The North Country doesn’t care about excuses—it demands power, traction, and absolute reliability. Nestled near the rugged Tug Hill Plateau, Constableville, NY experiences some of the most demanding winter weather and toughest driving terrain in Upstate New York. Whether you’re hauling equipment along the Sugar River, managing a commercial farm, or heading home past historic Constable Hall, you need a truck built for the task.
At Matt Nimey GMC, we have built a reputation that proves we are “Worth the Drive.” We stand as the premier regional destination for heavy-duty capability across Lewis County and the entire North Country.
For drivers in Constableville and the surrounding Tug Hill region, a truck isn’t optional—it’s essential. Deep snow, steep rural grades, and remote job sites demand equipment that doesn’t hesitate when conditions turn severe.
We understand the reality of North Country life. That’s why our approach is built around capability-first inventory and long-term trust. From winter storms rolling off Lake Ontario to muddy spring job sites, we match drivers with trucks that are ready for anything.
Rural drivers, contractors, and commercial operators across the North Country know that the right truck matters more than proximity. We stock a focused selection of professional-grade GMC trucks built for real-world performance.
“Serving the North Country with trucks that mean business. From the woods to the job site, we’ve got you covered.”

When your truck is your livelihood, downtime isn’t an option. Our Constableville-focused service strategy prioritizes uptime, durability, and long-term reliability for every customer we serve.
We specialize in the exact rugged vehicles that rural, commercial, and military buyers in the North Country need. Our customers choose us because we maintain an elite inventory of heavy-duty and work-ready GMC trucks that make us completely “worth the drive”.
Yes. Our service focus is centered around maintaining truck and commercial vehicle uptime. We provide expert repairs designed to handle the heavy wear and tear caused by rural workloads and harsh Upstate winters.