Towing Cost Seattle Washington Bridge Tolls: What You'll Pay Right Now

Towing Cost Seattle Washington Bridge Tolls: What You'll Pay Right Now

Photo: Pexels


> **Quick Answer:** Towing in Seattle runs $75 to $125 for a hook-up fee plus $4 to $7 per mile. If your tow crosses the SR-520 or I-90 floating bridges, expect the driver to add toll costs to your invoice. A 10-mile tow from Capitol Hill to a shop in Bellevue can land at $175 to $250 after tolls. Crossing a bridge does not automatically mean a surcharge on top of tolls. It means you pay the actual toll.

## What To Do

1. **Get off the travel lane immediately.** Seattle's floating bridges have no shoulder worth mentioning on some stretches. If you break down on SR-520, turn on your hazards and creep to the nearest toll plaza area or the Montlake end. Do not stand between lanes.

2. **Call for a tow before you call anyone else.** On WSDOT-managed bridges, Washington State Patrol can have your car towed by a contracted company. Those contracted rates are set, but they are not cheap. You have the right to call your own tow company instead. Do it fast.

3. **Tell the dispatcher exactly where you are.** "On SR-520" is not enough. Say which direction, which lane, and the nearest milepost marker posted on the bridge railing. This cuts response time significantly.

4. **Ask about the toll upfront.** When you call the tow company, tell them your pickup and destination. If the route crosses a tolled bridge, ask if they pass that cost directly to you or roll it into a flat fee. Most Seattle tow operators pass tolls through at cost. SR-520 peak toll rates run $3.25 to $6.15 depending on time of day. I-90 is currently toll-free for most lanes but that can change.

5. **Know your distance.** Most tow companies in Seattle price on a per-mile basis after a base hook-up charge. A tow from downtown Seattle to a Bellevue shop is roughly 8 to 12 miles depending on bridge routing. A tow from Eastside back to a Seattle shop on I-90 is similar. At $5 per mile plus a $100 hook-up fee, you are looking at $140 to $160 before any toll add-on.

6. **Check your insurance before paying out of pocket.** Roadside assistance through your insurer often covers towing but caps the dollar amount or the mileage. If your tow crosses a bridge and adds $6 to your bill, that still counts against your reimbursement cap. Know your limit. [GEICO roadside assistance towing limits](/geico-roadside-assistance-towing-limits-how-many-miles/) and [Progressive roadside assistance towing limits](/progressive-roadside-assistance-towing-limit-miles/) are worth reviewing before you assume you are fully covered.

7. **Flatbed vs. wheel-lift matters here.** Seattle's hills and bridge expansion joints can damage low-clearance vehicles on a wheel-lift. If you are driving a sports car, AWD vehicle, or anything with low ground clearance, request a flatbed. Expect to pay $20 to $40 more for that.

![tow truck loading car](/images/towing-cost-seattle-washington-bridge-tolls/mid.jpg)
*Photo: Pexels*

## What It Might Cost

| Situation | Estimated Cost |
|---|---|
| Local tow within Seattle (under 5 miles) | $85 to $130 |
| Tow crossing SR-520 (Seattle to Eastside) | $160 to $220 |
| Tow from Eastside to Seattle via I-90 | $140 to $200 |
| After-hours or weekend surcharge | Add $35 to $75 |
| Flatbed upgrade | Add $20 to $40 |
| SR-520 peak toll (passed to you) | $3.25 to $6.15 |

If you broke down on a mountain pass approach rather than in the city itself, costs climb fast. A breakdown near Snoqualmie Pass involves different pricing territory entirely. See [towing cost Seattle mountain pass breakdown](/towing-cost-seattle-mountain-pass-breakdown/) for those numbers.

If you are dealing with a breakdown on a toll road specifically, the process has some overlap with other metro situations covered in [towing cost toll road breakdown emergency lane](/towing-cost-toll-road-breakdown-emergency-lane/).


![roadside assistance highway](/images/towing-cost-seattle-washington-bridge-tolls/bottom.jpg)
*Photo: Pexels*

## Stay Safe

- Never exit your vehicle on the SR-520 bridge unless it is on fire. There is no safe place to stand.
- Turn on hazards before anything else, even before calling for help.
- If WSDOT incident response or WSP stops, you can decline their contracted tow. Be polite, be fast, and have your own tow company already on the line.
- At night, stay inside the car with your seatbelt on. Rear-end collisions into stopped vehicles happen on bridge approaches.
- Do not try to push or roll the car on a bridge. Grade, wind, and traffic make this extremely dangerous.

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*Need roadside help? Visit [Tow With The Flow](https://towwiththeflow.com/towing-cost-seattle-washington-bridge-tolls/) for real answers when your car breaks down.*

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