Iowa
City Coverage

Sioux City, IA.

Sioux City is the freight pivot of the Siouxland tri-state region where Iowa, Nebraska, and South Dakota meet at the Missouri River, and where I-29 hands off to I-129 to cross into South Sioux City NE. The metro is one of the largest meatpacking and agricultural-processing hubs in the upper Midwest, with Tyson Foods, Seaboard Triumph Foods, and a constellation of grain elevators, ethanol plants, and feedlot supply yards generating relentless heavy-duty freight 24/7. Reefer outbound from the packing plants ties Sioux City into the national protein supply chain.

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40 min
Average dispatch ETA
120
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Interstate Coverage

Sioux City IA Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage

Each corridor has a dedicated breakdown landing page with service zones, exits, and recent dispatched jobs.

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Interstate 29

7 exits in Sioux City

The Kansas City-to-Fargo freight backbone running north-south through Sioux City along the Missouri River bluff. Heaviest service-call volume between Exit 141 (Sergeant Bluff) and Exit 149 (Riverside Boulevard); the Singing Hills interchange southbound is a chronic congestion and breakdown cluster on Tyson shift changes.

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Interstate 129

4 exits in Sioux City

The 7-mile spur connecting I-29 in Sioux City to US-77 in South Sioux City, NE across the Missouri River bridge. Carries the Tyson Foods Dakota City plant inbound livestock and outbound reefer protein traffic; the river-bridge crossing is a recurring ice-event recovery zone.

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US Route 75

5 exits in Sioux City

The Sioux City-to-Sioux Falls northwest Iowa corridor running north from the I-29 / I-129 interchange toward Le Mars and Hawarden. Carries Wells Enterprises ice-cream outbound, agricultural drayage from the northwest Iowa grain belt, and the bulk of the Sioux Falls / Sioux City regional traffic.

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US Route 20

5 exits in Sioux City

The east-west northern Iowa corridor from Sioux City through Fort Dodge toward Waterloo. Carries grain, ethanol, and contract-distribution freight from the Iowa corn belt; the I-29 / US-20 interchange southeast of downtown is a daily dispatch zone.

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US Route 77

3 exits in Sioux City

The Nebraska side north-south corridor concurrent with I-129 from South Sioux City NE toward Norfolk. Carries Tyson Dakota City inbound supply and Nebraska Panhandle protein outbound; the South Sioux City I-129 interchange is a routine cross-state dispatch zone.

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Iowa Highway 12

4 exits in Sioux City

The Missouri River bluff state route running north from Sioux City along the South Dakota border toward Westfield and Akron. Carries Big Sioux River bottoms agricultural drayage and feedlot supply traffic; serves as the standard I-29 detour during Missouri River bluff snow events.

City Profile

Sioux City IA Trucking & Freight Industry Overview

Sioux City is the freight pivot of the Siouxland tri-state region where Iowa, Nebraska, and South Dakota meet at the Missouri River, and where I-29 hands off to I-129 to cross into South Sioux City NE. The metro is one of the largest meatpacking and agricultural-processing hubs in the upper Midwest, with Tyson Foods, Seaboard Triumph Foods, and a constellation of grain elevators, ethanol plants, and feedlot supply yards generating relentless heavy-duty freight 24/7. Reefer outbound from the packing plants ties Sioux City into the national protein supply chain.

Sioux City is a city in Woodbury and Plymouth counties in the U.S. state of Iowa. The population was 85,797 at the 2020 census, and was estimated at 86,875 in 2024, making it the fourth-most populous city in Iowa. The county seat of Woodbury County, Sioux City is the primary city of the five-county Sioux City metropolitan area, which had 144,334 residents on the 2020 census. Sioux City and the surrounding areas of northwestern Iowa, northeastern Nebraska and southeastern South Dakota are sometimes referred to collectively as Siouxland.

Sioux City sits at the convergence of three states (Iowa, Nebraska, South Dakota) at the Missouri and Big Sioux River confluence, and the freight pattern reflects that geography. I-29 carries north-south agricultural and protein freight from Kansas City to Fargo, I-129 cuts west across the Missouri River into Nebraska to feed the Tyson Foods Dakota City plant, and US-75 ties northwest Iowa into the Omaha-Sioux Falls supply chain. Service-call clusters concentrate at the I-29 / I-129 interchange (Exit 144), at the US-75 split north of downtown, and around the Tyson Dakota City and Seaboard Triumph plant gates. Road Rescue Network's Sioux City vendors work this Siouxland freight pattern every day.

The mechanics in Sioux City who handle heavy-duty calls know the rhythm changes when an Arctic outbreak pushes south from the Dakotas and ambient temperatures crash to -20°F with 40 mph wind. Air-system freezes, fuel-gel complaints, and brutal-cold battery failures cluster between December and February, and the Missouri River bluff descents on I-29 north of the metro turn into slick-spot zones during snow squalls. Our local mechanics carry methanol-injection kits, fuel-anti-gel inventory, and the upper-Midwest brutal-cold experience to keep service trucks moving when the wind chill drops below -40°F.

When a Class 8 truck breaks down on I-29 northbound at the Singing Hills interchange during a Tyson Dakota City shift change, every minute the truck sits is a downstream cascade through the Midwest protein supply chain that runs reefer reefer-loaded outbound from Sioux City. Whether you're a fleet manager dispatching from Omaha with a tractor stranded at the Seaboard Triumph plant gate, an owner-operator on US-75 toward Le Mars and Wells Enterprises, or a grain hauler on US-20 east toward Moville, the closest verified Road Rescue Network vendor is reached through a single phone call.