In a community like Airdrie, towing is personal - the 12 operators listed here cover the town and a wide rural radius around it, and they know every concession road on it. 8 of them run 24/7 dispatch, flagged on the listings below. The most common services locally are 24-hour towing, battery boosts, tire changes and fuel delivery.
Locally based dispatch serving Calgary and Airdrie
Bonded, 24/7 towing and recovery for Airdrie and Calgary
Family-owned round-the-clock towing serving Airdrie and area
Fast 20-40 minute towing across Airdrie and the QE2
24/7 towing between Olds, Red Deer and Calgary
Airdrie-based towing and tilt-deck hauling for Calgary
Round-the-clock roadside help near Beiseker and Three Hills
Calgary-area towing dispatched from Airdrie, day or night
Alberta regulates towing mainly through general consumer protection and traffic law rather than a dedicated towing act. Practical implications: get the price before the hook drops, and know that Alberta's Slow Down Move Over law requires passing drivers to slow to 60 km/h beside tow trucks with lights flashing - position yourself accordingly when waiting. Calgary and Edmonton both run municipal impound lots for police-ordered tows; private operators handle everything else.
The QE2 between Calgary and Edmonton is Canada's busiest intercity corridor and generates constant recovery work - if you break down, get well onto the shoulder and stay belted inside unless you can exit away from traffic. In rural Alberta, cell coverage gaps are real: tell someone your route in winter.
Chinook freeze-thaw cycles around Calgary glaze roads within hours, and Highway 63 and rural two-lanes see serious winter crashes. Block heater use below -15°C prevents most of the boost calls Alberta towers spend their winters on.
911
Emergencies and traffic hazards
511
Alberta 511 - road reports, closures, winter conditions on the QE2 and rural highways
310-0000
Government of Alberta general line (RITE) - non-emergency provincial services
Around Airdrie, expect a typical hook-up fee of $80–$120 plus roughly $3.00–$4.25 per kilometre for a standard light-duty tow, before tax. Nights, storms, winching and heavy vehicles cost more; short in-town tows often land near the minimum. Always ask for the all-in price to your destination before the truck rolls - reputable operators quote it without hesitation. Roadside fixes (boosts, lockouts, tire changes) usually run a flat $45–$120 and are worth asking about first.
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