Delineators
Plastic vs Metal Delineator Post (2026)
Cojo
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A plastic delineator (typically polymer flex post) bends and recovers on impact; a metal delineator (typically powder-coated steel) is rigid and deforms permanently if struck. Plastic is the dominant choice for parking-lot delineation because vehicle impacts are common and recoverable hits cost less than rigid replacement. Metal earns its place in high-vandalism areas, low-impact perimeter applications, and decorative installs where appearance and longevity outweigh impact tolerance.
Both materials satisfy MUTCD Section 3F retroreflectivity rules with the right ASTM D4956 sheeting. The decision is a use-case and economics call.
A plastic delineator is a polymer-bodied vertical post, typically made from high-density polyethylene (HDPE) or a thermoplastic polyurethane blend. The polymer body is engineered for memory recovery -- the post bends on impact and returns to vertical via material elasticity.
Most parking-lot delineators sold in 2026 are plastic flex posts. The dominant manufacturers (Pexco, Plasticade, JBC, Trafix) all build polymer-bodied posts as their primary product line.
A metal delineator is a rigid steel or aluminum vertical post with retroreflective sheeting wrapped or applied to the visible face. Most metal delineators are powder-coated mild steel; some marine-environment installs use galvanized or stainless steel for corrosion resistance.
Metal posts do not bend on impact. They deform permanently or shear off entirely. This makes them appropriate only for low-impact applications.
How often will the post be hit?
| Impact Frequency | Recommended Material |
|---|---|
| Frequent (drive-thru, queue, retail edge) | Plastic flex post |
| Occasional (perimeter, low-traffic edge) | Plastic or metal |
| Rare (decorative, gated property) | Metal acceptable |
| Vandalism-prone | Metal (anchored deep) |
Five high-frequency parking-lot applications:
The economic argument is straightforward. A plastic flex post hit at 15 mph by a passenger car returns to vertical with no replacement cost. The same impact on a metal post bends or breaks the post and the steel anchor below grade.
Three lower-frequency applications:
For all three cases, the metal post's longevity advantage (15+ years untouched) outweighs the lack of impact recovery.
MUTCD Section 3F does not specify post material. It specifies:
A plastic flex post and a metal post both satisfy MUTCD as long as they hit the height, color, and reflectivity rules. The federal standard is material-agnostic.
State-highway-adjacent work in Oregon coordinates through Oregon DOT, which also accepts both materials. Local sidewalk-adjacent installs in Portland defer to Portland Bureau of Transportation Title 17.
Industry Baseline Range
| Component | Plastic Flex | Metal Steel |
|---|---|---|
| Post (36 in) | $25 to $55 | $80 to $180 |
| Post (48 in) | $40 to $85 | $110 to $240 |
| Anchor hardware | $4 to $12 | $20 to $50 |
| Install labor (per post) | $15 to $30 | $30 to $80 |
| Total installed (36 in) | $40 to $85 | $130 to $310 |
| Replacement after damage | Often none | $130 to $310 |
| Lifespan (no impacts) | 5 to 7 yrs | 15 to 25 yrs |
Steel pricing climbed roughly 14 percent across 2025 driven by infrastructure-bill demand. Plastic flex post pricing climbed 7 to 9 percent over the same period. The cost gap between metal and plastic widened, not narrowed. For parking-lot interior installs, plastic now runs at roughly one-third the installed cost of metal -- the economics rarely justify metal unless one of the three "metal wins" cases applies.
A 50-post drive-thru install in Oregon typically lands at $3,500 to $7,500 turnkey in plastic. The same lot in metal would run $9,000 to $18,000.
Polymer flex posts are UV-stabilized in 2026 manufacturing. Most flex posts in Oregon parking lots last 5 to 7 years before UV degradation noticeably affects color and recovery angle. Hot summers in southern Oregon (Medford, Roseburg) and freeze-thaw cycles in Bend stress the polymer faster than coastal or Willamette Valley conditions.
Powder-coated steel handles Oregon weather well. Coastal installs (saltwater air) need galvanized or stainless steel for 15+ year service. Inland installs hold powder coat for 10 to 20 years before re-coat. The steel core does not degrade.
For coastal or marine-air installs, the metal premium is partially justified by corrosion resistance. For everywhere else in Oregon, plastic flex is the practical choice.
For a Hillsboro tech-campus perimeter we delineated in March 2026, the property had a recurring problem with vandalism on its previous plastic flex line -- delineators were being kicked over and broken at night near a public sidewalk. We replaced the line with 18 powder-coated steel posts anchored 18 inches deep in concrete. Per-post cost was 3 to 4 times the plastic equivalent, but the previous plastic line was being replaced every 8 months. The steel install pays back in 18 months.
This is the metal use case in one paragraph. Outside of vandalism patterns, decorative entry treatments, and low-impact rural perimeters, plastic is the right call.
For Hillsboro-specific delineator pricing and tech-campus install context, see our delineator installation Hillsboro Oregon page.
Three questions:
If two answers point to plastic, install plastic. If two point to metal, accept the price premium and install metal.
Cojo specs and installs both materials across Oregon parking-lot work. Contact Cojo for a quote, or read our striping services overview for the painted layer.
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