When your vehicle needs a full recovery, not just a quick pull in Fort Worth, TX, you don't have time to shop around. You need somebody local, awake, and honest to recover the vehicle safely. That's what All Your Needs Towing has been doing across Tarrant County since 2015 — and Fort Worth is a route our drivers know cold.
Why Fort Worth calls us first
The county seat and our home base - we dispatch trucks out of east Fort Worth every hour of the day. Fort Worth traffic is heaviest on the mixmaster (I-30/I-35W downtown) and on 820 during commute - we route around it. That's why we've built our dispatch around Fort Worth: our trucks stage close enough that our typical response is 20-35 minutes inside Loop 820. When you're stuck on I-35W at 10 p.m., minutes matter — and a dispatcher who already knows where the Sundance Square exit ramp is saves you a lot of them.
We're not a national call center that routes your ticket to whoever bids lowest. When you call (682) 299-3443, you get a live Fort Worth dispatcher who confirms your location, quotes a flat price up front, and sends a driver who has actually been to Fort Worth Stockyards before.
What our vehicle recovery in Fort Worth covers
Every truck that rolls to Fort Worth for vehicle recovery carries the same gear:
- Flatbed rollback for damaged or non-rolling vehicles
- Synthetic winch line and snatch blocks
- Rotator gear referral for major recoveries
- Dollies for locked or damaged wheels
- Traffic-safety cones, triangles, and light bars
Typically 60-120 minutes on-scene — so once we get to you in Fort Worth, the fix is fast. If we can't fix it on the roadside, we tow you to the shop of your choice, and the call fee comes off the tow bill.
Situations we see in Fort Worth every week
- Single-car accident with a damaged front end
- Vehicle rolled onto its side in a ditch
- Truck stuck deep off a jobsite path
- Transmission locked and vehicle won't roll
- Stolen recovery pickup from a police call
Near Sundance Square, along the I-35W corridor, in the Downtown apartments, or at a home in Cultural District — we've been there this month. If your situation isn't on the list, call anyway. Chances are we've handled it.
Neighborhoods and ZIPs we cover in Fort Worth
Our Fort Worth vehicle recovery route covers every ZIP inside the city limits and spills into the surrounding Tarrant County corridor.
- · Downtown
- · Cultural District
- · West 7th
- · Near Southside
- · Stockyards
- · TCU / University
- · Wedgwood
- · Fairmount
- · Ridglea
- · Meadowbrook
- · Ryan Place
- · Arlington Heights
- · Como
- · Poly
- · Riverside
- · 76102
- · 76104
- · 76106
- · 76107
- · 76109
- · 76110
- · 76111
- · 76112
- · 76114
- · 76116
- · 76118
- · 76119
- · 76120
- · 76123
- · 76131
- · 76132
- · 76133
- · 76134
- · 76135
- · 76137
- · 76140
- · 76148
- · 76179
- · 76182
I-35W · I-30 · I-20 · I-820 Loop · US-287 · US-377 · SH-121 · SH-183 · Chisholm Trail Pkwy
How the call goes, start to finish
- 1
Call with location, vehicle type, and a description of the damage.
- 2
We dispatch the right rig - rollback for damaged, winch truck for stuck.
- 3
We stabilize, secure the vehicle, and load it safely.
- 4
Delivered to the shop, body shop, or storage yard of your choice.
Straight-talk pricing for Fort Worth
Our vehicle recovery in Fort Worth runs $175+ depending on damage, distance, and equipment. That's a flat quote you hear before we roll — no dispatch fee, no hidden mileage charge inside our normal Tarrant County service area, and no membership required. We take card, cash, Apple Pay, and Google Pay on-site.
If the job is unusually far (a remote spot off Chisholm Trail Pkwy) or the vehicle needs special handling (AGM battery on a luxury car in Downtown, big diesel truck, low-clearance sports car), we tell you before we roll — not when we hand you an invoice.
Why 24/7 actually means 24/7
A lot of "24-hour" services in Tarrant County route to a voicemail after 10 p.m. Ours doesn't. We staff dispatch overnight because that's when the majority of Fort Worth roadside calls actually happen — after a late shift, after a game at Sundance Square, after a night out downtown, or on the way home from work at 5:30 a.m. A real person answers whether it's 3 in the afternoon or 3 in the morning.