A motor club is a roadside-assistance organization — AAA, CAA, Agero, Allstate, HONK, and the like — that sells drivers coverage and then routes the actual tow and roadside jobs to local operators. For a tow operator, motor-club jobs arrive through online portals on an acceptance timer, and how fast dispatch accepts them shapes your rating and your volume.
When a stranded driver calls their roadside coverage, they are calling a motor club. The club does not own tow trucks — it sells the coverage and then hands the job to a local operator like you. Understanding how that handoff works is central to running a towing operation, because the clubs are a major source of volume and they decide how much of it you get.
What is a motor club, exactly?
A motor club is an organization that sells roadside-assistance memberships or backs them for insurers and automakers, then dispatches the resulting jobs to contracted local operators. The names a tow operator deals with most:
- AAA in the US and CAA in Canada — the big membership clubs
- Agero, Allstate Roadside, HONK, Quest, and NSD — service providers and networks
- Insurer and automaker roadside programs routed through those networks
How do motor-club jobs reach a tow operator?
Through digital portals. When a member needs help, the club pushes the job out to operators in the area through an online portal or app, and it comes with an acceptance timer — accept it inside the window or it goes to the next operator. Watching those portals and accepting qualifying jobs fast is a core, around-the-clock dispatch task, and it is exactly the work that does not stop overnight.
Real-time driver coordination and routing around the clock — overnight, weekends, holidays, and peak surges covered.
Why acceptance speed decides your volume
The clubs track how reliably you accept and complete jobs, and that rating drives how much work they route you next. Miss jobs because no one was watching the portal at 3am and the rating slips; the clubs send the volume to a more responsive operator. This is why so many tow operators put a desk on the portals around the clock — consistent, fast acceptance is the single biggest lever on motor-club volume.
How dispatch handles motor-club work
A tow dispatch desk watches your motor-club portals around the clock, accepts qualifying jobs inside the acceptance window, and routes your trucks to them — inside TowBook or Dispatch Anywhere. The overnight and surge hours, when a portal can fill fast and a stranded member is waiting, are precisely when an unwatched screen costs you both the immediate jobs and the future volume your rating earns.