Eagle Eye Towing St. Petersburg
1448 66th St N, St. Petersburg, FL 33710, United States
Brand
Independent
Property type
Light Duty Towing
About This Provider
Eagle Eye Towing St. Petersburg is a light duty towing listing for St. Petersburg, FL. Confirm truck type, tow destination, ETA, and pricing directly with dispatch before relying on the page.
Service Overview
Use this RoadHauler profile for Eagle Eye Towing St. Petersburg as a pre-call checklist for St. Petersburg, FL. The goal is simple: confirm whether the next available truck fits the vehicle, location, tow distance, and urgency before the driver is sent. The fastest way to use this listing is to prepare the dispatch script before dialing. Say whether the vehicle is in a travel lane, shoulder, driveway, parking lot, garage, ditch, or private property; give the drop-off address; and explain any visible damage. Those details help the provider decide whether the call needs roadside assistance, a tow, a flatbed, or recovery equipment. The service signals on file point toward Light Duty Towing, Open 24 Hours, Emergency Dispatch, Highway Coverage, Insurance Billing, and Vehicle Tows. Treat those labels as dispatch topics rather than fixed promises. A light-duty tow, flatbed transport, motorcycle tow, winch-out, jump start, lockout, tire change, or fuel-delivery call can require different equipment, different pricing, and a different driver assignment. The right tow method depends on the vehicle, not just the distance. Flatbeds are often preferred for all-wheel-drive, electric, specialty, lowered, or heavily damaged vehicles, while wheel-lift towing may fit many standard light-duty calls. Winch-outs, off-pavement recoveries, and accident scenes require a clearer equipment check. The public record currently shows a 5.0 Google rating across 1 reviews. Review volume can help show that a business has public activity, but it should not replace the practical dispatch questions: ETA, truck type, distance, price assumptions, and destination. The listing does not expose a phone number in this data row, so the website or map link becomes the main verification path. For a non-emergency transport, compare the same assumptions across providers: pickup address, drop-off address, vehicle condition, loading method, mileage, and timing. For an emergency tow, focus first on safe arrival and a clear price range, then compare alternatives if the wait sounds long. For long-distance or cross-city towing, ask whether the quote covers the full route, tolls, return mileage, waiting time, and any after-hours drop-off process. These details matter more than a vague promise that the company can take the vehicle across town. The location reference for this listing is 1448 66th St N, St. Petersburg, FL 33710, United States, which gives the caller a concrete address reference even when the vehicle is somewhere else. Dispatch also needs to know where the vehicle should go: home, repair shop, dealership, tire shop, charging station, impound yard, or another address. A tow destination can affect mileage, truck availability, and whether the provider accepts the call. The listing carries a 24-hour availability signal, but a towing directory should treat that as a call prompt rather than a promise; dispatch must still confirm that a truck and driver are available right now. If the dispatcher sounds uncertain about the service area, vehicle type, or loading method, pause before committing; the wrong truck can turn one roadside call into two. If the vehicle is in a parking garage, gated lot, apartment complex, loading dock, service alley, or private property, tell dispatch about height limits, gate codes, security desks, and permission issues before the truck arrives. In FL, heat, storms, highway traffic, and long tow distances can shape response windows, so the destination and mileage question should come early. For service-area context, this row currently points to St. Petersburg, Fort Lauderdale, Jacksonville, Miami, and Orlando. That should be treated as a comparison aid, not a boundary guarantee. Ask Eagle Eye Towing St. Petersburg whether your pickup point and drop-off destination are both inside the current coverage area. If another person owns the vehicle, if the vehicle is leased, or if an insurer is directing the tow, clarify authorization before the truck arrives. Dispatch may need the registered owner, policy number, claim number, membership number, or shop authorization before completing the call. A useful final check is to ask what would make the price or arrival time change. Common answers include distance, tolls, vehicle weight, flatbed need, winch time, traffic, locked gates, closed destinations, and unsafe loading positions. Knowing those triggers makes the wait less uncertain. For insurance or motor-club calls, ask who is actually dispatching the driver and how updates will reach you. A listing, insurer, app, police rotation, and tow company can each be part of the chain, so the phone number that sends status updates matters. RoadHauler does not dispatch trucks, set prices, sell leads, or certify response times. The profile organizes public-source details so a driver can make a sharper call and compare nearby options without confusing towing with unrelated home-service questions.
Service Highlights
Availability
Open 24 Hours
Service Type
Light Duty Towing
Customer Rating
5.0 / 5
Phone
See listing
Services & Capabilities
24/7 Availability
Round-the-clock dispatch and roadside coverage.
Open 24 Hours
Emergency Dispatch
Highway Coverage
Insurance Billing
Common Services
Most-requested calls handled by tow operators.
Vehicle Tows
Jump Starts
Lockouts
Tire Changes
Fuel Delivery
Winch-out
At a Glance
Google Rating
5.0
Service Type
Light Duty Towing
Hours
Open 24/7
Location
St. Petersburg, FL