24/7 Jumpstart Near Me — Grapevine, Texas (Near Grapevine Mills)

★ 4.9 · 487 reviews·From $49·24-Hour Private Roadside

Grapevine's 24-hour private roadside line for jumpstart. Real humans answer, real trucks roll, and pricing starts at $49 — no surprise after-hours fees.

Quick answer

Highway 35 Roadside provides 24/7 jumpstart in Grapevine, TX, serving Tarrant County and the surrounding Dallas–Fort Worth Metroplex & North Texas. Typical on-scene arrival is 25–40 minutes anywhere in Grapevine. Flat upfront pricing from $49 with no hidden fees, hookup fees, or after-hours upcharges. Call (469) 340-3500 to dispatch a tech now.

Stranded in Grapevine right now?

Service-area edge of Grapevine? We still come — Tarrant County coverage is end-to-end.

Call now: (469) 340-3500

Why drivers in Grapevine choose Highway 35

  • Live human answers — no robo-menu, no "press 1 for…" maze.
  • 55,000 Grapevine neighbors already on file. Yours could be next.
  • Apartment lots, hotel garages, and every Grapevine highway shoulder.
  • Local to Tarrant County — we know the SH-114 on/off ramps by heart.
  • Flat-rate from $49 with upfront pricing before we dispatch.
  • Highway-trained crew for SH-114, SH-121
  • Apartment, garage, and gated-community access in Grapevine
  • Licensed & insured technicians with commercial-grade equipment
  • Tracked ETA covers every ZIP code in Grapevine
  • 4.9★ rating on Google — 487 verified DFW reviews
  • Live human on every call — no automated menus

Common jumpstart situations in Grapevine

  • Office park near Main Street — won't start at quitting time
  • Locked keys at Main Street
  • Flat tire on SH-114 during morning commute
  • Construction detour on SH-114 left you on the shoulder
  • Late-night call from a Grapevine hotel garage

Areas we serve in Grapevine

Our roadside assistance covers all Grapevine neighborhoods, including areas near Grapevine Mills, Main Street, Lake Grapevine. We also provide service to apartment communities, office parks, shopping centers, hotels, and entertainment venues throughout the city — and the broader Tarrant County region.

Silent in the structure — the jump-start problem in parking garages

A jump start near a luxury mall garage is one of our most common calls, and the enclosed environment is the culprit. Dense multi-story concrete blocks cellular and satellite signal. If your vehicle has a telematics system or a passive keyless-entry fob, it will continuously ping for a signal it can't find — draining the battery in a late-model BMW, Mercedes, or Range Rover within hours of parking. This is the signal-seek dead battery. We bypass it safely with professional-grade jump packs that won't damage sensitive ECUs, far safer than asking mall security for rusty cables.

Jumpstart near Grapevine landmarks

Grapevine Mills

Grapevine Mills roadside — battery drain in the outer-loop lots

Grapevine Mills sprawling outer lots and the shared LEGOLAND / SEA LIFE traffic keep this one of the busiest weekend roadside zones in Tarrant County. Late-model SUVs with the rear hatch held open by toddlers will drain a battery in under 90 minutes — we run quick jumps, CCA tests, and on-site battery swaps without you needing to leave the lot.

Gaylord Texan Resort

Gaylord Texan resort guest roadside — multi-day garage battery calls

Gaylord Texan self-park and valet decks see weekly multi-day battery failures from convention guests and ICE! holiday-season visitors. We run the SH-121 / SH-26 corridor daily and we know the resort's parking layout so we get to the right level on the first pass.

Historic Main Street Grapevine

Historic Main Street Grapevine — wine-trail and GrapeFest lockouts

Main Street's tight street parking and weekend wine-trail crowds produce a predictable rhythm of lockouts and dead batteries. We pre-stage on GrapeFest weekends and through the holiday-lights season.

Jumpstart safety playbooks for Grapevine

Step-by-step action guides for the specific Grapevine breakdown scenarios this service handles most.

Safety playbook

What to do with a 1 AM lockout or flat tire in the entertainment district

If you're stranded in Deep Ellum, West 7th, Sundance Square, or Bishop Arts after bar close, get to the nearest well-lit business facade as your safe base, do NOT sit in the driver's seat if you've been drinking (Texas Penal Code 49.04 can charge DWI for 'operating' a vehicle), and decline help from strangers — say 'my cousin is a mechanic, on his way.'

For entertainment districts including Historic Main Street Grapevine.

  1. The intoxication-proximity problem

    It's 1:30 AM in Deep Ellum and you've found a dead battery or a lockout. By law and safety logic, do not stand in the roadway — but a dark sidewalk by an alley off Elm Street is also a risk vector. Find the nearest well-lit, open business facade, even an ATM vestibule, and make that your safe base. We'll call when we're one block away. If you've had any alcohol, do NOT sit in the driver's seat with keys in your pocket — Texas Penal Code 49.04 allows a DWI charge for 'operating,' which some officers interpret as occupying that seat with access to keys.

  2. The street-debris pre-check (flat tire)

    In Bishop Arts or Lower Greenville your flat is likely from a broken bottle, a curb-pothole, or a metal valve stem from street sweeping. Before we arrive, use your phone flashlight from inside the car to scan the street around the tire. If you see jagged glass still embedded in the tread, do not touch it. Tell dispatch 'debris in tire, still embedded' — the tech brings a plug kit and expects a sharp extraction, not just a swap. Prevents a second flat 20 feet down the road.

  3. The non-engagement rule

    At bar-close in Sundance Square or West 7th you'll be approached by pedestrians offering help. Some mean well, some don't. Safest script: 'My cousin is a mechanic, he's on his way right now, thank you.' Emphasizing a personal connection ('cousin') shuts down persistent offers more reliably than 'I've already called someone.' Never accept a stranger's push — an unpowered car with no steering assist or brake boost is nearly impossible to control on a slope and you'll roll into a parked car or a DART track.

  4. Arrival — creating a work zone

    Our truck pulls in with amber flashers and a rear-facing arrow board, creating a legal utility-work-zone buffer under Texas Transportation Code. Exit your vehicle on the passenger side only, directly onto the sidewalk. For lockouts we need your ID to verify ownership before unlocking — have it ready, not buried in the locked glovebox. Once the door's open, start the car immediately and confirm the fob is detected so we don't leave you with a 'no key detected' fault after we drive off.

  5. The 'watch your six' departure

    We won't leave until your car is running, lights are on, and you're pulling away safely. We follow for one block to confirm no dash alerts. On Elm Street with heavy pedestrian spillover at 2 AM, our truck serves as your rear blocker until you're fully integrated into moving traffic and clear of the bar crowd.

Safety playbook

What to do when your SUV is a brick oven and your battery is dead

If your battery is dead after hours at a DFW mall in 100°+ heat, stop clicking the fob — you get 3–4 cranks before the starter solenoid quits. Lead-acid batteries lose 33% of cranking capacity at 100°F, and signal-seek drain from keyless fobs in a concrete garage finishes the job. Call a professional with an ECU-safe jump pack and an on-site battery test.

For shopping centers including Grapevine Mills, Gaylord Texan Resort.

  1. The heat-soak realization

    You shopped Galleria Dallas for 3 hours at 103°F. Your interior hit 140°F and the battery under the hood marinated in ambient engine-bay heat. Lead-acid batteries lose 33% of cranking capacity at 100°F and electrolyte fluid can actually evaporate. When the fob clicks and nothing happens, do not keep clicking — every failed crank in a hot-soaked engine saps residual voltage. You get 3–4 attempts before the starter solenoid won't even click.

  2. The garage signal-blackout factor

    In the underground at NorthPark Center or the structure at The Shops at Clearfork, cell signal degrades to 1 bar. Keyless fobs also struggle there — the car may have been polling for a fob it can't find for hours, draining the battery. Don't wander the structure hunting for signal. Move to the open-air top level, or step just outside the garage entrance to make the call, then return to your vehicle. Note your parking section letter and level — NorthPark's Zone labeling is notoriously confusing.

  3. Valet and security conflict avoidance

    At Legacy West or Grandscape, private security patrols aggressively. If a security vehicle approaches while you wait, tell them 'My roadside assistance is already dispatched and paid for.' Private security often has an 'approved vendors' list and may try to redirect you to a contracted company with inflated rates. On private public-access property you have the right to choose your own provider. Just point them to our arriving truck.

  4. Trunk-first access for modern SUVs

    Many luxury SUVs (Range Rover, BMW X5, Mercedes GLE) and newer minivans mount the battery under the cargo floor. If you're at Southlake Town Square with a trunk-mounted battery and the car is dead, the power liftgate won't open. Tell dispatch on the phone: 'Dead battery, trunk-mounted, no manual key slot for the hatch.' We bring a secondary supply to feed 12V through a hidden positive terminal under the dash or fuse box, popping the hatch without ripping interior panels.

  5. Post-jump shopping continuation

    After a Grandscape jump start, your battery is chemically stressed. Do NOT drive to the next store and shut off again. Idle for 10 minutes or drive a full loop of the complex. A healthy alternator needs sustained RPM to replenish a deeply discharged AGM battery. We can run a CCA test on-site to tell you if this was a one-time fluke (dome light) or a failing battery that will strand you again at Allen Premium Outlets next weekend. If the latter, we often install a replacement right in the lot — no tow.

Frequently asked questions

More services in Grapevine

Nearby cities we serve

No matter where you park, we're 20 minutes away.

Don't see your exact breakdown spot? DFW's traffic system is a complex web. If you're broken down near Reunion Tower, a DART station in Plano, Buc-ee's in Denton, or a hidden garage in Las Colinas — here's what to do right now:

  1. 1Turn on hazard lights. Save your battery by switching off A/C and radio.
  2. 2Pin your location. Use Google Maps "Share Location." On the Sam Rayburn Tollway, note the nearest mile marker.
  3. 3Tap to call. A dead battery in the Stockyards or a lockout at Stonebriar needs a human voice that knows the landmarks. We service every parking lot from The Star in Frisco down to the Cotton Bowl at Fair Park, 24 hours a day.
Call (469) 340-3500

Skip the chain. Highway 35 jumpstart gets Grapevine moving 24/7.

One call. Real human. Fast dispatch.

(469) 340-3500

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Trust & transparency

  • Licensed & insured

    General liability and service-vehicle insurance. License and proof of insurance available on request.

  • Bonded operators

    Every technician is background-checked and trained on non-destructive procedures.

  • Published SLA

    Median DFW response 25–45 minutes. Live ETA quoted on the call before dispatch.

  • Editorial policy

    How we source prices, response data, and safety guidance. Read policy

  • Reviewed by Highway 35 Dispatch Operations

    Page last updated 2026-06-23. Corrections welcome at dispatch@highway35roadside.com.