San Ramon sits directly on I-680, one of the main freight corridors connecting the Tri-Valley to the broader Bay Area. Large trucks and heavy rigs that break down along this stretch need heavy duty equipment that standard light-duty trucks cannot safely handle.
San Ramon households tend to own newer vehicles with all-wheel drive and low-profile tires - vehicles that must be transported on a flatbed to avoid drivetrain or undercarriage damage. Flatbed towing is the default choice for most passenger car tows in this area.
With a large share of San Ramon residents commuting to Oakland, San Francisco, and other Bay Area cities, early-morning and late-night breakdowns on I-680 are a real and regular occurrence. Our 24-hour towing service means there is always someone available when you need it.
Hillside neighborhoods on San Ramon's east and west edges sit on sloped streets where a disabled vehicle creates real hazards for passing traffic. Emergency towing gets you off a dangerous street or freeway shoulder as quickly as possible.
Properties on San Ramon's hillside lots - especially in the neighborhoods near the Diablo Range foothills - sometimes mean vehicles end up off-road or stuck on a slope. Winch out service recovers a vehicle from terrain where a standard tow truck cannot safely approach.
San Ramon is positioned directly on I-680, a major commuter and commercial freight corridor that connects the Tri-Valley to the Bay Area. Vehicle breakdowns on this stretch of freeway - whether passenger cars or large commercial trucks - happen in a location where recovery has to be handled correctly. The Crow Canyon Road and Bollinger Canyon Road interchanges see high traffic volume throughout the day, and a stalled vehicle on the shoulder here creates a real hazard. A towing company working in San Ramon needs to know this corridor and the right access points, not just a general Bay Area familiarity.
Beyond the freeway, San Ramon has a mix of flat valley-floor streets and hillside residential neighborhoods near the Diablo Range foothills, where sloped driveways and uneven terrain add complexity to recovery jobs. The city's housing stock - mostly built from the mid-1980s through the 2000s - includes a high concentration of newer, higher-value vehicles. The Mediterranean climate here means long, dry summers that stress mechanical components, and expansive clay soils on hillside lots that shift with wet-dry cycles. These local conditions affect when and why vehicles get stuck or break down, and a tow operator who works here regularly understands them.
Our crew works throughout San Ramon regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect towing work here. We know the I-680 corridor through town, the commercial access points around Bishop Ranch, and how traffic stacks up on Bollinger Canyon Road and Crow Canyon Road during morning and evening commute hours. The Iron Horse Regional Trail runs north-south through the city and marks the boundary between different residential neighborhoods - we know which side streets connect to the main arterials and how to reach a job quickly without adding unnecessary time.
San Ramon is bordered by the City of Danville, CA to the south, and we work between the two cities throughout the week. Both share the same I-680 corridor, and tows that originate in San Ramon often end at shops or storage facilities in Danville or vice versa. We are also familiar with Pleasanton, CA to the south, another Tri-Valley city we cover daily, and cross-city tows between San Ramon and Pleasanton are routine for our drivers.
Tell us your street, cross street, or freeway exit and direction of travel. We confirm what type of truck you need and give you an honest arrival window - typically under 45 minutes for most San Ramon locations.
Our driver assesses the vehicle and confirms the job scope before touching anything. You receive a firm price at that point - nothing is added after the work begins. Non-emergency estimate requests are returned within 1 business day.
We select the right loading method for your vehicle - flatbed for AWD or low-clearance cars, wheel-lift for standard vehicles, heavy wrecker for large trucks. Your vehicle is secured before we move.
We transport your vehicle to your chosen destination - repair shop, home, or storage - and provide a receipt for any insurance reimbursement claim your policy may cover.
Call us now or fill out the form. We cover all of San Ramon, including I-680, Bishop Ranch, and every neighborhood in the city.
(510) 216-0633San Ramon is a city of roughly 85,000 people in the San Ramon Valley, in the western part of Contra Costa County. Incorporated in 1983, the city grew rapidly through the 1980s and 1990s and is now one of the more affluent suburbs in the East Bay. Most of the housing stock was built during that growth era, with single-family homes, attached garages, and stucco exteriors common throughout the established neighborhoods. Newer multi-family developments and mixed-use projects have followed more recently, particularly near the Bishop Ranch business campus along Interstate 680. The city is home to the West Coast headquarters of AT&T and to other major corporate tenants, making Bishop Ranch one of the largest office parks in the Bay Area.
Geographically, San Ramon sits in the valley between the Diablo Range foothills to the east and open hills to the west near the Alameda County line. The Iron Horse Regional Trail runs north-south through the city along a former railroad corridor, connecting San Ramon to neighboring communities and providing a reference spine for the city's layout. Major surface streets like Bollinger Canyon Road, Crow Canyon Road, and Alcosta Boulevard divide the city into recognizable sections. The neighboring city of Danville, CA borders San Ramon to the south along the same valley, and both share the I-680 corridor. Dublin and Pleasanton, CA are a short drive to the south, and all four cities form the core of the Tri-Valley service area we cover daily.
Specialized transport for heavy construction equipment and machinery.
Learn MoreEvery hour a disabled vehicle sits on the roadway is a safety risk. Call Rapid Dublin Heavy Duty Towing Service for fast, reliable towing anywhere in San Ramon.