
Oakley Heavy Duty Towing Service provides towing service in Concord, CA, covering 24-hour emergency towing, heavy duty towing, and roadside assistance across Concord's I-680 and SR-4 corridors and all neighborhoods in the Diablo Valley. We have served Contra Costa County since 2019 and know this city from the postwar tracts near downtown to the neighborhoods closer to Mount Diablo.

Concord is the largest city in Contra Costa County, and I-680 and SR-4 carry significant commuter and freight traffic around the clock. Breakdowns happen at 2 a.m. on a Tuesday as often as at noon on a Saturday, and 24 hour towing means a Concord driver stranded on I-680 in the middle of the night does not have to wait until morning for help.
Concord has active commercial corridors along Willow Pass Road and Clayton Road, and the I-680 and SR-4 interchange moves both passenger and freight traffic. When a commercial vehicle or heavy truck breaks down along these corridors, heavy duty towing with the right equipment is the only safe way to clear it without making a dangerous situation worse.
Concord's inland location means summer heat pushes deep into the 90s, and that sustained heat is genuinely hard on batteries, belts, and cooling systems. Many drivers near the Concord BART station and the surrounding commuter corridors deal with heat-related roadside issues during the hottest months - a jump start or a tire change can resolve the problem without a tow.
I-680 through Concord is a busy freeway, and the interchanges with SR-4 and the surface street connections at Clayton Road and Concord Avenue see real traffic volume. When an accident disables one or more vehicles, a fast recovery response minimizes the secondary hazard to other drivers and gets the roadway back to normal sooner.
The expansive clay soils under Concord's older residential neighborhoods shift seasonally, and uneven driveway aprons, sunken road edges, and soft shoulders on less-traveled streets can trap a vehicle in ways a standard tow truck cannot address. A winch-out extracts the vehicle without dragging it across unstable ground.
Concord has a significant commercial base - delivery operations, service businesses, and companies that maintain vehicle fleets. When a company vehicle breaks down anywhere in the city, a fleet towing account means one call gets the vehicle moving and keeps the rest of the day on track.
Concord is not a small town. It is the largest city in Contra Costa County, with roughly 120,000 residents spread across about 30 square miles in the Diablo Valley. That size means the city has genuinely different conditions in different neighborhoods. The postwar tracts built in the 1950s through 1970s - which make up a large share of Concord's residential housing - sit on slab-on-grade foundations on lots with concrete driveways that are now 50 to 70 years old. The clay soils under those neighborhoods expand in wet winters and contract in hot summers, and that movement gradually shifts road edges and driveway aprons. Drivers dealing with a breakdown on one of the older residential streets may find a vehicle hung up on a heaved curb cut or a sunken shoulder rather than simply stopped in a lane.
The city also carries more seismic risk than most people think about on a daily basis. The Concord Fault passes close to the city, and smaller quakes happen regularly in the region. Over years, that seismic activity compounds the existing clay soil cracking on older pavement and creates the kind of irregular surface conditions that lead to unexpected vehicle incidents. A towing company that knows Concord's neighborhoods understands why some blocks need more care than others when accessing a stalled vehicle.
Our crew works throughout Concord regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect towing work here. We know I-680 and its interchanges the same way we know the surface streets in the older neighborhoods between Willow Pass Road and Clayton Road. Concord drivers can reach the City of Concord for permit and public services inquiries. For towing and roadside situations, our team handles calls across the full city - from the blocks near Todos Santos Plaza downtown to the residential streets with views of Mount Diablo.
Concord borders Pleasant Hill to the west and Bay Point to the east on the SR-4 corridor, and many towing calls involve vehicles that started or ended their trips in a neighboring city. We cover the full stretch without treating city limits as a reason to hand a call off. Drivers in neighboring Pleasant Hill, CA to the west or coming from Bay Point, CA to the east reach us on the same number and get the same response.
A real person answers every call, not a recording. Give us your location in Concord, your vehicle type, and what happened so we can confirm what equipment to send and which truck is nearest.
We tell you the rate before dispatch - hookup fee plus a per-mile charge to your destination. Prefer to submit online? We respond within 1 business day. No guessing on cost while you wait on the shoulder of I-680.
The driver assesses the actual situation when they arrive - standard tow, winch-out, accident recovery, or roadside fix. If the situation has changed from what was described on the call, you are not locked in and the driver will adjust.
Once your vehicle is secured, we deliver it to your mechanic, a storage facility, or your home. You receive documentation of the tow before we leave the scene so there is a clear record of what happened.
We cover all of Concord and the surrounding Diablo Valley 24 hours a day. Call us or request online - we respond within 1 business day.
Concord is the largest city in Contra Costa County, with a population of roughly 120,000 to 125,000 people spread across about 30 square miles in the Diablo Valley. It sits approximately 29 miles east of San Francisco, far enough from the coast that the marine layer rarely reaches it and summers are genuinely hot. The city grew rapidly after World War II, particularly through the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s, when large tracts of single-family homes were constructed across the valley floor. Those neighborhoods - mostly stucco exteriors on slab foundations, with concrete driveways and wood fencing - still make up the core of Concord's residential character today. Downtown Concord centers on Todos Santos Plaza, a full city-block public space known for its farmers market and summer concert series. The city is well-connected by transit, with two BART stations - Concord Station and North Concord/Martinez Station - that link residents to Oakland, San Francisco, and the rest of the Bay Area. Drivers heading east toward Bay Point, CA pick up SR-4 just outside the Concord city limits.
Mount Diablo - the 3,849-foot peak that defines the Diablo Valley - is visible from most of Concord's neighborhoods and rises just south of the city. Its presence as a local landmark reflects how Concord sits at the transition between the more urban East Bay corridor and the open hills and ranch land to the east. Interstate 680 runs along the city's western edge, connecting Concord to Walnut Creek to the south and Martinez to the north. State Route 4 cuts east-west through the city, linking it to Pleasant Hill on one side and Pittsburg and Bay Point on the other. These two highways and the surface streets that connect them - Clayton Road, Concord Avenue, and Willow Pass Road - carry the bulk of Concord's daily traffic and are where most vehicle breakdowns and roadside situations in the city occur. Drivers heading west along SR-4 pass into Pleasant Hill, CA within a few miles.
Specialized transport for construction equipment and heavy machinery.
Learn MoreWe are available 24 hours a day across all of Concord and the surrounding Diablo Valley. Call now or submit a request online and we will get back to you within 1 business day.