RV & Motorhome Towing in Great Kills — 24/7
RV & Motorhome Towing in Great Kills
Class A coaches, Class B camper vans, and Class C motorhomes towed by heavy-duty wreckers with proper rigging. We handle the weight, the height, and the length — and the logistics of where to take something that big in NYC. 24/7 dispatch in Great Kills, typical 20–40 minute arrival, flat-rate pricing.
RV & Motorhome Towing in Great Kills, Staten Island
If you are stranded in Great Kills and the word you just typed into your phone was "rv & motorhome towing," you landed on the right page. We are The NYC Towing Service — licensed by NYC DCWP, running trucks staged across Staten Island, dispatching 24 hours every day of the year including holidays. Flat-rate quotes on the phone before we dispatch. Typical arrival 20–40 minutes. Licensed, insured, W-2 employees — not gig workers routed through a call center in another state.
RVs are heavy, tall, and long. A 40-foot Class A diesel pusher can weigh 30,000+ pounds and won't fit in most repair shops. We dispatch heavy-duty wreckers with the right capacity, route around bridge and tunnel clearance restrictions, and tow to the RV dealer, a heavy-duty truck shop that can work on it, or a storage facility with height clearance. Class B camper vans get standard heavy-duty towing; Class C motorhomes sit between the two. Expect a quoted rate before we dispatch — RV jobs are not flat-rate because the work varies too much. That description is the baseline — every rv & motorhome towing call adds context that changes exactly how we execute. A rv & motorhome towing call in a narrow Great Kills side street requires different positioning than the same call on an open parkway shoulder. A call on a luxury or low-clearance vehicle requires different equipment than a call on a standard sedan. Dispatch sorts that on the phone so the right crew and rig show up the first time.
Our Great Kills drivers handle rv & motorhome towing calls daily. They know the local streets, parking rules, building clearances, and common hazards — streetcar tracks where they exist, bike-lane concrete curbs, low-clearance residential garages, and the specific intersections where police enforcement or active construction can complicate a hookup. That local knowledge is why we arrive fast and get the job done without the "we cannot access it" callback that plagues out-of-area operators.
One thing that separates licensed operators from light-pole flyer outfits: the truck has the right equipment on board before it leaves the yard. For rv & motorhome towing in Great Kills, that means the primary gear, the secondary gear, NYC-specific extras (wheel chocks that hold on Manhattan and Bronx hills, work lights for overnight shoulder calls, absorbent for fluid spills on residential streets), and full documentation kit (phone mount, dash camera, digital intake pad). Arrive prepared, finish fast.
RV & Motorhome Towing Procedure — Step by Step in Great Kills
Step 1 — Call (212) 470-4068. Tell dispatch you are in Great Kills and you need rv & motorhome towing. Share the cross-streets (or nearest intersection if you do not know the address), the vehicle year/make/model, and any details that matter — AWD, EV, low clearance, keys are in the ignition, what warning lights are on the dash, whether the vehicle is driveable at all. The call takes about 90 seconds. No phone tree, no "press 1 for dispatch," no transfer to a subcontractor.
Step 2 happens before the call ends: the dispatcher quotes a flat rate and a live ETA for your rv & motorhome towing job in Great Kills. Flat rate means the number you hear on the phone is the number on the invoice, unless the scope materially changes. If the dispatcher thinks the job might shift (a jump-start could become a tow because the alternator sounds dead), they will say so and quote both outcomes before dispatching. The ETA is based on which truck is nearest and what the current traffic looks like — not a generic "30 to 60 minutes."
When our truck arrives at your Great Kills location, the driver does three things before touching your vehicle: confirms it is the correct vehicle (plate, VIN, make/model), photographs the condition (four quarters, any existing damage, any special equipment like roof racks or hitches), and explains what is about to happen. For a tow, that means showing you where the tie-downs will clip, where the wheel-lift cradles will sit, what angle the load will come up at. For roadside, it means showing you the tool and explaining what you will see.
Step 4 — Job done at the quoted rate. Receipt is emailed within minutes of completion. All major cards accepted, plus Apple Pay, Google Pay, and cash. For accident tows in Great Kills, we bill your insurance carrier directly in most cases — you provide the policy and claim info, we handle the paperwork. For commercial or fleet accounts, the charge goes on your monthly net-30 invoice. No scrambling for a card at the curb unless that is how you prefer to pay.
A word on scope changes, because they happen on rv & motorhome towing calls more than you might expect. Sometimes what sounded like rv & motorhome towing on the phone is actually a different heavy-duty issue once the driver looks at it. We handle that the same way: stop, re-diagnose, tell you what we see, quote the revised rate, and ask before proceeding. If a roadside fix is going to fail (bad alternator under a seemingly routine dead-battery call), we tell you now instead of taking the $85 and coming back for a second tow call in 20 minutes.
What Causes RV & Motorhome Towing Calls in Great Kills
The Great Kills call volume for rv & motorhome towing is not accidental. Staten Island has specific conditions that drive this exact job: narrow streets that shred sidewalls on curb scrapes, overnight residential parking that exposes batteries to cold, commercial loading zones that fill quickly and leave nowhere to diagnose a failure, and highway corridors (FDR, BQE, Cross Bronx, LIE, Belt Parkway, West Side Highway) where a breakdown becomes dangerous in seconds. Each of those conditions shows up on our dispatch log every week.
The single most common cause of rv & motorhome towing we see is repo or dealer recovery where the RV needs to come back to the sales lot for a missed payment or end-of-lease return. It shows up on our dispatch log week after week across every borough, and Great Kills is no exception. If you drive in Staten Island long enough, you will see this pattern yourself — either on your own vehicle or a neighbor's. The difference between "annoying hour" and "ruined day" is almost always how fast help arrives and whether the operator understood the failure the first time.
The second most common pattern we see on rv & motorhome towing calls is breakdown mid-trip on I-95, the Palisades, I-84, or the Thruway with the RV parked on a shoulder where it can't legally stay overnight. This one tends to concentrate in specific weather windows or in specific parts of Great Kills. If you have been driving in NYC for more than a year, you have probably either experienced this yourself or watched a neighbor experience it. engine or drivetrain failure on a Class A diesel pusher — the big Cummins or Cat diesels are reliable but when they go, the RV is not moving without a heavy wrecker rounds out the top three — less common than the first two but still accounting for meaningful dispatch volume.
Staten Island-specific conditions worth flagging for rv & motorhome towing: The Holland Tunnel and Lincoln Tunnel prohibit propane-equipped vehicles — which means every RV. RVs leaving Manhattan go via the GWB, the Verrazzano, or one of the East River bridges. NYC has almost no RV repair shops — the tri-state RV dealer network is in New Jersey (Camping World in Hanover, La Mesa RV in Stafford Township) and upstate New York (Alpin Haus in Amsterdam). Most RV tows end up leaving the city, so distance matters. NYC doesn't have RV-friendly streets for parking a 40-foot coach — owners usually store the RV out of the city and come in by car, which means RV breakdowns in the city are rare but the ones we get are usually from out-of-town visitors. Every one of these is the kind of thing a suburban operator shows up in Great Kills without knowing, and then burns an hour on curb navigation or parking-enforcement avoidance that a local driver would handle automatically.
Seasonality matters too. rv & motorhome towing calls in Great Kills spike in certain weather windows — cold snaps for battery-related failures, summer heat for fluid and AC-related issues, winter storms for stuck-in-snow winch-outs, and rainy days for reduced-visibility accidents. Knowing the seasonal curve lets us pre-stage extra trucks in Staten Island during peak windows so retail response times stay in the 20–40 minute zone instead of blowing out to 90+ during storms.
Vehicle Types We Handle on RV & Motorhome Towing Calls in Great Kills
Most cars we move on rv & motorhome towing calls in Great Kills are standard passenger vehicles — Camrys, Civics, Accords, CR-Vs, RAV4s, the working fleet of the city. Wheel-lift rigs handle these fine and are quicker to stage on narrow blocks. The category where the rig decision gets interesting is the "non-standard" vehicles — AWD crossovers that look normal but cannot tolerate wheel-lift, EVs that physically cannot tolerate it, and luxury or low-clearance sports cars where wheel-lift would damage the front air dam.
AWD and 4WD vehicles — common across Great Kills especially in winter months — require flatbed. Dragging drive wheels on an AWD transfer case is a warranty-voiding, drivetrain-destroying decision. Subaru, AWD crossovers from every major brand, 4WD trucks and Jeeps: all flatbed. If you are not sure whether your vehicle is AWD, tell dispatch the year/make/model and we will know. About 40% of our Great Kills flatbed calls come from AWD vehicles where the customer did not realize the drivetrain required it.
Electric vehicles — Tesla (Model 3, Y, S, X), Rivian, Lucid, Mustang Mach-E, Hyundai Ioniq, Kia EV6, Chevy Bolt, all of them — are a separate category with strict rules. Flatbed only. Drive wheels off the ground. Some manufacturers require specific dolly configurations or won't allow transport with a fully drained battery. Our Great Kills team handles EVs regularly and follows manufacturer specs per model. If you are stranded in a Great Kills EV, tell dispatch the exact model and we will match the right procedure.
Heavy-duty and specialty vehicles need different gear. Box trucks, sprinter vans, contractor rigs, oversized SUVs, and anything over ~10,000 lbs gets heavy-duty service with the correct wrecker and trained driver. Motorcycles go on flatbed with soft straps and wheel chocks — they are not "just small cars" and the tie-down procedure is totally different. Our Great Kills dispatch distinguishes these on intake so the right equipment rolls.
Equipment & Tools for RV & Motorhome Towing in Great Kills
Our Great Kills rv & motorhome towing rigs roll out with the tools the job actually needs. Item one is the primary piece: Air-bag and air-line equipment to re-inflate a collapsed air suspension on scene — required before a Class A with air suspension failure can be safely towed. Every truck also carries the redundancy — backup batteries for jump-starters, spare fuel cans for delivery trucks, extra lockout kits for vehicles that turn out to have different door-lock mechanisms than the dispatcher expected. Redundancy is cheap at the yard and expensive at the scene.
The backup kit: Scene-lighting rig and traffic control because an RV on a highway shoulder at night needs more light than a car to stay safely visible covers the adjacent situation (the one that looks like the primary situation on the phone but turns out to be different on scene), and A heavy wrecker with 35-50 ton capacity rated for Class A motorhomes — most of the fleet is overmatched on a 30,000-pound diesel pusher and the specialty trucks matter handles edge cases. Our Great Kills team sees all of these. Carrying the full kit means we rarely have to admit defeat and dispatch a second truck — a good outcome for the customer's wait time and for our operating efficiency.
Beyond the primary three items, we carry: Tire gear for dual-rear blowouts — RV spares are rare (most owners don't carry one) so we often swap or get you to a tire shop that carries the size, GPS and dispatch coordination with the receiving shop to confirm they can accept the RV's height and length — an RV at a shop without a bay door that fits it is a wasted trip, and the universal NYC extras — wheel chocks for hills, reflective gear for scene protection, work lights for night shoulders, tire inflator and air compressor for on-spot inflation needs, absorbent pads for fluid leaks, wrecker straps rated for the vehicle class we are working, and a first-aid kit that gets inventoried every month.
Every truck in our rv & motorhome towing fleet also carries documentation gear — a phone mount, a dash camera, and a digital intake pad for photos and the customer signature at completion. We photograph the vehicle before we touch it, during the procedure, and after. Those photos live in your service record for 90 days and are available on request if your insurance adjuster, body shop, or attorney needs them. For fleet accounts, condition-report photos push to your fleet portal automatically before the truck leaves the scene.
RV & Motorhome Towing Pitfalls to Avoid in Great Kills
Mistake one on rv & motorhome towing in Great Kills: letting a standard heavy-duty wrecker attempt an rv tow — most heavy-duty trucks are rated for box trucks and tractors, not a 30,000-pound class a. the rigging and capacity need to match. This shows up constantly. The driver figures they can wait it out or fix it themselves, and 40 minutes later the situation is worse — battery fully dead instead of marginal, tire ruined instead of patchable, vehicle ticketed or towed by NYPD, or the whole thing turned into a bigger bill because what started as roadside is now a tow plus shop time.
Pattern two to avoid: forgetting the pets, the contents of the fridge, or the propane tanks — propane must be shut off at the tank before a tow, and the driver will verify before hooking up. In Great Kills this tends to come as a truck pulling over uninvited offering a "quick fix" or a flat-rate cash deal. Sometimes it is honest, often it is not. The tell: a real dispatched operator has your ticket number, driver name, truck number, and destination already loaded — unsolicited arrivals have none of that. Keep your doors locked, stay in the car, and call dispatch back to confirm before engaging with anyone.
Avoid: not confirming the receiving shop has rv-capable bays — most auto shops do not, and many heavy truck shops do not have the height clearance. Our Great Kills drivers confirm the rate verbally before execution and capture your signature on the tablet after the job — with the rate locked in. Anyone asking you to sign before the job is done, at a number "to be determined," is either sloppy or trying to upsell at the drop.
Fourth and fifth on the common-mistakes list for rv & motorhome towing in Great Kills: taking the wrong bridge — the queensboro lower level, the brooklyn bridge, and parts of the henry hudson parkway prohibit rvs or have clearance issues. gps routing without manual override puts rvs on the wrong road and driving the rv with a failed air suspension — sitting on the frame destroys drivetrain bushings in miles, not hours. Photos protect both of us and are non-negotiable on our side — drivers who skip the photo walkthrough are not our drivers. Leaving the vehicle unattended on an NYC curb with hazards on reads as "opportunity" to a small number of people who actively look for that. Stay in the vehicle with the doors locked, or stay within visual range.
What RV & Motorhome Towing Includes in Great Kills
Class A, B & C Motorhomes. Class A coaches, Class B camper vans, and Class C motorhomes towed by heavy-duty wreckers with proper rigging. We handle the weight, the height, and the length — and the logistics of where to take something that big in NYC. The Heavy-Duty & Specialty Transport category also includes related services we run in Great Kills. If your situation turns out to be adjacent to rv & motorhome towing rather than exactly rv & motorhome towing, dispatch can re-route on the same phone call without requiring a second intake.
Standard rv & motorhome towing scope for Great Kills calls: right-sized truck, full equipment kit, documentation photos, verbal walkthrough, flat-rate pricing, digital receipt. That is the package — no surprise extras, no "shop supplies" fee, no fuel surcharge, no "NYC metro fee." The number you heard on the phone is the number on the receipt.
Insurance handling in Great Kills: for collision tows and insurance-covered roadside, we bill your carrier directly in most cases — you provide the policy number, claim number, and adjuster contact, and we submit through their standard process. For routine non-insurance jobs, you pay at completion and we email an itemized receipt suitable for reimbursement. COI (certificate of insurance) available within 24 hours for commercial clients who need it for fleet accounts or vendor onboarding.
Delivery: we land the vehicle exactly at the drop you authorized, in the position you requested (facing forward, backed in, key location). If the destination has special requirements (gate code, back-lot access, specific bay number), share those with dispatch and they go to the driver's tablet before arrival. If something changes en route from Great Kills, we call you.
What RV & Motorhome Towing Costs in Great Kills
Rates for rv & motorhome towing in Great Kills: base rates align with our full-borough pricing — $85 roadside flat, $125 light-duty tow base, $175 flatbed base, heavy-duty quoted per job. Mileage included for the first five miles on tows. Any delivered fuel billed at cost on top of the service rate. No surprise surcharges, no "metro fee," no after-hours or holiday upcharge.
The specific number for your rv & motorhome towing call in Great Kills depends on the job type, distance, and whether any scope variations apply. Dispatch quotes it on the phone before the truck dispatches — you know the rate before you commit to the call. If the job changes on scene (a jump-start turns into a tow because the alternator is gone, or a tow destination has to be redirected mid-run), we stop and quote the revised number before executing.
Great Kills payment options for rv & motorhome towing: every common method works — card, wallet, cash, direct-to-insurance for covered work, net-30 for commercial. For split billing (partial direct-to-insurance, partial out-of-pocket), coordinate at intake so the driver has the right paperwork on scene. Our billing desk can restructure invoices after the fact if something changes, but on-call is easier.
Factors that can change pricing on a Great Kills rv & motorhome towing call: mileage beyond the included zone, vehicle weight class bumps, scope changes on scene (a roadside fix turning into a tow), and ancillaries like scene cleanup on accident calls. Each of these is quoted before execution. If the rate change would be trivial ($5–$20 for a short mileage overrun), the driver just informs you; if it is material, dispatch stops and re-confirms before we proceed.
Billing & Fleet Setup for RV & Motorhome Towing in Great Kills
For insurance-covered rv & motorhome towing work in Great Kills — accident tows, collision recovery, and roadside covered under your auto policy or a roadside-club membership — we bill direct to the carrier in most cases. You provide the policy number, claim number, and adjuster contact at intake. We handle the paperwork, submit through the carrier's standard process, and you pay $0 at the scene for the portion that is covered. Any remaining deductible or uncovered delta is charged to your card or billed separately, whichever you prefer.
Commercial rv & motorhome towing structure for Great Kills operators: account number = priority routing, consistent drivers, net-30 invoicing, automated photo delivery, COI on file, and a named account manager for any escalations. This works for body shops, dealers, rideshare fleets, delivery fleets, contractor fleets, rental-car operations, property management companies, and anyone else whose rv & motorhome towing volume justifies dedicated dispatch.
Documentation package for Great Kills commercial rv & motorhome towing: COI on request, W-9 on file, account agreement with payment terms, driver roster with license numbers (for property managers who require it for access), and a photo-delivery protocol per your fleet portal's specs. All of this lives in your account record and is pushed to your AP and ops contacts once.
When to Call for RV & Motorhome Towing in Great Kills
Any time, any day, for rv & motorhome towing in Great Kills. We do not charge a premium for overnight, weekend, or holiday work. Dispatch answers the phone at 3 AM on Christmas the same way it answers at 3 PM on Tuesday. The only thing that changes the rate is scope — the clock does not.
Same-day is the default for rv & motorhome towing in Great Kills. You are broken down or need service now, we dispatch now. Typical arrival 20–40 minutes. Peak rush hour (5–7 PM weekdays) can push that to 40–60, and severe weather (snow, ice, heavy rain affecting traffic) can push it further. Dispatch gives you an honest ETA on the call — if it is going to be 75 minutes because we are stacked up, you hear that before the truck leaves the yard.
Scheduled rv & motorhome towing in Great Kills: book 24–48 hours ahead and we hit a 30-minute window. Works for planned vehicle moves, fleet relocations, inspection drop-offs, service-appointment runs, and pre-arranged commercial pickups. Scheduled rate is the same as same-day flat rate — we do not charge extra for planning ahead. In fact, planning ahead helps us route efficiently, which is a win for us and a win for you.
Recurring-need setup for Great Kills rv & motorhome towing: a fleet account consolidates billing, priority-routes your calls, and assigns consistent drivers. Typical setup fits on a single phone call with our commercial desk. Billing: net-30, monthly statements, W-9 and COI on file. No setup fee, no minimum volume, no term commitment — we earn the volume or we do not.
How Great Kills Fits Into Our Staten Island RV & Motorhome Towing Network
Great Kills is one of the neighborhoods we prioritize within our broader Staten Island rv & motorhome towing operation. Trucks stage here or within minutes of here, which is why our arrival times in Great Kills are toward the fast end of our 20–40 minute range. Adjacent neighborhoods get the same priority — a truck in Great Kills is often the nearest available unit for a call a few blocks over, so response times stay tight across the whole zone.
Staten Island is one continuous coverage area for us. Great Kills is a focal point within it, but neighborhoods adjacent to Great Kills get the same priority and the same pricing. Live routing and dispatcher judgment matter here — if a truck in Great Kills is the closest unit to a call in the next neighborhood over, that truck takes the call regardless of which block "owns" it.
Staten Island-specific factors in Great Kills response time: bridge and tunnel traffic state, Staten Island arterials congestion, weather effects on specific corridors, and real-time positions of our trucks. These all feed into the ETA you hear on the intake call. When we say 22 minutes, we mean 22 minutes — not "somewhere in the 20–40 minute range, probably." Accuracy comes from the local intelligence layer on top of GPS.
Beyond Great Kills, our Staten Island network connects to the broader NYC coverage — all five boroughs, with cross-borough transfers, direct-to-shop drops, and outbound tows to the suburbs and beyond. A rv & motorhome towing call that starts in Great Kills often ends somewhere else entirely (a shop in another borough, a dealer, a body shop, a residence across town). Our multi-borough operation makes those runs routine, not exceptional.
Great Kills RV & Motorhome Towing Follow-Up, Records, and Next Steps
After a rv & motorhome towing job completes in Great Kills, the next thing that happens is your email receipt. It arrives within a few minutes of the driver clearing the scene. The receipt itemizes the service, the flat rate, any mileage overages, any ancillaries, and the payment method. For insurance-billed jobs, you get a separate copy of what was submitted to your carrier. Keep these — they matter for expense reimbursement, insurance follow-up, and any future dispute resolution.
For insurance-involved rv & motorhome towing calls in Great Kills, the back-end processing runs in parallel to your next steps. We submit through the carrier's tow-vendor process, provide any supplementary documentation they request, and close out when they pay. If anything stalls (uncommon, but it happens with smaller carriers), our billing desk contacts you or your adjuster to unblock. You typically will not have to do anything between the scene and the claim closing.
When your rv & motorhome towing job in Great Kills dropped the vehicle at a repair shop, we have already handed off the condition documentation to the shop. Your next step is typically to wait for the shop's diagnostic and estimate. If the shop ever raises a question about damage caused in transit, the pre-tow photos we took settle it immediately — that is exactly why we take them.
If you expect to need rv & motorhome towing again in Great Kills — a fleet operator, a repair shop, a property manager, a real estate operator handling unauthorized parking, or just a driver whose commute takes them through rough roads — opening an account pays back quickly. Dispatch remembers you, the intake shortcuts, and pricing gets smoothed out (volume rates available above certain thresholds). Ask on the next call, or request account setup at any time.
Why Choose The NYC Towing Service for RV & Motorhome Towing in Great Kills
The category of "rv & motorhome towing operator in Great Kills" is crowded with names that are actually subcontractors, lead aggregators, or light-pole flyer shops. We are different: NYC DCWP-licensed operator, W-2 drivers, owned fleet, direct dispatch. That structure produces a different customer experience — one line of communication, one entity responsible, one flat rate, one receipt.
Consistency matters more than people realize. In Great Kills, a driver who has run rv & motorhome towing calls here dozens of times already knows the block patterns, the common garage clearances, which corners are hydrant-zoned, and where the nearby loading zones are for staging. A driver sent in from outside Staten Island does not. That familiarity compresses every call by 10–20 minutes.
Flat-rate, upfront pricing. NYC DCWP tow license. Commercial auto, garage liability, and on-hook insurance on every truck and every load. No storage fees on same-day drops. Receipts emailed before the truck leaves the scene. No "NYC surcharge," no "after-hours" surcharge, no "holiday" surcharge, no "fuel" surcharge. The rate is the rate, and we say it out loud on the intake call so you can write it down before we move.
Dispatch line for rv & motorhome towing in Great Kills: (212) 470-4068. Live answer, flat rate, real ETA, email receipt. That is the whole transaction. We have been doing this in NYC for years, and the process is smooth because we have refined every step — no surprises, no drama, just a tow or roadside fix done right.
Local Tips
RV & Motorhome Towing Tips for Great Kills Drivers
Great Kills has its own patterns for rv & motorhome towing calls — informed by Staten Island traffic, local streets, and the mix of vehicles on the road. Browse all Staten Island neighborhoods or get the full service overview on the RV & Motorhome Towing service page. For the deep-dive how-to — step-by-step protocol, do's and don'ts, common causes, and FAQs — see the full RV & Motorhome Towing guide.
- 1Great Kills RV recovery requires height and length routing — share class and dimensions on the call.
- 2In Great Kills, destinations to shops or dealers may be outside the borough — confirm the flat-rate covers the distance.
- 3Snow extraction and winch-out calls are common in Great Kills during winter; dispatch has seasonal gear ready.
RV & Motorhome Towing Pricing in Great Kills
Heavy-Duty & Specialty Transport
Flat-rate pricing, quoted before dispatch.
No NYC surcharge. No after-hours markup. No storage fees on same-day drops.
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Heavy-Duty Towing
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Flatbed Towing
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Accident Recovery & Collision Towing
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Long Distance Towing
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Roadside Assistance
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Jump Start / Dead Battery
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RV & Motorhome Towing in Nearby Staten Island Neighborhoods
Our Staten Island Dispatch Hub — Serving Great Kills
1110 South Ave
Bloomfield, SIN 10314
(917) 277-0300
Corporate Park of Staten Island on South Avenue, minutes from the Goethals and the West Shore Expressway. Fastest response across the island — St. George to Tottenville, Travis to Great Kills — and direct access to the Verrazzano for Brooklyn crossings and the Bayonne Bridge for Jersey recoveries.
Get Directions →Need RV & Motorhome Towing in Great Kills?
24/7 dispatch. Flat-rate pricing. Typical 20–40 min arrival.