You’re rattled, your car’s not moving, and a tow truck rolls up before you’ve even finished dialing - sound familiar? Most tow operators in Canada are straightforward professionals, but the industry has a real problem with a small number who prey specifically on stressed, distracted drivers. Knowing the seven red flags below turns you from an easy target into someone who asks the right question at the right moment.

1. The Accident Chaser

This is the tow truck that shows up at a collision scene uninvited, sometimes within minutes - occasionally faster than police - and starts hooking up your car before you’ve had a chance to think. Legitimate operators respond to a call; they don’t monitor scanners and race each other to crash sites hoping to grab a vehicle before you’ve chosen who you actually want.

Red flag: A driver you never called is already attaching straps to your bumper. What to do: Say clearly, “I did not call you, and I have not agreed to this tow.” You are never obligated to accept an unsolicited tow, even at an accident scene. Call your own preferred operator, or ask police who’s officially dispatched, and see accident recovery for what a legitimate post-collision tow should look like.

2. Inflated or Mystery Storage Fees

Some operators - particularly ones connected to a storage yard - make their real money after the tow, not during it. The tow itself might even look cheap, but the daily storage rate is unusually high, undisclosed up front, or starts accumulating before you’ve been told your car arrived.

Red flag: You can’t get a straight answer on the per-day storage rate, or it’s dramatically higher than what you’ve seen quoted elsewhere. What to do: Ask for the daily storage rate in writing before you leave the scene, and ask when the clock starts. Retrieve your vehicle as soon as you reasonably can - the longer it sits, the more it costs, and disputing an inflated bill after the fact is much harder than avoiding it up front.

3. Destination Steering

This is when a tow operator - or someone posing as helpful at the scene - pushes hard for your car to go to “their” body shop or a specific yard, rather than asking where you’d like it taken. Sometimes there’s a kickback arrangement behind the recommendation; sometimes it’s simply easier for the driver’s route. Either way, it’s not their call.

Red flag: The driver tells you where your car is going rather than asking. What to do: State your destination clearly and early: “Take it to [your shop/home/dealer].” You choose the destination - that’s your right, not a negotiation, outside of a police-directed tow.

Related to the accident chaser but broader: any tow that happens without your clear agreement, whether at a collision scene, a private parking lot, or your own driveway. Consent has to come before the hook, not after, when you’re arguing about an invoice you never agreed to.

Red flag: Your car is already on the hook or the deck before anyone asked you anything. What to do: Stop the process verbally the moment you notice - “I have not consented to this tow” - and document the time and the driver’s information. In Ontario, consent before towing (except when police direct it) has been a legal requirement since TSSEA rules took effect.

5. Cash-Only Demands

A driver who insists on cash only, refuses card payment, or pressures you to pay immediately before releasing your vehicle - especially at unusual hours or isolated locations - is a strong signal something’s off. Legitimate operators want a clean, traceable transaction as much as you do.

Red flag: “Cash only, right now, before you get your keys back.” What to do: Push back and ask for card payment. Refusing card payment without a clear, disclosed reason is itself a warning sign in provinces with rate-disclosure rules. If you feel unsafe or coerced, that’s a call-the-police situation, not a negotiate-harder situation.

6. No Upfront Rate Disclosure

A truck that won’t tell you the hook-up fee and per-km rate before starting work is setting you up for a surprise invoice. This is one of the most basic protections a driver should get as a matter of course.

Red flag: “Don’t worry about it, we’ll sort out the price after.” What to do: Ask directly: “What’s your hook-up fee and per-kilometre rate?” A legitimate operator answers without hesitation. If they dodge, call someone else - see our towing cost calculator for what a fair range actually looks like so you recognize a lowball-then-upsell tactic too.

7. No Itemized Invoice

At the end of the job, you should get a clear, itemized bill - hook-up, distance, any extras like winching, and storage if applicable. A driver who hands you a single lump-sum number with no breakdown, or who’s reluctant to put anything in writing, is making it hard for you to dispute anything later.

Red flag: “It’s just one flat number, don’t worry about the details.” What to do: Ask for an itemized invoice before you pay, and photograph it. This is your paper trail if you need to dispute charges with the company, your insurer, or a provincial regulator later - and it’s worth comparing the invoice against typical towing costs in Canada to see if anything looks out of line.

What Changed in Ontario: TSSEA

Ontario introduced the Towing and Storage Safety and Enforcement Act (TSSEA), in force since January 1, 2024, specifically to address these patterns. Under TSSEA, tow operators, drivers, and storage yards operating in Ontario must be provincially certified, must disclose rates before towing, must get your consent before hooking up (except when police direct the tow), must let you choose your own destination, must accept card payment, and must provide an itemized invoice. If an Ontario operator is skipping any of these, they’re not just being unprofessional - they may be violating the law, and that’s worth reporting.

Other provinces regulate towing differently - Alberta relies on general consumer protection law rather than a dedicated towing act, for example - so the specific rules vary. But the underlying rights (consent, choice of destination, itemized billing) are good practice to expect everywhere in Canada, even where they’re not yet codified the way Ontario has done it.

Exactly What to Say at the Scene

Keep these lines ready - you won’t be thinking clearly right after a breakdown or collision, so it helps to have the words pre-loaded:

If a driver pushes back hard on any of these, that’s your answer about whether to use them. Walk away and call a tow truck near you that you’ve chosen, not one that chose you.

FAQ

Can a tow truck legally take my car without asking me first? Only in specific circumstances, like a police-directed tow. Outside of that, you must consent before your vehicle is hooked up and towed - this is explicit law in Ontario under TSSEA and good practice to expect nationwide.

What do I do if a tow truck shows up at my accident that I didn’t call? Tell them clearly you didn’t call them and haven’t agreed to a tow, then contact your own preferred operator or ask police who’s officially dispatched. You’re not obligated to use an uninvited tow truck.

How do I know if a storage fee is unreasonably high? Ask for the daily rate up front and compare it against what you’d expect for towing and storage generally - if the answer is vague, delayed, or dramatically different from other quotes you can find, treat it as a red flag and retrieve your vehicle as soon as possible.

Is it illegal for a tow operator to demand cash only? In Ontario, TSSEA requires operators to accept card payment, so cash-only demands may violate the law there. Elsewhere, it’s at minimum a strong warning sign worth pushing back on.

Who do I report a towing scam to? Start with the operator’s provincial regulator - in Ontario that’s tied to TSSEA enforcement - and keep your itemized invoice, photos, and any correspondence as documentation for your report and for your insurer if relevant.

Avoid the scramble entirely by knowing who to call before you need them - browse towing companies by province and save a number you trust.