Spike Strips
Tire Spike Strip Cost: 2026 Installation Pricing Breakdown
Cojo
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6 min read
A commercial tire spike strip costs $1,800 to $7,000 installed in 2026 for a single 8-foot exit lane, with surface-mount units at the lower end and recessed in-ground units at the upper end. Total project cost includes the unit itself, saw-cut and pavement work, MUTCD-compliant signage, and ADA bypass-lane provision. This article breaks the line items down so a property manager can sanity-check a bid before signing.
For background on what a tire spike strip is and when it fits, start with our commercial tire spike strips guide.
The average installed cost for a commercial tire spike strip in 2026 is approximately $3,200 for a surface-mount 8-foot unit and approximately $5,800 for a recessed in-ground 8-foot unit, including pavement work and MUTCD signage. Hydraulic retractable systems run $9,000 to $18,000 per opening. Tire deflation device alternatives run $5,500 to $9,500 per opening. Pricing varies meaningfully by region, pavement type, and access-control integration.
Industry Baseline Range
| Line item | Cost range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Surface-mount unit (8-ft strip) | $400 to $1,200 | Manufacturer-direct; 4-ft and 12-ft alternatives available |
| Recessed in-ground unit (8-ft strip) | $2,500 to $5,000 | FAAC plate, premium pricing |
| Hydraulic retractable system | $6,000 to $15,000 | Magnetic AutoControl, fleet-grade |
| Tire deflation device (airbag) | $4,000 to $7,500 | ALL-O-MATIC, healthcare-grade |
| Saw-cut and concrete pocket labor | $1,500 to $3,500 | Per opening; varies by pavement |
| Anchor and bolt hardware | $150 to $400 | Concrete anchors, stainless |
| MUTCD R5-1 sign installed | $150 to $300 | Decision-point placement |
| MUTCD W4-4 sign installed | $150 to $300 | Lane-mouth placement |
| Custom property warning sign | $100 to $300 | Line-of-sight gap coverage |
| ADA bypass-lane striping | $200 to $600 | If retrofit required |
| Permit and traffic-control plan | $300 to $1,200 | Varies by jurisdiction |
Commercial spike strip pricing in 2026 trends above 2024 baselines for three reasons. First, steel-spring stock surcharges of 8 to 12 percent on tariff-affected imports have pushed unit pricing up across surface-mount lines. Second, saw-cut and concrete pocket installation labor on existing pavement has risen with broader construction labor inflation -- approximately 14 percent year over year on commercial concrete saw-cutting in Oregon. Third, MUTCD-compliant signage costs have risen with reflective-sheeting raw-material increases.
Five factors push a project from baseline toward the high end of the range:
Cutting and anchoring into asphalt is faster and cheaper than concrete. Concrete saw-cutting on a hardened existing slab adds $400 to $1,000 to the labor line. Asphalt pavement that requires repair or repaving around the install adds $500 to $2,500 depending on patch size.
Saw-cutting blind into a pavement that contains buried conduit, fuel lines, or stormwater pipe creates a damage-and-repair scenario. We always GPR (ground-penetrating radar) survey the saw-cut location before mobilization. Where buried utilities require relocation, project cost can double.
If the existing site has no separate accessible lane and the spike strip would create an ADA accessible-route obstruction, the project must include a separate bypass lane. This typically adds $400 to $1,200 in striping and signage plus permit time. The U.S. Access Board's ADAAG Section 4.3 governs accessible-route obstruction (see U.S. Access Board ADAAG).
Hydraulic retractable systems require integration with an access-control system (proximity card, license plate recognition, intercom). The integration adds $1,500 to $4,500 to the project, plus ongoing access-control maintenance.
Where the install touches city right-of-way or interfaces with a state highway frontage, permit fees and traffic-control plan costs can run $800 to $1,200 in metros like Portland and Salem. ODOT permits add 4 to 8 weeks of timeline.
The most common cost question is whether to spec a surface-mount or recessed unit. The 10-year cost picture:
Industry Baseline Range
| 10-year line item | Surface-mount | Recessed in-ground |
|---|---|---|
| Initial install | $2,200 to $4,400 | $4,500 to $7,000 |
| Year-3 spring service | $300 to $600 | $400 to $800 |
| Year-7 partial replacement | $800 to $2,000 | $1,500 to $3,500 |
| 10-year total | $3,300 to $7,000 | $6,400 to $11,300 |
For a side-by-side selection guide, see our best tire spike strips for parking lots roundup.
Three line items routinely surprise property managers reviewing a first bid:
Cojo itemizes all three on every quote so they are visible from day one.
For the spike-strip-vs-gate-arm financial comparison, see tire spike strips vs gate arm.
For events or short-duration deployments, rental rather than purchase makes sense. Surface-mount unit rental runs $200 to $500 per month plus delivery and pickup. The break-even crosses at roughly 6 to 9 months of equivalent rental cost vs purchase cost. For a deeper analysis, see our tire spike strip rental vs purchase cluster article.
A typical commercial spike strip quote from us itemizes:
Property managers can value-engineer by adjusting the signage scope or deferring the bypass-lane work, but the unit cost and pavement work are non-negotiable for a code-compliant install.
For Portland-area projects bundled with striping work, see our Portland parking lot striping page.
Three things keep our quotes consistent project to project:
Our typical commercial tire spike strip quote across Oregon ranges from $3,200 (basic surface-mount, single 8-ft strip, asphalt pavement) to $9,500 (recessed in-ground with ADA bypass and full MUTCD signage package).
We deliver itemized quotes within 5 to 7 business days of a site walk. Quotes include all line items above, the manufacturer brand selection rationale, and projected lead time.
Compliance disclaimer: Always verify current requirements with your local jurisdiction. This article reflects May 2026 specifications.
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