Shenaniganz Entertainment Center
Near the start, short detour
Rockwall, Texas
Hours: 12–11 pm
+19727221133
Visit websiteCompiled and reviewed by the US Trip Planner planning team at COD Solutions Oy · Last reviewed Apr 21, 2026 · Editorial standards
Drive Time
2h 50m
Distance
151.8 mi
244 km
Drive Score
8/10
Great drive
Same Day?
Yes, doable
Fuel Cost
$23
one way
EV Charging
Unknown
Estimated drive times based on typical traffic patterns. Actual times may vary with weather, construction, and real-time conditions.
Dallas, TX
Wikimedia Commons
Traveling from Dallas to Garland covers 152.6 miles and takes approximately 2 hours and 23 minutes behind the wheel. Because this route is well within the range of a standard day trip, you won't need to worry about booking overnight accommodations. You will navigate via a combination of Commerce Street, I-45 South, and I-30 to reach your destination. Budgeting around $23 for fuel should keep you covered for the entire journey. Both cities remain firmly within the Great Plains region, ensuring a consistent landscape throughout your drive. It is a straightforward, manageable trek that serves as a practical connection between these two Texas locations.
Trip Pace
Same-day drive is realistic
A same-day return is realistic if you keep stops short.
Break Rhythm
1 planned break
A short stop every 2 to 3 hours is enough for this drive.
Midpoint
75.9 miles from Dallas, TX
A natural place for your longest stop of the day , about 1h 21m into the drive .
| Road | Distance | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| East R L Thornton Freeway | 130.9 mi | 2h 15m |
| US Highway 259 North | 16.5 mi | 24m |
| FM 1701 | 2.1 mi | 4m |
| Commerce Street | 0.9 mi | 1m |
| North Lamar Street | 0.3 mi | <1m |
Step-by-step road directions between Dallas, TX and Garland, TX.
Start on North Lamar Street
Turn left onto Commerce Street
Take the ramp
Keep slight right at fork
Keep slight left at fork
Merge onto I 30; US 67
Keep slight left at fork onto I 30; US 67
Take the exit
Turn left onto US 259
Turn left onto FM 1701
Arrive at destination
Given the 2 hour and 23 minute duration, you have plenty of flexibility in your departure time to avoid the heaviest local traffic. Since there are no scheduled stops in this itinerary, you are free to dictate your own pace, though you may want to account for the technical nature of the turn-heavy roads when calculating your arrival. Keep your fuel budget of $23 in mind as you plan your stops, ensuring you have enough to cover the full 152.6-mile distance. A helpful tip for this specific route is to prioritize your GPS navigation early, as the transition between local streets and highway segments can be frequent. Staying alert during these transitions will make your trip significantly smoother.
Morning Departure
Leave by 9 AM and you'll arrive before lunch.
Evening Departure
Even a 4 PM departure gets you there before dark in summer.
This is a comfortable same-day trip.
Departure
Before you leave
Start with fuel, water, and navigation already sorted so the first hour feels easy.
First stop
Around 33 miles or 37m in
Use this first pause for coffee, a restroom break, and a quick traffic check ahead.
Halfway reset
Around 75.9 miles or 1h 21m in
This is the best place for your longest stop, a real meal, and a full fuel check.
Final approach
Final hour starts around 2h 11m
Traffic, exits, and arrival timing usually matter more near Garland, TX than in the middle of the route.
Open the route before leaving Dallas, TX so your first major turns are already loaded.
Leave with enough water and a charging cable within reach, not packed away.
Check your fuel range against the first long segment, especially if you are starting outside city service areas.
Day 1
Settle into the route from Dallas, TX
This is one driving day of about 151.8 miles and 2h 50m.
Rest stops, refuel points, and overnight suggestions along this route.
Mid-route town
Meal stop
76 mi into the route
Best for: Lunch, fuel, and a longer reset
This sits close to the middle of the route, so it works well for the longest stop of the day.
A short stop after about 33 miles helps settle the day before fatigue starts building.
The midpoint is around 75.9 miles from Dallas, TX, which is a good place for a longer meal and fuel stop.
Before the longest stretch
Fuel checkTop up before East R L Thornton Freeway if your tank is already low. That segment runs about 130.9 miles.
These stop ideas are pacing suggestions — the exact town or exit can change with traffic, hotel plans, and fuel range.
Picked by where they fit in your drive — first break, midpoint reset, final stretch.
Best meal stop · first break window
Rockwall, Texas
Near the start, short detour
Hours: 12–11 pm
+19727221133
Near the start, short detour
Rockwall, Texas
Hours: 12–11 pm
+19727221133
Visit websiteNear the start, ~9 min detour
Dallas, Texas
Hours: 7 am–3 pm
+14693876289
Visit websiteNear the start, short detour
Dallas, Texas
Hours: 10 am–5 pm
+19724823055
Visit websiteNear the start, short detour
Mesquite, Texas
Hours: Closed
+19729822073
Visit websitePlace data sourced from public business listings. Hours and availability may vary.
5 decision points cluster between mile 1.2 and 7.8 — GPS handles the exact turns, but know they're coming. Your lane choice matters more than the turn itself.
Take the ramp toward I 45 South
Lane positioning matters here
Keep slight right at fork toward I 30
Highway fork - watch signs carefully. Lane positioning matters here
Keep slight left at fork toward I 30 East
Highway fork - watch signs carefully
Merge onto I 30; US 67 / East R L Thornton Freeway
Merge point - match speed before joining. Lane positioning matters here
Keep slight left at fork onto I 30; US 67 / East R L Thornton Freeway toward I 30 East: Texarkana
Highway fork - watch signs carefully. Lane positioning matters here
Regular Gas
$22.94 one way
$45.87 round trip
| Fuel Type | $/gal | One Way | Round Trip |
|---|---|---|---|
| midgrade | $4.20 | $25.11 | $50.21 |
| premium | $4.54 | $27.10 | $54.21 |
| diesel | $5.61 | $33.52 | $67.03 |
No toll roads detected on this route.
Estimated Trip Cost (one way, 1 person)
Fuel
$23
Meals
$25–$50
Total
$48–$73
Rough estimate based on US averages. Hotel $80–$140/night, meals $25–$50/day.
Estimated CO2 emission: 53.1 kg one way. Prices: EIA weekly data, 2026-04-13.
Driving Electric?
About $16 in charging · 0 stops · 66% less CO2
| Vehicle Type | kWh | Stops | DC Fast | Home Charge |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Average EV | 45.5 | 0 | $15.94 | $7.29 |
| Efficient EV | 38 | 0 | $13.28 | $6.07 |
| EV Truck/SUV | 60.7 | 0 | $21.25 | $9.72 |
Gas CO2
53 kg
EV CO2
18 kg (66% less)
This trip is well within single-charge range for most EVs. No charging stops needed if you start fully charged.
DC fast charging avg $0.35/kWh. Home charging avg $0.16/kWh. US grid CO2: 0.39 kg/kWh.
Current conditions at both ends of the drive.
Origin
Late night in Dallas on Tuesday
Local time
3:50 AM
CDT
Current temp
84°F
Unavailable
Destination
Late night in Garland on Tuesday
Local time
3:50 AM
CDT
Current temp
81°F
Unavailable
78°F
Greenville, TX
76 mi in
Seasonal Notes
Summer travel usually means heavier construction, hotter rest stops, and busier weekend traffic around major cities.
Winter travel shortens daylight, so a route that looks manageable on paper can feel much longer after dark.
Holiday weekends tend to make both departure and arrival windows slower than the raw route time suggests.
Time zone
Origin and destination are on the same clock, so arrival timing is easier to judge at a glance.
Temperature spread
A meaningful temperature swing is a good cue to rethink layers, water, and how soon you want to arrive.
Road read
Use the two city cards together: check the sky where you start, then compare it with the local time and temperature at arrival.
Weather data from the National Weather Service. Conditions may change; check closer to your travel date.
Expect a turn-heavy local drive rather than a monotonous highway cruise. Since the route features a 0% highway share, you will spend your time navigating through local roads and urban connectors. This profile creates a more technical experience behind the wheel, requiring your full attention as you move between the segments of Commerce Street and the interstate portions. Because there is no single longest uninterrupted stretch, the drive feels dynamic and requires frequent adjustments rather than long periods of cruise control. You should prepare for a steady, hands-on driving experience that demands engagement with the road's layout.
This is a straightforward highway drive that stays mostly on East R L Thornton Freeway and US Highway 259 North. You will hit about 9 points where you need to pay attention to lane position or signs. The trickiest moment comes around 1.2 miles in.
Moderate - straightforward overall, but long enough or busy enough to require pacing
Balances navigation complexity with total wheel time.
This drive requires moderate attention. Across 151.8 miles you will encounter 9 spots where lane choice or exit timing matters. Not difficult for experienced highway drivers, but worth previewing the tricky sections before you go.
Where does it get tricky?
The main spots that need attention: at 1.2 miles: Lane positioning matters here; at 1.4 miles: Highway fork - watch signs carefully. Lane positioning matters here; at 1.6 miles: Highway fork - watch signs carefully.
Based on OSRM destination-sign hints, not a full list of every settlement the road passes.
On the drive from Dallas, TX to Garland, TX, road signs begin pointing toward Daingerfield along the way.
Daingerfield
“Big D” · Founded 1841
Dallas, with a population of more than 1.3 million residents, is the ninth largest city in the United States and the third largest in the state of Texas. It is an impressive melting pot of culture and character. Boasting high-end luxury hotels, innumerable fine dining spots, and one of the busiest airports in the world, Dallas maintains an upscale ethos reflected by an affluent population, world-class museums, and a shimmering modern skyline. Its history was marred by the infamous assassination of U.S. President John F. Kennedy, but there is more historic and contemporary heritage to be discovered in the city. As a center of the oil and cotton industries in the late 1800s and early 1900s, Dallas was a classic American boom town and remains one of the fastest growing cities in the nation.
Top landmarks
Founded 1891
Garland is a city in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex area in the State of Texas. Mike Judge, the creator of Beavis and Butthead and King of the Hill, used to live in Garland, as well as some other small towns around Texas. So, yeah. Don't be shocked if you take a wrong turn through a downscale neighborhood and see someone barbecuing hot dogs using one of those things that turns your truck's air filter into a grill. On the other hand, Garland's north side is a palacial monument to suburban living in all its McMansioned, strip malling, Starbucks-sipping glory. Garland is basically an unprepossessing, pleasant place. While it's hard to get too excited about much that happens in Garland, it is just so darned pleasant.
City content from Wikivoyage (CC BY-SA 4.0) and Wikidata (CC0).
Weekend Trip
Doable as a same-day drive at 2h 50m. Total distance: 151.8 miles.
Family Friendly
Moderate complexity with 1 natural rest stops along the way.
Solo Traveler
2h 50m drive, comfortable solo distance.
First-Time Driver
Mostly highway driving (98%). Some complex stretches to watch for.
Compiled by the US Trip Planner planning team at COD Solutions Oy from open government datasets — OSRM over OpenStreetMap for geometry, and EIA for fuel prices. See our methodology for refresh cadence and limitations.
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