TrafficVision.Live

San Angelo, TX Traffic Cameras: 350+ Live Cams

350+ Live Camera Feeds • San Angelo, Texas

πŸ“Œ Table of Contents 10 sections

Watch San Angelo Traffic in Real-Time

Access 350+ live traffic and street cameras across San Angelo and the Concho Valley β€” the largest city in west-central Texas and the hub of the Concho region. Our interactive map provides real-time access to live street feeds and intersection cameras across Loop 306 (Houston Harte Expressway), US-67, US-87, and the surface streets serving Goodfellow AFB and Angelo State University. Monitor the daily flow between San Angelo, Abilene, the Permian Basin, and the southern Texas oilfields.

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Cameras: 350+  |  Coverage: San Angelo & Tom Green County  |  Sources: TxDOT, DriveTexas  |  Access: Free, no registration

Camera Coverage

Loop 306 (Houston Harte Expressway)

150+ Live Cameras

The major freeway-grade loop around the city β€” the closest thing to an interstate San Angelo has

US-67 / US-87 / US-277

110+ Live Cameras

The convergence of three U.S. highways at San Angelo β€” the city's primary regional connectors

Surface Streets & Downtown

60+ Live Cameras

Knickerbocker Road, Sherwood Way, Bryant Boulevard, Main Street, College Hills Boulevard

Goodfellow AFB & ASU Approaches

30+ Live Cameras

The Goodfellow Air Force Base perimeter and Angelo State University access routes

San Angelo is one of the largest cities in Texas without an interstate, but its position at the convergence of US-67, US-87, and US-277 makes it a major regional traffic hub linking Abilene, the Permian Basin, and San Antonio. According to the Texas Department of Transportation, the Houston Harte Expressway (Loop 306) functions as the city's de facto interstate, carrying enormous commuter and freight volumes around the urban core.

TxDOT camera coverage on Loop 306 is dense because the Houston Harte Expressway is the only true freeway-grade route in the Concho Valley. Combined with the city's role as a hub for oilfield service traffic from the southern Permian and a major Air Force training installation, San Angelo produces commuter and freight flows that punch well above its population.

Loop 306 (Houston Harte Expressway)

Loop 306 is San Angelo's signature freeway, encircling the city and providing the primary bypass for through-traffic. The corridor is freeway-grade through most of its length, with cameras at every major interchange and the most heavily used surface street junctions.

Loop 306 Key Segments

  • US-87 / Sherwood Way Junction (West) — Western entry, Angelo State University and west San Angelo
  • Knickerbocker Road — Central Loop 306 exit, College Hills retail cluster
  • US-67 / Bryant Boulevard — Major downtown San Angelo exit
  • US-277 / Sherwood Way Junction (East) — Eastern transition toward Goodfellow AFB
  • North Loop / FM 388 — Northern bypass section

The Loop 306 expressway is the critical route across the city. When it stalls β€” usually due to oilfield-related truck incidents or weather events β€” surface streets like Sherwood Way, Knickerbocker, and Bryant Boulevard absorb the load. Cameras on those parallel arterials show whether they're still moving or already saturated.

Check Loop 306 Conditions Now

See live conditions on the Houston Harte before committing to a cross-town drive.

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US-67, US-87, and US-277

San Angelo is the rare Texas city where three U.S. highways converge β€” and the camera network reflects that:

  • US-67 (Sherwood Way): Connects San Angelo to Ballinger and Brownwood on the east, and to Mertzon and the Permian Basin on the west
  • US-87 (Bryant Boulevard / Christoval Direction): North-south spine, connection to Big Spring and the Permian on the north, San Antonio direction on the south
  • US-277 (East Loop): Connection to Sonora and the Mexican border direction

Cameras at the major intersections of these highways with Loop 306 are critical for navigating regional through-traffic.

Loop 306 vs. Surface Streets

For local moves through San Angelo, Sherwood Way and Knickerbocker Road parallel Loop 306. Cameras on these surface arterials show whether they're flowing freely β€” during peak hours, signal cascades can make the surface arterials slower than the freeway.

Goodfellow AFB and ASU

Goodfellow Air Force Base β€” primarily a training installation focused on intelligence and firefighting β€” is the largest single employer in San Angelo. Daily training schedules and shift changes generate predictable flows along Knickerbocker Road, Sherwood Way, and the base perimeter.

Angelo State University's campus on the west side adds a student-driven traffic layer, with surges during class change windows and major university events.

Surface Streets and the San Angelo Grid

When the Loop slows, the city's grid carries the load:

  • Knickerbocker Road: Major north-south arterial through central San Angelo
  • Sherwood Way (US-67): Primary east-west spine
  • Bryant Boulevard (US-87): Cross-town connector
  • Main Street / Beauregard Avenue: Downtown spine
  • College Hills Boulevard: Retail and commercial corridor
  • Avenue N / Loop Connectors: Residential cross-routes

Users can also monitor live street feeds along Knickerbocker Road, Sherwood Way, and Bryant Boulevard to spot signal cascades or accident backups before they spill onto the Houston Harte.

Plan Your Concho Valley Route

Build a custom route between San Angelo and Abilene, the Permian Basin, or San Antonio β€” and see every camera along the way.

BUILD YOUR ROUTE β†’

Traffic Patterns

San Angelo rush hours are concentrated. Morning peak runs 7:00-8:30 AM, with significant Goodfellow AFB-bound flow on Sherwood Way and Knickerbocker Road. Afternoon peak hits 4:30-5:45 PM. Friday afternoons see typical regional outflow on US-67 east toward DFW and on US-87 toward San Antonio. Oilfield-related truck flow stays heavy across the entire 24-hour cycle on US-87 north and US-67 west toward the Permian.

Weather and Driving Hazards

Severe weather in west-central Texas is fast and dangerous. Spring brings supercell thunderstorms with hail and tornadic potential. The Concho Valley sits near the southern edge of Tornado Alley.

Dust storms drift in from the Permian and can drop visibility on US-67 west and US-87 north to dangerous levels. Cameras let drivers see actual visibility before committing.

Ice events are rare but tend to shut Loop 306 elevated sections entirely. The flyovers at the major interchanges freeze before surface streets do.

Major Events

San Angelo Stock Show & Rodeo (one of the oldest in Texas), Angelo State Rams home football, Goodfellow AFB graduations, and major events at Foster Field all produce predictable surges. Cameras at Knickerbocker Road, Sherwood Way, and the relevant Loop 306 interchanges are the best indicators of arrival flow.

About the Platform

TrafficVision.Live aggregates feeds from 600+ official sources into one seamless interface. Use our interactive map to find cameras by location, switch to grid view for side-by-side Loop 306 monitoring, build custom routes for your Concho Valley commute, or save favorites for instant access. Available 24/7 on any device.

These San Angelo cameras are part of the world's largest traffic camera directory with 140,000+ live feeds from 600+ sources across 130+ countries worldwide.

How many traffic cameras are available in San Angelo?

TrafficVision.Live aggregates over 350 live cameras covering San Angelo, including Loop 306 (Houston Harte Expressway), US-67, US-87, US-277, and the surface arterials across Tom Green County. Feeds come from TxDOT and DriveTexas.

Are San Angelo traffic cameras free to view?

Yes. All San Angelo cameras on TrafficVision.Live are completely free with no account required. They are publicly maintained TxDOT feeds presented in one searchable interface.

What's the busiest stretch of Loop 306?

The Knickerbocker Road and US-67 / Sherwood Way interchanges are consistently the most congested points, particularly during Goodfellow AFB shift changes and Angelo State class change windows.

How does Goodfellow AFB affect San Angelo traffic?

Daily training schedules and shift changes at Goodfellow generate predictable flows on Knickerbocker Road, Sherwood Way, and the base perimeter. Cameras around the base let civilian drivers time their commutes around gate surges.

Where can I find San Angelo street cameras?

You can find live San Angelo street feeds and intersection cameras on our interactive map, including coverage of Knickerbocker Road, Sherwood Way, Bryant Boulevard, College Hills Boulevard, and the downtown grid.

Are oilfield routes covered?

Yes. The US-67 west and US-87 north corridors leaving San Angelo toward the southern Permian Basin have camera coverage, allowing oilfield workers and freight operators to see truck traffic and weather conditions before heading out.

Start Watching San Angelo Street Cameras

Access 350+ live camera feeds across Loop 306, US-67, and San Angelo city street feeds instantly.

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