Curbing
Best Curb for Drive-Thru Lanes: 2026 Spec Guide
Cojo
May 7, 2026
6 min read
The best curb for a drive-thru lane in 2026 is 4-inch face mountable curb on the inside of the drive-thru loop (where vehicles cut the corner) and 6-inch face barrier curb at the building wall and storefront-adjacent zones (where pedestrians walk and the building has to be protected). The drive-thru lane itself needs a 25-foot inside radius minimum at every turn to accommodate a passenger vehicle without tire scrub, with 50-foot inside radius for delivery-truck access at restaurants and banks. The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA Roadside Design Guide) and the Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE Trip Generation Manual + Parking Generation) both treat drive-thru geometry as a specialized application within commercial parking-lot design.
This guide ranks the curb specs that work best on drive-thru lanes by site type, gives you the geometry and materials data behind each, and identifies the four scenarios where each spec is the right call.
We weighted four factors that actually matter on a drive-thru:
The ranking reflects what a quick-serve restaurant operator, bank branch manager, or pharmacy property owner should specify by default.
Spec: 4-inch face, 12-inch top sloped at 1:3, 12-inch base. 4,000 PSI air-entrained concrete.
Cost: $9 to $16 per linear foot installed.
Best for: The inside of every drive-thru lane curve where vehicles have to negotiate a tight radius. Quick-serve restaurants, coffee shops, bank drive-thrus, pharmacy drive-thrus.
Why it ranks first: Drivers inevitably cut the inside corner of any drive-thru lane. With 6-inch barrier curb on the inside, that means scuffed sidewalls, damaged rims, and complaint calls. With 4-inch mountable curb, the tire rolls up over the curb at low speed without damage. The slope on the top face (typically 1:3) matches the geometry of a standard passenger-vehicle tire crown.
Spec: 6-inch face, 6-inch flat top, 12 to 18 inch base. 4,000 PSI air-entrained concrete with continuous #4 rebar per ACI 318 Building Code Requirements for Structural Concrete.
Cost: $10 to $20 per linear foot installed.
Best for: The outside of the drive-thru lane where it abuts the building wall, storefront, or pedestrian queue zone. Also at the order menu and pickup window.
Why it ranks second: Drive-thru queues run alongside building walls, walk-up entry doors, and pedestrian areas. A vehicle that drifts into the building takes the building down with it. 6-inch barrier curb stops a passenger vehicle at parking-aisle speeds. This is the same default spec as the rest of the commercial parking-lot perimeter — see best curb for commercial parking lot.
Spec: 8-inch face, 6-inch flat top, 18 to 24 inch base. 4,000 PSI concrete with #4 rebar continuous plus vertical dowels at expansion joints.
Cost: $12 to $23 per linear foot installed.
Best for: Drive-thru sites with daily delivery-truck access where the truck path crosses or runs adjacent to the drive-thru lane. Most quick-serve restaurants have a delivery zone within 30 feet of the drive-thru.
Why it ranks third: Heavy delivery trucks (Sysco, US Foods, Coca-Cola direct delivery) take 3 to 5 times the impact loading of passenger vehicles. The curb adjacent to truck-loading paths needs the upgrade or it tends to fail at the 12 to 15 year mark.
Spec: 12-inch wide flush concrete band at pavement grade, face height 0 to 2 inches.
Cost: $8 to $14 per linear foot installed.
Best for: Drive-thru lane drainage transitions where stormwater needs to leave the lane and enter a swale, bioretention basin, or stormwater inlet. Common at the entry and exit of the drive-thru loop.
Why it ranks fourth: Drive-thru lanes generate concentrated stormwater flow because they handle daily traffic and tend to slope toward a single low point at the order or pickup window. Ribbon curb at the drainage transition lets the water leave the pavement cleanly without ponding. The EPA Stormwater Best Management Practices treat this as standard drive-thru drainage detail.
Beyond curb spec, the drive-thru lane has fixed geometric requirements that interact with curb selection:
| Geometry Element | Minimum | Preferred |
|---|---|---|
| Inside radius (passenger vehicle) | 25 feet | 30 feet |
| Inside radius (delivery truck access) | 50 feet | 65 feet |
| Lane width | 11 feet | 12 feet |
| Order-window approach length | 30 feet | 50 feet |
| Pickup-window stack length | 60 feet | 100 feet |
| Bypass lane (where required) | 11 feet | 12 feet |
The curb has to follow this geometry. A 25-foot inside radius forces a hand-formed curb pour at the corner because slipform machines cannot follow that tight a radius. See our extruded curb vs poured curb breakdown for the production-method implications.
On a 12,000 square foot Beaverton drive-thru restaurant we curbed in January 2026, the project broke down as:
The mountable section let delivery box trucks back into the dumpster pad without tearing landscaping. The barrier section protected pedestrians at the storefront. The heavy-duty section absorbed the daily delivery-truck loading. Total curb run: 449 LF, blended cost averaging $13 per LF.
Use this decision sequence:
For broader curb-type detail see mountable curb vs barrier curb and the full concrete curb buyer's guide. When the drive-thru is part of a paving rebuild, our asphalt paving services crew sequences both pours.
Most commercial drive-thru sites end up using three or four of the five specs in this guide. The blend depends on the site plan, the inside-radius geometry, the delivery-truck access pattern, and the stormwater design. We walk every drive-thru site before quoting to map curb-by-section spec.
Get a custom quote for your drive-thru project.
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