Port Isabel is a small Cameron County seaport town on the western shore of the Laguna Madre, at the far southern tip of the Texas coast. This is not a big city. It is a compact, working waterfront community of roughly 5,000 people, where a historic downtown, a shrimp basin, and a steady flow of visitors headed to the beach set the pace. Food trucks fit right into that rhythm, serving locals and travelers around downtown, the waterfront, and the everyday stops in between.
The town centers on the historic Port Isabel Lighthouse, a 72-foot brick tower built in 1852 and now a Texas state historic site, one of the last Texas lighthouses open to the public for climbing. Around it, the downtown historic district along Maxan Street and Queen Isabella Boulevard keeps a small-town Gulf Coast feel with local shops, museums, and casual bites within walking distance of the water.
Port Isabel still runs on the water. A working shrimping fleet ties up at the local basin, fresh Gulf seafood comes off the boats, and fishing charters head out into the Laguna Madre and the Gulf for a day on the water. That heritage shows up on local plates, where Gulf shrimp and fresh catch share the menu with the Mexican and Tex-Mex cooking that runs deep across the Rio Grande Valley.
Port Isabel also sits at the base of the Queen Isabella Causeway, the long bridge across the Laguna Madre to South Padre Island, which makes the town a natural gateway and a stop for beachgoers coming and going. Use this page to browse Port Isabel food trucks by cuisine, menu, catering options, and nearby service areas. Whether you want Gulf seafood, tacos, birria, burgers, sweets, or something fresh rolling through town, FTGC helps you find a local truck worth checking out.