Common Highways Used for Texas Car Driveaway Services
Highways | |||
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Interstate 10 (I-10): Spans east-west across Texas, connecting cities such as El Paso, San Antonio, Houston, and Beaumont. It is the longest Interstate Highway in Texas, stretching approximately 878.7 miles between the New Mexico and Louisiana borders. | |||
Interstate 20 (I-20): Runs east-west through northern Texas, linking cities like Midland, Odessa, Abilene, and Dallas-Fort Worth, and extending from the New Mexico border to the Louisiana border. | |||
Interstate 30 (I-30): Connects Fort Worth and Dallas to Texarkana, running east-west and serving as a primary route between Texas and Arkansas. | |||
Interstate 35 (I-35): Extends north-south through central Texas, connecting cities such as Laredo, San Antonio, Austin, and Dallas-Fort Worth, and continuing into Oklahoma. | |||
Interstate 37 (I-37): Links Corpus Christi to San Antonio, running north-south and serving as a key route between the Gulf Coast and central Texas. | |||
Interstate 45 (I-45): Connects Houston to Dallas, running north-south entirely within Texas, and extending from Galveston on the Gulf Coast to Dallas. | |||
Interstate 69 (I-69): Currently under development, with segments like I-69E, I-69C, and I-69W connecting various parts of southern Texas, including cities such as Brownsville, McAllen, and Laredo, with plans to extend northward. | |||
U.S. Route 59 (US 59): Runs diagonally from the Mexico border near Laredo, through Houston, and northeastward to the Arkansas border, serving as a major corridor for freight movement. | |||
U.S. Route 83 (US 83): Extends north-south from the Oklahoma state line near Perryton to the Mexico border at Brownsville, covering approximately 783.5 miles and serving as the longest highway in Texas. | |||
U.S. Route 90 (US 90): Parallels I-10 across much of Texas, connecting cities such as Del Rio, San Antonio, and Houston, and continuing into Louisiana. | |||
U.S. Route 287 (US 287): Runs northwest-southeast, linking cities like Wichita Falls, Fort Worth, and Dallas, and extending into Colorado. | |||
State Highway 6 (SH 6): Extends from the Gulf Coast near Galveston, through College Station, and northwestward to the Texas Panhandle, serving as a key route for regional traffic. |