What to Keep in Your Car: The Essential Roadside Emergency Kit for North Texas
Pulse Roadside Services Team
18 Mar 2026
6 min read

Anyone who drives the Metroplex knows the routine: long commutes across a dozen cities, miles of open highway between exits, and summers hot enough to cook a dashboard. A breakdown on the shoulder of I-20 in July is not just inconvenient — in triple-digit heat, it can be dangerous. The single best thing you can do before it happens is keep a real emergency kit in your trunk.
Here is what actually matters for North Texas driving, organized by what it does and why it counts here.
Heat & Summer Essentials (Non-Negotiable in DFW)
Our summers are the reason this category comes first. A car with a dead battery has no air conditioning, and the pavement on Highway 360 or Loop 820 radiates heat long after you stop moving.
- Water — and plenty of it. Keep several sealed bottles or a gallon jug. If you are waiting on the shoulder for help, dehydration sets in fast. This is the one item you should never skip.
- A sunshade or reflective windshield cover. It keeps the cabin from turning into an oven while you wait and cuts the glare on a stopped car.
- A portable phone charger / power bank. Your phone is your lifeline for calling help and sharing your location. A dead phone in the heat is a real problem — keep a charged bank in the glovebox.
- A small battery-powered fan and a hat. Simple, cheap, and a genuine relief when you are stuck without engine power on a summer afternoon.
Safety & Visibility
DFW traffic moves fast, and a stopped car on the frontage road or a highway shoulder needs to be seen — day or night.
- Reflective warning triangles or LED flares. Set them behind your vehicle to alert oncoming drivers, especially on high-speed stretches of I-30 and Highway 183.
- A flashlight or headlamp with fresh batteries — for changing a tire after dark or flagging down help.
- A reflective safety vest. If you have to step out near traffic, being visible can be the difference between a close call and a crash.
Tools & Basic Repairs
You do not need a full toolbox, just the essentials that solve the most common problems.
- Jumper cables or a portable jump pack. Dead batteries are the number-one roadside call, and our heat is brutal on batteries year-round. A self-contained jump pack means you do not have to depend on a passing stranger.
- A tire pressure gauge and a can of tire sealant. Heat swings and long highway miles are hard on tires — a quick pressure check can head off a blowout.
- Work gloves and a few basic tools. Changing a tire on hot asphalt is far easier with gloves and a properly fitting lug wrench.
Documents & Communication
- A charged phone with Pulse's number saved: 1-877-477-8573. When something goes wrong, you do not want to be searching for who to call.
- Insurance and registration in the glovebox, plus a written note of your policy and roadside numbers in case your phone dies.
- A small first-aid kit for minor scrapes and cuts.
Don't Forget Winter
North Texas usually skips real winter — until an ice storm shuts down I-20 and Highway 360 for a day or two. Toss in a blanket, a phone charger, and an ice scraper before the season. It costs nothing and you will be glad to have it.
A Kit Helps — But It Is Not a Tow Truck
A well-stocked kit buys you comfort and safety while you wait, but it does not replace real help. When you need a jump start, a spare installed on the shoulder, a lockout opened without damaging your doors, or fuel delivered when the gauge hits empty — that is when to call the pros.
Pulse Roadside Services covers Arlington, Hurst, Bedford, Euless, Irving, Grand Prairie, Fort Worth, Keller, Southlake, Mansfield, Burleson, and the surrounding Mid-Cities. We are here Sunday through Friday, 6 AM to 11 PM (closed Saturdays).
Stuck right now? Call 1-877-477-8573 or request service online — and let a local team that knows these roads get you moving again.

