Trailer Sales & Repair in Agua Dulce, TX
Inland South Texas climate.
For trailer sales & repair, the service area covers roughly 60 miles from central Agua Dulce.
Common reasons to call
- Utility trailer lights not working
- Boat trailer bearings, bunks, winch, or tires need service
- Cargo, equipment, or landscape trailer repair
- Broken ramp, gate, jack, coupler, or safety chain
- Need a trailer for work, moving, or equipment hauling
- Trailer registration, title, or VIN question
- Rust or corrosion from saltwater launch use
- Brake, axle, suspension, or wheel-end problem
Typical work
- Trailer light, plug, wiring, and breakaway repair
- Bearing pack, hub, tire, and wheel-end service
- Bunk, roller, winch, coupler, jack, and safety-chain replacement
- Ramp, gate, fender, and frame repair
- Brake controller, electric brake, and axle troubleshooting
- Trailer sales consultation and setup
- VIN, title, registration, and weight-rating guidance
Typical turnaround
Small lighting and bearing jobs can often be handled quickly. Axles, brakes, frame repair, and title-related sales questions depend on parts, paperwork, and inspection needs.
Materials and equipment
- Trailer lights, plugs, wiring, junction boxes, and breakaway kits
- Bearings, races, seals, hubs, grease, and dust caps
- Trailer tires, wheels, lug nuts, and valve stems
- Bunks, carpet, rollers, winches, straps, and bow stops
- Jacks, couplers, chains, ramps, hinges, and latches
- Brake assemblies, drums, magnets, and axle parts
- Steel, aluminum, welding materials, and corrosion-resistant hardware
Job sizes
Minor
Light repair, plug replacement, bearing service, strap, latch, or jack repair
Standard
Brake repair, hub replacement, bunk rebuild, winch setup, or tire set
Major
Axle, suspension, ramp, gate, frame, or corrosion repair
Replacement
New trailer purchase, full trailer rebuild, or major frame and axle replacement
Final pricing comes from the on-call provider after on-site assessment, with a written estimate before any work starts.
What to expect
- ✓Lighting, bearing, brake, axle, and frame scopes separated before repair
- ✓TxDMV title, registration, and dealer-license boundaries explained where relevant
- ✓Boat trailer corrosion checked before highway use
- ✓Welding routed to qualified welders for frame and ramp work
TxDMV dealer license where trailer sales require it, commercial auto insurance, welding credentials for frame work, NATM awareness for trailer standards, general liability insurance.
Common questions
Can you fix trailer lights that keep failing?
Yes. The tech checks the tow vehicle plug, trailer ground, wiring, bulbs or LEDs, and junction box. Saltwater boat trailers often need more than one corroded connection repaired.
Do trailer repair shops need a Texas license?
Texas does not have a general trailer repair license. Trailer sales and dealer activity are different and may require TxDMV licensing.
When does a trailer need a title in Texas?
TxDMV rules vary by trailer type, weight, manufactured status, and whether it is assembled. Bring the VIN, weight rating, bill of sale, and any prior registration or title paperwork.
Can you repair a boat trailer after saltwater use?
Yes. Bearings, hubs, lights, bunks, winches, and fasteners take a beating from saltwater. Rinse the trailer after launch days and service bearings before a long highway trip.
Can a cracked trailer frame be welded?
Sometimes. The repair depends on crack location, load path, rust, and metal thickness. A qualified welder may need to plate or reinforce the area.
Do you work on trailer brakes?
Yes. Electric brakes, drums, magnets, wiring, breakaway batteries, and brake controllers are common service items. Brake work should be tested before hauling a load.
Can you help me choose a trailer?
Yes. Match the trailer to the load, tow vehicle, brakes, axle rating, ramp needs, storage, and registration requirements. Cheap trailers get expensive when they are undersized.
Coastal Bend seasons
Spring (March - May)
Boat, landscape, and utility trailer service picks up before busy hauling season.
Summer (June - August)
Saltwater launch use and heat expose bearing, tire, and wiring problems.
Fall (September - November)
Storm prep and cleanup create trailer demand. Check tires, lights, bearings, and brakes before hauling debris or equipment.
Winter (December - February)
Good time for axle, frame, ramp, and brake rebuilds before spring work starts.