Search "best motor club" and you mostly get membership reviews written for stranded drivers. That is the wrong side of the transaction. This ranking is for the operator: the owner deciding which vendor programs to sign, which to skip, and which to drop once the trucks are busy.
The stakes are real because club work is a volume game played at thin margins. A typical club call pays $35 to $85 while a direct cash call pays $125 to $300 or more, so a bad club mix quietly locks your fleet into the lowest-paying work in the industry. The right mix keeps trucks moving without starving them.
Rank clubs like an operator, not a member
A motorist judges a club by its membership perks. An owner judges the same club by four numbers: the per-call rate, the days between the job and the deposit, the calls per week it actually sends, and how its dispatch algorithm decides who gets them.
That last one matters more every year. The big networks now score providers on acceptance rate, ETA accuracy, and customer marks, then route the next job to whoever scores best. Two shops with identical contracts can see wildly different volume because one answers every dispatch call and hits its ETAs while the other lets the phone ring. Keep that in mind as you read the ranking, because it decides how much any club on this list is worth to you.
Quick picks
- Best brand and standards · AAA
- Most volume · Agero (incl. Urgently)
- Best dispatch experience and pay speed · Swoop
- Best insurer network · GEICO ERS
- Solid second insurer network · Allstate Roadside
- Legacy network, lower rates · NSD
- Sign with eyes open · Honk
How we ranked these motor clubs
We scored each network on five things: typical per-call pay, pay speed (real-time app payment versus net 30 to net 60 invoicing), job volume, dispatch fairness (how the algorithm assigns work), and contract friction (paperwork, claim denials, short-pays). Sources are operator forums and rate reports, the clubs' own provider pages, and trade coverage. We are the publisher, we take no referral fee from any club, and no ranking here is paid.
Motor clubs at a glance
| Club | Typical per-call | Pay speed | Volume | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AAA | $40–$100+ | Net 30 (varies by club) | High | Brand-name volume, standards |
| Agero | $35–$85 | Net 30–45 | Highest | Filling idle trucks fast |
| Swoop | $35–$85 | Fast / near real-time | High (via Agero) | App-first dispatch, quick pay |
| GEICO ERS | $35–$75 | Net 30 | Medium–high | Steady insurer work |
| Allstate Roadside | $35–$75 | Net 30–60 | Medium | Second insurer stream |
| NSD | $35–$65 | Net 30–60 | Medium | Extra coverage-plan volume |
| Honk | Bottom tier | Fast, per app | Varies | Overflow only, watch margins |
Ranges reflect light-duty service calls (tows pay the most, jumps and lockouts the least, and gone-on-arrival calls usually pay $15 to $25). Heavy-duty, recovery, and after-hours rates run higher on every network.
The best motor clubs for tow companies in 2026
1. AAA
Typical per-call: $40–$100+ · apply through your regional club · ~2-week review
AAA is the club everyone knows, with more than 60 million members generating dependable call volume in almost every territory. Contracts run through your regional AAA club, which inspects trucks, checks drivers, and holds providers to service standards most other networks skip. That screening is work, but it is also why AAA contracts tend to pay better than the app-based networks and why the badge carries weight with cash customers too.
Pros
- Strong, steady volume from a huge member base
- Better per-call economics than most networks
- The contract itself signals quality locally
Cons
- Strict truck, driver, and response standards
- Regional clubs vary; some territories are waitlisted
Pick it if you can meet the standards and want the best mix of volume and rate in club work.
2. Agero (including Urgently)
Typical per-call: $35–$85 · online provider signup · net 30–45
Agero is the biggest job pipe in roadside. It holds the roadside contracts for major insurers and automakers, and after completing its roughly $280 million acquisition of Urgently on May 1, 2026, the combined network supports 150 million vehicles and around 14 million events a year. Signup is a portal application rather than an inspection gauntlet. The trade-off is algorithmic dispatch: your volume depends on your acceptance rate, ETA accuracy, and customer scores, and rates sit at the market's midpoint.
Pros
- More calls than any other network, in most markets
- Fast online onboarding, no regional gatekeeper
- One signup now covers the Urgently book too
Cons
- Mid-tier rates with little negotiating room
- The algorithm punishes missed calls and blown ETAs hard
Pick it if you have idle truck hours to fill and the discipline to keep acceptance and ETA numbers high.
3. Swoop
Typical per-call: $35–$85 · app-based dispatch · near real-time pay
Swoop is the digital dispatch platform Agero runs its network through, and for many operators it is the best day-to-day experience in club work. Jobs arrive in the app with clear details, paperwork happens on the phone instead of a fax machine, and completed jobs pay out fast, with operators reporting near real-time payment instead of a 45-day wait. If cash flow is your constraint, pay speed can matter more than a few dollars of rate.
Pros
- Fastest payment cycle in the club world
- Clean app dispatch, less lost paperwork
- Performance dashboard shows exactly where you stand
Cons
- Same Agero rate card underneath
- App-first means your standing lives on metrics
Pick it if net-30 terms strain your cash flow and you want dispatch without paper.
4. GEICO Emergency Road Service
Typical per-call: $35–$75 · vendor portal signup · net 30
GEICO runs its own emergency road service network rather than outsourcing it all, and its vendor program is a steady source of insurer-backed calls. Rates are set and unspectacular, but the work is consistent, the portal is workable, and payment is reliable on terms. For a shop building a base of predictable weekly volume, GEICO plus one aggregator is a common and sensible pairing.
Pros
- Reliable, insurer-backed call flow
- Predictable payment on stated terms
- Direct vendor relationship, no middle layer
Cons
- Set rates with little flexibility
- Coverage-verification steps add friction per call
Pick it if you want dependable insurer volume alongside a bigger network.
5. Allstate Roadside
Typical per-call: $35–$75 · provider network signup · net 30–60
Allstate Roadside serves both Allstate policyholders and white-label roadside programs it runs for other brands, so the network moves more calls than the Allstate name alone suggests. It has also invested in modern digital dispatch tooling for providers. Rates and terms sit in the same band as the other insurer programs, which makes it a good second or third stream rather than a foundation.
Pros
- Volume beyond its own policyholders via partner programs
- Modernized dispatch tooling
- Nationwide footprint
Cons
- Middle-of-the-pack rates
- Terms can stretch toward net 60 in some programs
Pick it if you are layering a second insurer stream on top of an established base.
6. Nation Safe Drivers (NSD)
Typical per-call: $35–$65 · network application · net 30–60
NSD has been around since the 1960s and administers roadside benefits for dealers, lenders, and coverage plans, which produces a wide but thinner stream of calls. Operators describe it as easy to join and useful for filling gaps, with rates at the lower end of the market and old-school claim processing. Worth carrying as a supplemental network, not a primary one.
Pros
- Easy onboarding for newer operators
- Extra call flow from dealer and lender plans
- Long-established, stable network
Cons
- Lower rate band than the majors
- Slower, older claims and payment process
Pick it if you are newer and stacking sources of volume while you build direct business.
7. Honk
Typical per-call: bottom tier · app signup · fast app payment
Honk is an app-based network that markets fast payment and easy signup, and both are real. So is the operator complaint you will find on every forum: rates at the bottom of the market and a heavy mix of low-margin fuel, lockout, and jump calls. Some shops use it as pure overflow for otherwise idle trucks. Run your own cost-per-call math before you let it fill your dispatch board.
Pros
- Quick signup and quick app payment
- Fills dead hours with something
Cons
- Bottom-tier rates in most markets
- Call mix skews to the lowest-value services
Pick it only as overflow, and only after the math clears your cost per rolled truck.
How to choose (and why you should not sign all of them)
No club demands exclusivity, so the temptation is to sign everything and let the calls rain. Resist it. Every network scores your acceptance rate, and every dispatch you decline because your trucks are busy on another club's job drags that score down. Sign more networks than you can serve and you slide down every algorithm at once.
A saner build: start with one high-volume network (Agero or AAA if your territory has an opening), add one insurer program (GEICO or Allstate) once acceptance is stable above 85 percent, and keep a supplemental network only if trucks still sit idle. Watch cash flow as you stack net-30 and net-60 payers; the jobs are today, the money is next month. Newer operators should read our guide to starting a roadside assistance business first, because club work is usually the first revenue that model earns.
Club dispatches typically pay $35 to $85 with the rate set for you. A direct cash call for the same hookup pays $125 to $300 or more, 3 to 5 times as much, because the customer picked you and nobody stands in the middle. Clubs keep trucks busy. Direct calls keep companies profitable. Our tow company marketing playbook covers how to grow the direct side.
The catch with club work: the algorithm is the boss
Whichever clubs you sign, understand how the work actually arrives. The modern networks do not call down a phone list anymore. Software scores every provider and routes each job to the best score in range.
That scoring is why two shops on identical contracts earn different money. A missed 2 a.m. dispatch is not one lost job; it is a lower acceptance score that costs you the next ten. The math on that leak is in the real cost of a missed towing call.
To be plain about our own angle: Towline does not send you jobs and cannot get you a club contract. What our AI voice agent does is answer every call that rings your line, day or night, so dispatches get taken, ETAs get communicated, and the standing you earned with each club stays earned.
FAQ
Which motor club pays tow companies the most?
No club publishes a national rate sheet, and pay varies by market and contract. Operators consistently report the strongest per-call economics on Swoop-dispatched work and on AAA contracts in busy territories, while Honk sits at the bottom of most comparisons. Remember the ceiling: club calls typically pay $35 to $85, while a direct cash call pays $125 to $300 or more.
How much do motor clubs pay per call?
Typical rates run $35 to $85 per call depending on service type, time of day, and region. Tows pay the most, lockouts and jumps the least, and gone-on-arrival calls usually pay $15 to $25. Winch-outs, recoveries, and after-hours work can pay above the range with the right contract.
Is it worth working for motor clubs as a tow company?
Club work trades margin for volume. Rates are low and most clubs pay on net 30 to net 60 terms, but the calls are steady, which keeps new trucks busy while you build direct business that pays 3 to 5 times more per job. Most operators treat clubs as a floor, not a business model.
What is the difference between Agero and Swoop?
Same parent company, different layer. Agero holds the insurer and automaker contracts; Swoop is the digital dispatch platform those jobs flow through. Becoming an Agero service provider gets you the volume, and the Swoop app is where you will live day to day, with cleaner dispatch and faster payment than legacy club paperwork.
Can you work for multiple motor clubs at once?
Yes, and most established shops run two or three. No club requires exclusivity. The limit is capacity: every network scores your acceptance rate, so signing more clubs than your trucks can serve drops your standing with all of them. Add one at a time and watch the numbers.
Did Agero buy Urgently?
Yes. Agero agreed in March 2026 to acquire Urgently for about $280 million and completed the deal on May 1, 2026. The combined network supports more than 150 million vehicles and roughly 14 million roadside events a year, so treat Urgently work as part of the Agero ecosystem now.
Key takeaways
- AAA offers the best mix of rate and volume if you clear its standards; Agero (now including Urgently) moves the most jobs; Swoop is the pay-speed and app-experience winner.
- Insurer programs (GEICO, Allstate) add steady mid-rate volume; NSD supplements; Honk is overflow at bottom-tier rates.
- Club calls pay $35 to $85 against $125 to $300+ for direct cash calls, so use clubs to fill idle hours, not as the business model.
- Sign networks one at a time. Acceptance rate and ETA accuracy decide your volume everywhere, and overcommitting hurts every score at once.
- The dispatch algorithm is the boss: answer every call, hit every ETA, and the same contracts pay more.