
Dublin Heavy Duty Towing Services provides emergency towing, heavy duty recovery, flatbed transport, and roadside assistance throughout Concord, CA. We have worked the I-680 and Highway 4 corridors since 2019 - when you call, a dispatcher answers and equipment moves.

Concord's position at the I-680 and Highway 4 junction means breakdowns on these corridors happen around the clock. Emergency towing is dispatched 24/7 so that a disabled vehicle on these busy routes does not stay in a travel lane any longer than necessary.
Learn about Emergency towingHighway 4 carries significant commercial truck traffic heading between Concord and the Port of Oakland. When a commercial vehicle goes down on this corridor, heavy duty rigs purpose-built for that weight class are the only way to move the load safely and quickly.
Many of Concord's older residential neighborhoods have narrow streets and aging pavement where dragging a vehicle with a traditional hookup can cause additional damage. Flatbed transport keeps all four wheels off the ground for a clean, damage-free move.
Concord's hot, dry summers push batteries and cooling systems hard. A battery jump, flat tire swap, or fuel delivery on Clayton Road or Willow Pass Road gets most drivers back moving without waiting for a tow.
Vehicles that slide off soft shoulders near undeveloped areas on Concord's north side often cannot be retrieved with a standard hookup. Winch out recovery extracts stuck vehicles without adding further damage to the undercarriage or body.
Concord has a significant commercial corridor along Willow Pass Road and through its downtown core. When a delivery van or fleet vehicle goes down in a parking lot or on a busy surface street, fast recovery reduces business disruption and clears the obstruction.
Concord is the largest city in Contra Costa County, and its position at the intersection of I-680 and Highway 4 makes it one of the most heavily trafficked points in the East Bay. Commercial trucks heading between the Port of Oakland and the Central Valley pass through Concord daily, and commuter traffic on both freeways is heavy during morning and evening hours. Breakdowns in this environment are not occasional - they are a daily reality on corridors where stopping is never convenient and response time matters.
Concord's inland valley climate compounds vehicle wear in ways that coastal Bay Area cities do not face. Summer temperatures regularly climb into the 90s and can exceed 100 degrees during heat waves - sustained heat that stresses batteries, overworks cooling systems, and softens asphalt. The Diablo Valley sits on clay-heavy soils that shift seasonally, and the Concord Fault runs near the city, meaning even moderate seismic activity can affect road surfaces and soft-shoulder areas where breakdowns sometimes occur. A towing crew that works Concord regularly understands all of this - and that familiarity shows in how efficiently a job gets done.
Our crew works throughout Concord regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect towing work here. The I-680 and Highway 4 corridors are the main areas where we respond to emergency calls, but we also work Willow Pass Road, Clayton Road, and Concord Avenue - the surface streets that carry daily commercial and residential traffic across the city. The area around Todos Santos Plaza and downtown Concord has a mix of older commercial blocks, tight parking areas, and slower-speed streets that require a different approach than a freeway recovery.
Concord's residential neighborhoods are predominantly postwar construction - most homes in the older tracts between downtown and the hills were built in the 1950s through 1970s. Streets in these areas are narrower than newer developments, and parking can be tight, which affects how we maneuver equipment on residential calls. The area near the City of Concord's two BART stations - Concord Station and North Concord/Martinez Station - also sees concentrated vehicle traffic that generates its share of parking lot and surface street incidents.
We serve neighboring communities across Contra Costa and Alameda counties as well. If you are coming in from Walnut Creek on I-680 or heading out toward Livermore and have an incident on the way, we cover both sides of the corridor.
Call (925) 468-2731 and tell the dispatcher where you are - street name, nearest cross street, or mile marker on I-680 or Highway 4. We identify the closest available rig and give you an honest arrival estimate right then.
Before hooking up or starting any recovery work, we confirm the cost with you directly. For standard tows this takes about a minute. Complex recoveries get a scene assessment first so you know exactly what is involved.
The crew uses equipment matched to your vehicle - flatbed for sedans and low-clearance cars, heavy rigs for trucks and commercial loads. Most roadside assistance calls wrap up in under 30 minutes.
Your vehicle goes to the shop, storage yard, or address you choose. The driver confirms delivery with you before leaving. Non-emergency quote requests get a reply within 1 business day.
Call us and a real dispatcher answers - no hold menus, no callbacks. We confirm your Concord location, give you an honest arrival window, and confirm cost before any work begins. Non-emergency estimates get a reply within 1 business day.
(925) 468-2731Our crew has worked the I-680 and Highway 4 corridors, Clayton Road, and Willow Pass Road regularly since 2019. We know Concord's access points, road widths, and the difference between a standard residential call and a commercial lot recovery.
Concord's inland summer heat means breakdowns happen at all hours. Dispatch is live around the clock - weekdays, weekends, and holidays. A real person answers, not an automated menu.
A commercial truck on Highway 4 needs a different rig than a passenger car on a residential street. We match equipment to the vehicle type on the first dispatch, which means no wasted trips and no delays.
We give you a clear cost confirmation before starting. Concord homeowners and fleet managers both want to know the number before authorizing work - we make that standard practice on every job.
When you are stuck on I-680 in 100-degree heat or dealing with a broken-down truck on Highway 4, you need a crew that has handled that exact scenario before - not one figuring it out on arrival. That is what working Concord regularly since 2019 gives us, and it is the difference between a job that goes smoothly and one that does not.
Concord is the most populous city in Contra Costa County, covering about 30 square miles in the Diablo Valley roughly 29 miles east of San Francisco. The city grew rapidly through the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s, when large tracts of single-family homes were built across the valley floor - most still standing today, giving the city a substantial stock of older residential properties. Downtown Concord centers on Todos Santos Plaza, a full city-block public space known for its farmers market and summer concerts. Mount Diablo, visible from most of Concord, rises just to the south and is the defining landmark of the broader Diablo Valley.
The city has a broad mix of housing types, from long-established single-family neighborhoods to newer apartment and condominium development near the downtown BART stations. Concord also borders Walnut Creek to the south on I-680, and the commute between the two cities is one of the most heavily used stretches of that freeway. To the east, the Highway 4 corridor connects Concord to Pittsburg and Antioch, and incidents along that stretch frequently bring our crew out to the Concord end of the route.
Specialized transport for construction equipment and heavy machinery.
Learn MoreCall now for emergency towing, heavy recovery, or roadside help anywhere in Concord. Our dispatcher answers live, confirms your location, and gets the right equipment moving - call (925) 468-2731.