Outsourced tow dispatch puts a trained desk on your phone and your motor-club portals around the clock. It accepts AAA, Agero, HONK, and NSD jobs inside the acceptance window, updates statuses, books cash and police calls, and assigns your drivers — inside TowBook or Dispatch Anywhere — so you stop losing 3am jobs and your acceptance rating holds.
Towing is the hardest dispatch job there is, and it never sleeps. Motor-club jobs land with acceptance timers, cash calls come at every hour, and the moment nobody is watching the screen, the work goes to the next provider and your rating slips. Outsourced dispatch exists for exactly this. Here is how it works for a tow operation.
What does an outsourced tow desk actually do?
It runs the whole intake-to-assignment job, on every channel a tow call arrives on:
- Monitors motor-club portals and accepts qualifying jobs in the window
- Updates status at each stage — en route, on scene, towing, complete
- Books cash, police rotation, and private-property calls by phone
- Assigns and routes your drivers by location and truck type
- Works inside TowBook or Dispatch Anywhere, not a separate system
How does it protect my motor-club rating?
The clubs grade you on acceptance rate and ETA accuracy, and they route the best jobs to the providers who perform. A flood of calls at 3am that nobody accepts doesn't just lose those jobs — it drags your standing for weeks. A desk watching your portals around the clock accepts qualifying jobs inside the window every time, which is the single biggest thing protecting your rating overnight.
What about cash jobs and impounds?
Club work is steady but the margin is thin; cash and private-property calls are where towers make real money, and those come by phone at every hour. A trained desk books them in your brand voice, captures the details right, and dispatches the nearest truck. The impound and lien paperwork tail can sit with a back-office desk so the records stay clean for the lot.
Real-time driver coordination and routing around the clock — overnight, weekends, holidays, and peak surges covered.
Who decides which jobs to take?
You do. You set the rules — which clubs, which rates, which zones, which jobs to skip — and the desk works them. A good partner never commits your trucks to a job you wouldn't take yourself. The desk handles the watching, accepting, and updating grind; the rate and account decisions stay yours.
What does it replace in cost terms?
Covering a true 24/7 tow desk in-house means three to four dispatchers plus a supervisor, around $180,000–$240,000 a year, and even then a single sick day leaves the screen unwatched. Outsourced coverage runs a fraction of that and removes the single-point-of-failure problem entirely. For overnight and weekend club monitoring especially, the math is rarely close.