In a community like Estevan, towing is personal - the 2 operators listed here cover the town and a wide rural radius around it, and they know every concession road on it. 1 of them run 24/7 dispatch, flagged on the listings below. The most common services locally are 24-hour towing, heavy-duty towing, light-duty towing and winch-outs.
CAA-approved heavy and light towing across Saskatchewan
Saskatchewan towing operates under general consumer protection, SGI insurance rules, and municipal bylaws. SGI covers accident towing as part of a claim. Private-property towing in Saskatoon and Regina requires posted signage. Slow Down Move Over: 60 km/h when passing tow trucks with amber lights.
Distances are the story: between Regina, Saskatoon and the smaller centres, a tow can be a 100 km run and priced like one. In winter, the Highway Hotline before you leave is not optional - ground blizzards close the 1 and the 11 with little warning.
Prairie winters are the toughest towing environment in Canada. If you go off the road in a blizzard, stay with the vehicle - it's shelter and it's what searchers find. Run the engine ten minutes an hour with the exhaust clear.
911
Emergencies
Highway Hotline (511 / hotline.gov.sk.ca)
Saskatchewan's road-condition service - closures, winter driving, construction
310-4141
RCMP non-emergency in Saskatchewan
Around Estevan, expect a typical hook-up fee of $75–$110 plus roughly $3.00–$4.00 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.
Estimate your tow