Curbing
Decorative Concrete Curbing Cost (2026 Pricing Guide)
Cojo
May 7, 2026
6 min read
Decorative concrete curbing costs 30 to 60 percent more than plain barrier curb because of three line items: the colored or specialty cement mix, the texturing or stamping labor, and the protective sealing program required to maintain the surface. The premium pays off on retail centers, hotels, HOA common areas, and high-end commercial entries where curb appearance is part of the brand experience. It rarely pays off on warehouse, industrial, or low-traffic perimeter applications.
This page covers the 2026 cost picture for decorative concrete curbing -- what counts as decorative, the per-foot premium for each treatment, and the long-term sealing economics that determine whether the upgrade is worth it.
Direct answer: Decorative concrete curbing is plain Class 4000 curb modified with one or more of: integral pigment color, surface staining, stamped or textured patterns, exposed aggregate finish, or specialty profile shapes. Pricing runs 30 to 60 percent above plain barrier curb depending on the treatment combination, with stamped and colored together at the high end and integral color alone at the low end.
Before you can price the decorative premium, anchor on the plain pricing:
| Plain Curb Type | Industry Baseline (per lf) |
|---|---|
| 6-inch barrier curb (slipformed) | $11 to $22+ |
| Mountable curb (4-inch face) | $9 to $18+ |
| Curb and gutter (combined section) | $17 to $32+ |
Industry Baseline Range (premium over plain barrier curb)
| Treatment | Premium Above Plain |
|---|---|
| Integral pigment color (uniform tone throughout the section) | +20% to +35% |
| Surface staining (acid stain or water-based stain) | +15% to +30% |
| Stamped texture (cobblestone, slate, brick patterns) | +35% to +55% |
| Exposed aggregate finish (washed surface) | +25% to +40% |
| Bullnose or chamfered edge profiles | +10% to +20% |
| Combined integral color + stamped texture | +50% to +75% |
| Specialty premium pigments (titanium dioxide white, deep iron oxide red) | +5% to +15% additional |
Decorative concrete is sensitive to skilled-labor availability. The number of contractors trained in stamped and stained finishes shrank during the 2020-2023 construction labor shortage. As of 2026, premium decorative work commands an additional 5 to 12 percent because of constrained supply of qualified finishers in the Pacific Northwest. Smaller projects (under 200 linear feet) carry an additional mobilization premium for decorative scope because the texturing and finishing labor doesn't scale linearly.
Putting it together for a typical 6-inch barrier curb at $16 per linear foot baseline:
| Decorative Combination | Per Linear Foot Installed |
|---|---|
| Integral color only | $19 to $22+ |
| Surface stain only | $18 to $21+ |
| Stamped texture only | $22 to $25+ |
| Integral color + stamped texture | $24 to $28+ |
| Exposed aggregate | $20 to $23+ |
| Bullnose edge + integral color | $20 to $24+ |
| Premium pigment + stamped + custom profile | $28 to $36+ |
Granite curb skips the decorative concrete category entirely and goes to a fundamentally different material. Pricing runs $45 to $90 per linear foot installed, which is 3 to 5 times plain concrete curb. Lifespan compensates: granite lasts 75 to 100-plus years vs concrete's 25 to 50. Granite is the right call on civic projects, historic districts (Portland's downtown waterfront, downtown Salem, Eugene's Whiteaker), and luxury commercial that intends to outlast multiple ownership cycles. See our broader concrete curb cost per linear foot breakdown for context.
Decorative finishes require active sealing to maintain appearance. The sealing program drives the long-term economics:
| Treatment | Sealing Frequency | Cost Per Application |
|---|---|---|
| Integral color | Every 3 to 5 years | $0.80 to $1.50 per lf |
| Surface stain | Every 2 to 4 years | $1.00 to $1.80 per lf |
| Stamped texture | Every 2 to 3 years | $1.20 to $2.20 per lf |
| Exposed aggregate | Every 4 to 6 years | $0.70 to $1.30 per lf |
Three use cases where decorative curb earns the premium:
Front-of-house curb at a hotel, mall main entrance, or upscale retail anchor where the customer's visual first-impression is part of the brand. The 30 to 60 percent premium on 50 to 200 linear feet of front-curb is small money against the brand investment.
Subdivision and condominium entries where curb appeal directly affects property values. Decorative curb at the entry monument and along the visible front frontage is a high-leverage upgrade.
Downtown Portland (some Old Town blocks), downtown Salem, downtown Eugene, and downtown Bend have historic-district overlay zoning that requires matching of curb material and finish to the existing context. Decorative or granite is sometimes the only compliant option.
Four use cases where plain curb is the right call:
Our slipform crews can run integral-color and exposed-aggregate continuously. Stamped and stained finishes are hand-finished after the slipform pass and need a dedicated finishing crew. We coordinate the texturing, color matching, and sealing program in a single contract, so the property owner has one point of accountability for the decorative outcome and the long-term sealing schedule.
We deliver decorative concrete curbing across Oregon — integral color, stamped texture, exposed aggregate, and combined treatments — plus the recommended sealing schedule built into the long-term maintenance plan. Contact Cojo for a site walk and a written scope.
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