24/7 Roadside Assistance Near Me — Little Elm, Texas (Near The Cove)

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

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

Quick answer

Highway 35 Roadside provides 24/7 roadside assistance in Little Elm, TX, serving Denton County and the surrounding Dallas–Fort Worth Metroplex & North Texas. Typical on-scene arrival is 25–40 minutes anywhere in Little Elm. 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 Little Elm right now?

Little Elm traffic moves fast. So do we. Live ETA the moment we accept your call.

Call now: (469) 340-3500

Why drivers in Little Elm choose Highway 35

  • 55,000 Little Elm neighbors already on file. Yours could be next.
  • Live human answers — no robo-menu, no "press 1 for…" maze.
  • True 24/7 coverage — same rate at noon and at 3 a.m.
  • Top-rated DFW provider — 4.9★ across 487 verified reviews and counting.
  • Local to Denton County — we know the DNT on/off ramps by heart.
  • Fast ETA from a tech already inside Denton County
  • Cash, card, Apple Pay, Google Pay — pay how you want
  • 4.9★ rating on Google — 487 verified DFW reviews
  • Tracked ETA covers every ZIP code in Little Elm
  • Dispatcher trained on every roadside assistance edge case in Little Elm
  • 24/7 emergency roadside assistance across Little Elm — including holidays

Common roadside assistance situations in Little Elm

  • Office park near The Cove — won't start at quitting time
  • Cold-snap morning, no crank, Little Elm driveway
  • Construction detour on DNT left you on the shoulder
  • Late-night call from a Little Elm hotel garage
  • Gated community on the edge of Little Elm — chain tow refused entry

Areas we serve in Little Elm

Our roadside assistance covers all Little Elm neighborhoods, including areas near Little Elm Beach, The Cove. We also provide service to apartment communities, office parks, shopping centers, hotels, and entertainment venues throughout the city — and the broader Denton County region.

Stranded on the pavement — what to do with a blowout on a DFW tollway

Breaking down on the President George Bush Turnpike, Sam Rayburn Tollway, or the I-35E express lanes feels uniquely exposed. The 75–80 mph traffic and the narrow Chisholm Trail Parkway shoulder create a lethal risk. If you have a flat or an overheating engine, stay buckled inside with hazards on if you can't safely exit curbside. Do not attempt a DIY tire change with traffic flying past your mirror. Call for a professional roadside unit with a full-size spare, a 10-ton hydraulic jack for soft shoulders, and amber light bars that legally move traffic over. We monitor NTTA incident feeds to respond faster than the standard tow dispatcher.

Roadside Assistance safety playbooks for Little Elm

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

Safety playbook

What to do when you blow a tire or stall at 75 MPH on a DFW tollway

If a tire blows on the Sam Rayburn or Dallas North Tollway at highway speed, do NOT slam the brakes — ease off the accelerator and coast to 45 mph before braking. Steer for the widest paved shoulder (often the left on the DNT, per NTTA data), stay belted with hazards on, and call a professional with amber lights instead of attempting a DIY change in an 8-foot shoulder beside 75 mph traffic.

For tollways and highways including DNT.

  1. Coast to the curbside — do not brake hard

    Your tire delaminates at 78 mph on the Sam Rayburn Tollway and the wheel shakes violently. Do not slam the brakes — that unloads the rear suspension and can snap the car sideways. Ease off the accelerator and let the car coast to 45 mph before applying gentle, progressive braking. Target the right shoulder, but on the Dallas North Tollway the left shoulder against the concrete median is often wider and safer than the narrow right gutter pan. NTTA data shows left-shoulder breakdowns have a 40% lower strike rate. Steer for whichever paved shoulder is widest.

  2. Stay belted, passenger-slide exit

    Once stopped: hazards on, everyone stays seatbelted. With passengers on the left shoulder of I-35E, the safest exit is the passenger-side door, sliding occupants across and onto the median grass — never the traffic side. Do not open any door facing traffic; a truck mirror at 70 mph will remove a car door and an arm in a single impact. If you're alone on the left shoulder, stay inside, belt on, doors locked. We approach from the rear and the truck blocks the lane.

  3. The mile-marker precision call

    When you call from the PGBT, do not say 'near the Coit exit.' Say 'President George Bush Turnpike southbound, mile marker 22.5, between Coit and Preston, left shoulder.' NTTA tollways have blue mile-marker signs every 0.2 miles — that pinpoints you within 1,000 feet. Better yet, note whether you're before or after a gantry. The overhead toll gantry is visible from half a mile away: '300 yards past the Coit gantry' beats any GPS pin for our tech approaching at 65 mph.

  4. The no-self-change rule on NTTA shoulders

    NTTA's own safety advisories strongly discourage motorists from changing tires themselves on tollway shoulders. The Sam Rayburn 'safety' shoulder is 8 feet wide. A full-size SUV is 6.5 feet wide. That leaves 18 inches between your kneeling body and a 75 mph stream of distracted drivers. We carry an extendable, remote-operated hydraulic jack so the technician stands behind the vehicle while lifting, arrive in Class 2 hi-vis uniform with a truck-mounted attenuator for severe exposure, and absorb the risk so you don't have to.

  5. The re-entry sequence

    After the tire change or jump start, the most dangerous moment is merging back into tollway flow from a dead stop. We pull behind you, match hazard patterns to traffic rhythm, and when we see an 8-second gap we signal with a long horn honk and a flashing spotlight. Accelerate hard down the shoulder to reach 55+ mph before merging — never merge at 30 mph. The speed differential causes panic braking behind you and a secondary collision risk. We watch your six until you're two exits away.

Frequently asked questions

More services in Little Elm

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 roadside assistance gets Little Elm moving 24/7.

One call. Real human. Fast dispatch.

(469) 340-3500

Live dispatcher, never an automated menu.

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.