Flatbed tow truck on a coastal highway at sunset
Canada's Towing Directory · Coast to Coast

Stranded? The right tow truck is closer than you think.

See who's nearby, who's open right now, and who runs the right truck for your vehicle - then call them directly. No call centre, no middleman, no markup.

Find towing near you Estimate my tow cost
24/7 Emergency Towingfind operators answering right now, so you're not stranded waiting for morning
Local Tow Trucks Near Youreal companies based in your city, so help arrives in minutes, not hours
Flatbed & Heavy Duty Towingmatch the right truck to your vehicle and avoid drivetrain damage on AWD & EVs
Roadside Assistance Firstboosts, lockouts and tire changes that get you moving for a fraction of a tow
Towing Services

Find the best local towing service for your vehicle.

The right tow starts with the right equipment. Compare local towing companies by what they actually run - flatbeds, wheel-lifts, heavy wreckers, rotators - and call the one built for your vehicle and your situation, the first time.

See all 20 services →

Roadside Assistance

Professional roadside help that gets you running before towing.

A dead battery, a flat, keys dangling in the ignition, an empty tank ten minutes from home - these are 20-minute fixes for a mobile roadside unit, and they cost a fraction of a tow. Hundreds of the companies listed here run dedicated roadside fleets alongside their trucks.

Before you assume the worst, check the company's profile: if it lists battery boosts, tire changes, lockouts or fuel delivery, ask for the roadside rate first. A boost that gets you to work beats a tow to a shop that finds nothing wrong.

Jumper clamps connected to a car battery Roadside tire change on a sedan Operator returning recovered keys to a driver Roadside fuel delivery from a jerry can
The Directory

Find towing in your city.

Pick your province and city to see the operators who actually cover your roads - including the small-town one-truck outfits the big apps never list.

Popular cities

How It Works

Three steps between you and a truck on the way.

1

Find your city

Pick your province and city, or jump straight to the service you need. Companies are ranked by rating and review depth, with 24/7 operators flagged.

2

Compare real profiles

Profiles are built from each operator's own published information: equipment, coverage area, hours, and what they actually specialize in, so you know before you call.

3

Call direct. Pay direct.

We're a directory, not a dispatcher. No call centre in the middle, no referral markup: the number on the page rings the company's own line.

Free Tool

What should a tow cost?

Towing in Canada is typically a hook-up fee plus a per-kilometre rate, and both vary by province, vehicle and time of day. This estimator uses typical published ranges so you can sanity-check a quote before you say yes - especially after an accident, when you're in no state to haggle.

Rule of thumb: a local daytime tow for a sedan runs $100–$250 in most Canadian cities. Long distance, heavy vehicles, winching and 2 a.m. calls cost more - and impound release fees are a different animal entirely.

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Quick estimate

Estimated range
$115 – $175
Typical published rates, before tax. Nights, weekends and storms run higher. Always confirm the total before the hook drops.
Featured Operators

Highly rated, heavily reviewed.

A sample of the companies drivers rate highest across the country.

Tow truck operator carrying straps beside a loaded car
For Towing Companies

Your next call is reading this page.

Get Towing puts your company in front of drivers at the exact moment they need a truck - on a page about your city, your services, your coverage area. Claim your free listing, or go featured and take the top spot.

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Guides & Resources

Know your rights before the hook drops.

Towing is regulated province by province, and the rules protect you more than most drivers realize. Our guides cover what a tow should cost, what an operator must show you, and how to get through a Canadian winter without meeting one.

FAQ

Quick answers for stressful moments.

Tow truck with warning lights at night
How much does towing cost in Canada?

Most local tows for a car or SUV run $100–$250: a hook-up fee (typically $75–$125) plus a per-kilometre rate ($3–$5). Heavy vehicles, winching, storms and after-hours calls cost more. Ontario now requires tow operators to publish maximum rates - always ask for the total before the truck is dispatched.

Is it cheaper to call a tow company directly?

Usually, yes. Apps and call centres add referral fees. Every number on Get Towing rings the company's own dispatch - you pay their rate, not their rate plus a middleman.

Does my insurance cover towing?

After an accident, towing from the scene is generally covered under your collision or DCPD claim. Breakdown towing is only covered if you added roadside assistance to your policy or carry a plan like CAA. Keep every receipt either way.

Can a tow truck take my car without permission?

From private property (a plaza, a condo lot) - yes, if signage meets provincial rules. From a public street, only police or bylaw can order it. If your car vanishes, call local non-emergency police before assuming theft; they log all authorized tows.

What's the difference between a flatbed and a wheel-lift?

A flatbed carries the whole vehicle on a deck - required for AWD vehicles and most EVs. A wheel-lift tows with two wheels rolling on the road: faster and often cheaper, but only for the right drivetrain. When in doubt, say what you drive and let the dispatcher choose.

How fast will a tow truck arrive?

In cities, 30–60 minutes is typical; 24/7 operators flagged on our listings often quote 30 or less. In storms, expect multiples of that - which is why the winter guides exist.

Warning triangle on the road with a roadside crew behind

Stuck right now? Skip the reading.

Pick your province, pick your city, and call the top-rated 24/7 operator on the page. That's the whole process.

Find a tow truck now