Car accident towing rights give you the legal authority to choose your own tow company, demand an itemized bill, and refuse unauthorized services after a crash. In most U.S. states, police cannot force you to use a specific operator unless your vehicle is blocking traffic and must be moved immediately.
Published: 2026-03-02 · Updated: 2026-03-02
Car Accident Towing: Your Rights & How to Avoid Predatory Tows
Key Takeaways
- You have the right to choose your own tow company in most states — a police rotation list is a suggestion, not a mandate.
- The at-fault driver's liability insurance typically covers towing costs; your own collision or roadside coverage may also apply.
- Predatory tow operators look for distracted crash victims — arriving before police, rushing paperwork, and refusing to show a rate sheet are the biggest red flags.
- Average accident tows cost $200–$500+ once winching, after-hours surcharges, and storage fees are added.
- File disputes with your state's Department of Transportation or consumer protection office — 29 states plus D.C. cap towing rates by law.
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What Are Your Towing Rights After a Car Accident?
After a car accident, state law protects your car accident towing rights in three core ways: you can choose your own tow company, request an itemized bill before signing anything, and refuse add-on services you didn't authorize. Police may suggest an operator from their approved rotation list, but in most jurisdictions that's a recommendation — not a legal order.
The exception matters. If your vehicle is obstructing a highway lane or creating an active safety hazard, officers have authority under state traffic codes to dispatch the next company on their rotation without your consent. That's a non-consensual tow, and it's legal in every state under those specific conditions. Outside of that scenario, you're in control.
Practically speaking, the best time to know your rights is before an accident. Save your preferred tow company's number in your phone. Carry your insurance card and roadside assistance info in your glove box. If you're in a state with weak towing regulations — Missouri, Kentucky, and West Virginia have no statewide rate caps as of 2026 — your pre-selected company is your primary protection.
For a broader look at post-accident procedures, see our guide on what to do after your car is towed.
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Who Pays for Towing After a Car Accident?
The at-fault driver's liability insurance is the primary payer for towing after a car accident — it covers getting your vehicle to a repair shop or storage yard. If fault is disputed or the other driver is uninsured, your own collision coverage or a standalone roadside assistance rider kicks in instead.
Here's how the money flows in a typical scenario:
You're rear-ended at a stoplight. The other driver is clearly at fault. Their liability policy should reimburse your tow bill once you file a claim — but you'll almost certainly pay out of pocket first and get reimbursed later. Save every receipt. Get the tow operator's name, business license number, and itemized invoice before you hand over your keys.
If you carry roadside assistance through your insurer, that rider usually covers $50–$150 per tow incident. AAA's standard membership covers towing up to 5 miles; their Plus tier extends that to 100 miles. According to AAA, a roadside assistance rider typically costs $5–$15 per year added to an existing auto policy — one of the cheapest insurance add-ons available.
One honest limitation: liability coverage from the at-fault driver doesn't always move fast. If their insurer disputes fault or delays the claim, your vehicle could rack up $30–$75/day in storage fees while you wait. That's your money at risk, not theirs. Check out impound lot fees to understand exactly how quickly those charges compound.
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Can You Choose Your Own Tow Truck After an Accident?
Yes — in the majority of U.S. states, you have the legal right to select your own tow company after an accident. The police rotation list exists to ensure a licensed operator is always available when a driver can't or won't choose, not to override your preference.
The practical move: when an officer arrives on scene, say clearly and calmly, "I'd like to call my own tow company." Most officers will give you 10–15 minutes. If your vehicle isn't blocking traffic, there's no urgency. If it is blocking traffic, you may need to accept the rotation tow — but you can still direct them to a specific repair shop rather than the tow company's affiliated yard (which often charges higher storage rates).
Highway corridors are a separate case. Programs like Houston's SafeClear and Florida's Road Ranger/Motorist Assist use state-authorized operators to clear accidents from high-speed lanes as quickly as possible. Within those zones, your right to choose is limited for safety and traffic-flow reasons. Check your state's DOT website for specifics on managed-clearance corridors.
Our towing laws by state tool can show you the exact rules where you live.
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What Is Predatory Towing and How Do You Spot It?
Predatory towing after an accident means operators exploit crash victims through inflated fees, unauthorized services, or excessive storage charges — often targeting people who are injured, shaken, or simply don't know their rights.
The warning signs are consistent. Watch for:
- Tow trucks arriving before police. Operators who monitor police scanners and race to accident scenes are called "chasers." Several states, including Florida and Texas, have laws banning solicitation within 24 hours or within a set distance of an accident scene.
- Pressure to sign vague paperwork. If a driver hands you a form before you've even called your insurance company, slow down. Read every line. "Authorization to tow" can include buried consent to storage fees.
- Cash-only payment demands. No legitimate towing company refuses a credit card. Demanding cash is a scam tactic.
- Refusal to provide a rate sheet. Under state regulations in California, Texas, New York, and Illinois, tow operators must provide a written rate schedule on request. If they won't, walk away and call your insurance.
- "Helpful" advice to skip your insurance. Operators who tell you not to call your insurer are protecting their inflated bill, not you.
The Consumer Federation of America estimates more than 15,000 predatory towing complaints are filed with state attorneys general annually. The FMCSA (fmcsa.dot.gov) regulates interstate towing operations and maintains complaint filing resources. For a deeper look at scam tactics, see our guide on tow truck scams.
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How Much Does Accident Towing Cost on Average?
A standard accident tow costs $200–$500+ once you add up hookup fees, mileage, after-hours surcharges, and the first few days of storage. The base hookup rate alone runs $75–$125 for the first 5–10 miles, with $2–$7 per mile beyond that, according to data compiled from state DOT rate filings and NHTSA consumer towing resources.
Here's a real-numbers example: You total your sedan on a Tuesday night at 11 p.m., 18 miles from the nearest body shop. Base hookup: $100. After-hours surcharge: $50. Mileage at $4/mile for 18 miles: $72. If your car sits at the tow yard for three days before you can arrange pickup: 3 × $45/day = $135. Total bill: $357 — and that's without any winching or accident-scene cleanup fees.
| Cost Component |
Low End |
High End |
Notes |
| Base hookup (first 5–10 mi) |
$75 |
$125 |
Standard sedan; source: state DOT rate filings |
| Per-mile charge (beyond base) |
$2/mi |
$7/mi |
Higher in urban markets; NHTSA consumer data |
| After-hours surcharge |
$25 |
$75 |
Nights, weekends, holidays |
| Accident scene winching |
$50 |
$200 |
Required if vehicle is off-road or overturned |
| Daily storage fee |
$20 |
$75 |
Starts after 24–72 hours; varies by state |
| EV/hybrid flatbed premium |
$50 |
$150 |
Dolly towing prohibited; specialized handling required |
Sources: State DOT rate filings, NHTSA consumer towing data, AAA towing cost surveys.
For a complete breakdown of towing costs by region, use our towing cost calculator or read the full towing cost guide.
One important limit: these figures reflect standard passenger vehicles. If you're driving an SUV or pickup, expect a 10–25% surcharge. EVs require flatbed transport — no dolly towing allowed — which adds cost and limits which companies can even legally move your vehicle. See our article on towing electric cars for the specifics.
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What Should You Do If You're Overcharged by a Tow Company?
If a tow company overcharges you after an accident, your first move is to request a fully itemized invoice and compare each line item against your state's published maximum rate schedule. Don't pay a lump-sum "accident tow" figure without seeing exactly what you're being charged for.
Twenty-nine states plus Washington D.C. cap towing rates by law, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. In California, for example, non-consensual tow rates are set by each county, and operators must post their rates publicly. In Texas, the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation enforces maximum rates for non-consent tows. If a company charges above those ceilings, they're violating state law — not just being greedy.
Your dispute path:
- Get the itemized bill in writing. Take photos of your vehicle before it leaves the scene.
- File a complaint with your state's Department of Transportation, consumer protection office, or state attorney general.
- Notify your insurer. They deal with tow disputes regularly and can apply pressure the tow company will respond to.
- Contact your state's towing board. Many states have a formal hearing process where you can contest charges, and penalties for over-limit billing are real.
If your vehicle is already being held and you're afraid of mounting storage fees, our guide on how to get your car out of impound walks through the fastest retrieval process step by step.
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How Do Police Decide Which Tow Company Responds to an Accident?
Police departments use a pre-approved tow truck rotation list — a roster of licensed, insured companies that take turns responding to accident calls. Companies earn a spot by meeting the municipality's insurance minimums, equipment standards, and licensing requirements.
Rotation assignments exist to ensure fast, accountable response when a driver can't choose. But in most jurisdictions, the list is not binding on you. You can decline the assigned company and call your own, provided you do so before the rotation truck hooks up your vehicle. Once they've attached and started moving, fees typically begin.
Winter months shift this dynamic. During ice storms and high-volume crash periods (November through February), rotation companies are often dispatched to multiple scenes simultaneously. Wait times stretch. Some jurisdictions temporarily waive the rotation requirement and allow any available licensed operator to respond. That's when predatory chasers are most active — and when your pre-saved tow company number matters most.
Understanding the types of tow trucks that different scenarios require can also help you verify whether the responding company has the right equipment for your vehicle.
Mark
Founder & Automotive Writer
Mark Benson is a lifelong car enthusiast with roots in a family-run auto repair shop. With years of hands-on experience in the automotive industry, Mark founded RevFrenzy to help drivers make informed decisions about towing, truck capacity, and roadside assistance.
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