Speed Bumps
Best Speed Bumps for HOA Communities (2026 Guide)
Cojo
May 7, 2026
7 min read
The best speed bump for an Oregon HOA community is a 4 to 6-foot heavy-duty recycled-rubber section, painted yellow with integrated reflective tape, installed with lag-bolt anchors, and paired with W17-1 advance-warning signage. That spec balances the three things HOA boards usually fight over: real speed reduction, low noise complaints from adjacent residents, and the ability to pull or relocate the unit later if the community votes to reconfigure. Below this spec, plastic units fail in winter and generate maintenance tickets. Above it, you're paying for industrial-grade capacity an HOA road doesn't need.
Below: the five HOA-friendly speed-bump categories we spec for board members and property managers, plus selection criteria, the Oregon Revised Statutes Chapter 94 (Planned Communities) context, and the board-approval process most HOAs run.
We weighted five product categories on five criteria specific to HOA use:
HOA products are different from commercial products. Noise, appearance, and reversibility matter more than industrial-grade load capacity.
The default for HOA private roads and shared driveways. Real load capacity, real lifespan, removable if the community votes to change layout.
Spec callouts:
Best for: HOA private roads, shared-driveway communities, large planned-unit developments. The most-installed product in HOA work. For broader rubber product context, see our best rubber speed bumps 2026 guide.
The shorter version of #1, sized for narrower HOA private drives or constrained sections.
Spec callouts:
Best for: Narrow HOA private drives, small lane sections, gated-community entry approaches.
A split-pad design that allows golf carts and similar small vehicles to pass through the gap while still slowing passenger cars.
Spec callouts:
Best for: Active-adult communities with golf-cart traffic, retirement HOAs, communities with small-vehicle paths. Note: this is not the same as a true speed cushion for fire-truck access, which is a different product sized to commercial fire-apparatus specs.
A wider, lower-profile rubber section (2.5 inch height instead of standard 3 to 4 inch) that reduces vehicle noise at the bump while still producing speed reduction.
Spec callouts:
Best for: HOA roads with adjacent residential units, properties where night-time noise complaints are documented, communities where noise has been a board-meeting agenda item.
Built into a regular paving operation when the HOA private road is being repaved or overlaid.
Spec callouts:
Best for: HOA private-road paving or overlay projects, communities planning long-horizon installs.
| Use Case | Pick | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Standard HOA private road | #1 (HD 6 ft) | Default rubber product |
| Narrow HOA drive | #2 (HD 4 ft) | Shorter footprint |
| Active-adult community with golf carts | #3 (cushion-style) | Small-vehicle pass-through |
| HOA with night-noise complaints | #4 (quiet profile) | Lower vehicle noise |
| HOA repaving private road | #5 (asphalt formed) | Permanent during paving |
Oregon HOAs are governed by the Planned Communities Act, ORS Chapter 94, which establishes the legal framework for HOA governance. Most HOAs require board approval for any common-area modification, which includes speed bump installations on private roads.
The typical approval process:
Some HOAs require an architectural review committee (ARC) sign-off for visible exterior changes. A speed bump usually does not trigger ARC review because it is a traffic-control device, not an architectural feature, but check the bylaws.
Always verify current requirements with your HOA's governing documents and counsel. This article reflects 2026-05-07 considerations.
The following categories appear in residential retail catalogs but rarely fit Oregon HOA use:
Industry Baseline Range — by category
| Category | Per-Section Range |
|---|---|
| HD 6 ft rubber (#1) | $200 to $350 installed |
| HD 4 ft rubber (#2) | $150 to $260 installed |
| Cushion-style (#3) | $200 to $350 installed |
| Quiet profile (#4) | $230 to $380 installed |
| Asphalt formed (#5) | $400 to $1,500 per bump (with paving) |
In 2026, HOA speed bump installs have run 25 to 35 percent above 2024 baselines, driven by labor costs and the additional administrative coordination HOAs need (approval timelines, member notifications, scheduling around community events). Multi-bump installs typically discount 15 to 20 percent because mobilization is amortized.
On a Beaverton HOA install in February 2026, we placed five #1 picks (HD 6-foot sections) along a 1,400-foot HOA private road. The board had voted at its November 2025 meeting after three months of member discussion. Total install ran $1,250 ($250 per bump average) and the property manager reports a 28 percent reduction in observed mid-block speeds. For broader local context, see our speed bump installation in Beaverton page.
For full-scope HOA installs across Oregon, paired with asphalt maintenance services when bumps coincide with paving or sealcoat work, Cojo coordinates with HOA boards on approval timelines and member-notification logistics.
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