
Law enforcement called - your vehicle needs to move. We respond fast on Highway 4 and throughout Bay Point, handle the paperwork correctly, and give you straight answers on retrieval.

Police towing in Bay Point means law enforcement - the Contra Costa County Sheriff's Office or the California Highway Patrol - has ordered your vehicle moved to a licensed storage facility, and a rotation-approved towing company handles the move, with storage fees beginning the moment the vehicle arrives at the yard.
When your car ends up in an impound lot, the first question is usually where it went and what you need to bring. Bay Point is an unincorporated community, so police-ordered tows here follow county and CHP protocols rather than a city-run system - knowing who ordered the tow is the key first step. For vehicles that have been involved in an incident on the road, our accident recovery service handles that side of things.
Storage charges add up every day, including weekends and holidays, so the faster you locate your vehicle and understand what you need to retrieve it, the lower your total bill.
A disabled or abandoned vehicle on the SR-4 corridor is a safety issue, and CHP responds to clear the road quickly. If your vehicle broke down and could not be moved in time, a police-ordered tow may have already happened - storage charges start immediately once the truck arrives at the yard.
The Bay Point BART station area has active parking enforcement, and vehicles left in tow-away zones or in violation of posted rules can be towed by order of the transit authority or local law enforcement. If your vehicle disappeared near the BART station, that is a likely starting point.
Officers can order a tow if a vehicle has an expired registration or the driver cannot show proof of insurance. In these cases, you may need to resolve the underlying issue and bring proof before the storage yard will release the vehicle - confirm what is required before you make the trip.
Vehicles involved in accidents are often towed on police order, and if law enforcement places a hold on the vehicle, the storage yard cannot release it even after you pay. You must contact the agency that ordered the tow to have the hold lifted before retrieval is possible.
We serve the Contra Costa County Sheriff and CHP rotation for the Bay Point area, which means when law enforcement calls, we respond to the scene, handle the vehicle correctly, and move it to the designated storage facility. Every move follows a documented chain of custody - the vehicle condition is noted before loading and the paperwork is completed accurately.
If you need your vehicle stored after a police tow, our vehicle storage service provides a secure, licensed option. We can also walk you through the retrieval process - what documents to bring, whether any hold needs to be cleared, and what the current charges are - so you do not make a wasted trip to the yard.
For agencies dispatching a tow on SR-4, in Bay Point neighborhoods, or anywhere in our service area - we respond to meet rotation standards.
We coordinate with licensed storage facilities and can tell vehicle owners where their vehicle is, what is owed, and what documents are required for release.
Police calls often involve vehicles that are not operational - we have the equipment to load and secure them safely regardless of condition.
If your vehicle was towed on a police order, we can tell you the location, current charges, and what to bring - saving you a wasted trip to the yard.
Bay Point sits along State Route 4, one of the primary east-west commuter corridors connecting Contra Costa County to the Bay Area. Incidents, breakdowns, and collisions on this stretch are common, and CHP responds frequently - making police-ordered tows along Highway 4 a regular occurrence for Bay Point residents and commuters passing through. Fast response on this corridor matters for traffic clearance and for limiting the storage time that starts the moment a vehicle arrives at the yard.
Because Bay Point is unincorporated, towing and impound procedures follow Contra Costa County Sheriff and CHP protocols rather than a city-specific system. We serve the Bay Point area and extend coverage to nearby Pittsburg and Concord, covering the full stretch of SR-4 from the I-680 junction east to the county border. Knowing which agency ordered the tow - and which storage facility they use - is the piece of local knowledge that makes retrieval straightforward.
Contact the Contra Costa County Sheriff's Office or CHP dispatch with your license plate number. They confirm the tow was ordered and give you the storage facility name and address - that is your starting point for everything that follows.
Call the storage facility before you go. Ask for the current total charges, what documents are required for release, and whether any law-enforcement hold is on the vehicle. Showing up without the right paperwork means a wasted trip and more storage time accumulating - we reply to questions within 1 business day.
If the agency placed a hold, contact the Sheriff's Office or CHP to find out what is required to lift it. The storage yard has no authority to release the vehicle until the hold is cleared - this step must happen before or alongside your visit to the facility.
Arrive with your ID, proof of ownership, and payment for tow and storage charges. Inspect your vehicle before you leave the yard and note any concerns on the spot - it is much easier to address them there than after you drive away.
We can tell you where your vehicle is, what you owe, and exactly what to bring to the storage yard.
(925) 468-2909Being approved for the Contra Costa County Sheriff and CHP rotation requires meeting specific standards for equipment, insurance, response time, and operator qualifications. That approval is not automatic - it is earned and maintained, and it means your vehicle is handled by a vetted provider when law enforcement calls.
Highway 4 is a high-activity corridor for police calls, and response time directly affects traffic clearance and your storage costs. Our position in the Bay Point area means we can reach the scene quickly and move your vehicle without delay.
Bay Point follows county and CHP towing procedures, not a city-specific system. We know how the Contra Costa County Sheriff rotation works, which storage facilities are used, and what documentation the process requires - that knowledge makes retrieval straightforward for vehicle owners.
California regulates what towing and storage companies can charge for non-consensual tows, and the California Highway Patrol enforces those standards. We operate within the applicable rate caps and tell you the current charges before you make the trip to the storage yard.
A police tow handled correctly from the start - proper loading, accurate documentation, and clear communication on retrieval - saves vehicle owners time, money, and unnecessary trips. That is what we deliver on every call.
Secure, licensed vehicle storage for vehicles that need to stay off the road after a police-ordered tow or other incident.
Learn MoreFor vehicles involved in collisions - specialized recovery from the scene, separate from the police towing rotation process.
Learn MoreWe cover the SR-4 corridor and all of Bay Point - call us now to confirm your vehicle's location and get clear answers on what to do next.