> **Quick Answer:** Get as far right as possible, turn on hazard lights immediately, and exit the vehicle from the passenger side if you're on the shoulder. Call 511 or *399 (Caltrans/Freeway Service Patrol) for free help on LA freeways during peak hours. If you need a tow, have your location ready: mile marker, nearest cross street visible from the overpass, and which freeway and direction.
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## What To Do
**1. Steer to the right shoulder without hesitation.**
The moment you feel the car losing power, signal right and coast as far off the travel lanes as you can. Do not stop in a live lane. Do not stop at the white line. Get the entire car off the road. If you can't reach the shoulder, get as close to the right edge as possible and leave your hazard lights on.
**2. Turn on your hazard lights immediately.**
Do this before anything else, even before you fully stop. On a busy LA freeway like the 405, the 10, or the 101, a stopped car with no lights in poor visibility can be hit within seconds.
**3. Exit from the passenger side.**
If you stopped on the right shoulder, open the passenger door and get out on the side away from traffic. Move up the embankment or behind the guardrail if one is present. Do not stand directly behind or beside your car. A driver drifting onto the shoulder at 70 mph has almost no reaction time.
**4. Call Freeway Service Patrol (FSP) before calling a tow truck.**
Dial **511**, then say "Freeway Service Patrol." FSP operates on most LA-area freeways during peak hours (roughly 6-10 AM and 3-7 PM on weekdays). They will push, tow, or help you to the nearest exit at no charge. If it's outside FSP hours or they can't reach you quickly, move to step 5.
**5. Call for a private tow truck.**
Know your exact location. Look at your phone's GPS, check the nearest overpass sign, or note the last exit you passed. Freeway tows in LA are not cheap. A tow from the freeway to a shop in the same area typically runs $150 to $350 depending on mileage and whether it's rush hour. [Towing cost on LA freeways](/towing-cost-in-los-angeles-california-freeway/) varies more than most people expect, so ask for a total estimate before agreeing.
**6. Stay off the road while you wait.**
Once you've made your calls, stay behind the guardrail or on the embankment. Do not sit in the car if you're on a narrow shoulder on a high-speed freeway. Secondary crashes kill people every year in exactly this scenario.
**7. Place something reflective behind the car if you have it.**
A warning triangle, flares, or even a bright jacket placed 100-150 feet behind the car gives drivers earlier notice. Most people never carry these, but it's worth mentioning if you do.
**8. Do not try to restart repeatedly.**
If the engine died from overheating, a seized engine, or a catastrophic electrical failure, cranking it over and over makes things worse. Turn the key once. If it doesn't catch within a few seconds, stop. [Alternator failure while driving](/alternator-failed-while-driving-what-happens-next/) is one of the more common causes of a sudden freeway death, and restarting won't fix it.
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*Photo: Pexels*
## What It Might Cost
Private tow from an LA freeway to a nearby shop: **$150 to $350**. Add another $50-100 per extra five miles if your mechanic is far from where you broke down. Rush hour adds cost because trucks sit in the same traffic you're stuck in. Check whether your insurance includes roadside assistance before you call a private company. Some policies cover the entire tow. If you're uninsured or your policy doesn't include towing, [tow truck cost in LA without insurance](/tow-truck-cost-los-angeles-no-insurance/) is higher than most people budget for.
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*Photo: Pexels*
## Stay Safe
- Never walk along the freeway to find a call box. Use your cell phone.
- If your car is still running but smoking or behaving strangely, [a smoking engine is a stop-now situation](/car-smoking-under-hood-safe-to-drive-or-tow/). Do not try to drive to the next exit if the hood is putting out heavy smoke.
- Keep your seatbelt on until you are ready to exit, then move quickly.
- At night, stay as visible as possible. Phone flashlight, hazards, anything.
- If CHP stops behind you, follow their instructions. They may be able to arrange a faster tow or a push to safety.
- Do not accept a tow from an unmarked truck that pulls up without being called. Predatory towing in LA is real.
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*Need roadside help? Visit [Tow With The Flow](https://towwiththeflow.com/car-died-on-freeway-in-los-angeles-what-to-do/) for real answers when your car breaks down.*
Car Died on Freeway in Los Angeles: What to Do Right Now

Photo: Pexels