Wheel Stops
Wheel Stop Maintenance: Cracks, Reflectivity, ADA Compliance Checks
Cojo
May 7, 2026
7 min read
Inspect wheel stops quarterly: walk the entire lot, check every stop for cracks wider than 1/4 inch, faded paint below 70 percent contrast, missing reflective tape, and ADA compliance on accessible stalls. Track findings in a stall-level log. Repaint annually in the Willamette Valley, every 18 months east of the Cascades. Replace any stop that has shifted more than 2 inches from layout or that has a through-body crack.
The Cojo quarterly inspection checklist covers six conditions per stop:
| # | Condition | Threshold | Action if Failed |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Body cracks | None wider than 1/4 inch | Epoxy-fill if smaller, replace if larger |
| 2 | Anchor integrity | No play, no rotation | Re-anchor or replace |
| 3 | Position drift | Within 2 inches of layout | Reset on existing anchors |
| 4 | Paint contrast | At least 70 percent of original | Repaint |
| 5 | Reflective tape | Present, intact, retroreflective | Replace tape |
| 6 | ADA compliance (accessible stalls only) | Color, position, clearance correct | Reposition or recolor |
The 1/4-inch threshold comes from the standard freeze-thaw failure mode. Below 1/4 inch, water entering the crack does not have enough volume to expand significantly when frozen. Above 1/4 inch, every freeze cycle widens the crack by 5 to 10 percent. A 1/4-inch crack in October becomes a 1/2-inch crack by March in any Oregon climate that sees overnight freezes.
The U.S. Federal Highway Administration's pavement maintenance guidance covers crack-width thresholds for asphalt and concrete in detail; the wheel stop community has aligned its inspection thresholds to the same scale because the failure mechanism is identical.
For the full crack-vs-replace decision tree, see our wheel stop replacement guide.
The four most common failure modes Cojo crews see across Oregon:
The maintenance routine should be tuned to the dominant failure mode. A Bend lot needs winter snowplow inspections; a Hillsboro warehouse needs quarterly heavy-truck-impact checks; a Salem retail lot needs spring freeze-thaw audits.
Paint cycle by region and material:
| Region | Substrate | Repaint Cycle |
|---|---|---|
| Willamette Valley (Portland to Eugene) | Rubber + latex | 12 to 15 months |
| Willamette Valley | Concrete + solvent | 18 to 24 months |
| Willamette Valley | Concrete + thermoplastic | 4 to 6 years |
| Central Oregon (Bend, high desert) | Rubber + latex | 14 to 18 months |
| Central Oregon | Concrete + solvent | 24 to 30 months |
| Coast (Astoria, Newport) | Any | 9 to 12 months — salt accelerates fade |
For application procedure, see how to paint and stripe wheel stops.
ASTM Type III high-intensity reflective tape has a manufacturer-rated life of 5 to 7 years on a vertical surface protected from direct UV. On a wheel stop's front face it lasts 3 to 5 years in Oregon because:
Replace tape that:
Tape is cheap (under $10 per stop) and the work is fast. Add tape replacement to every other quarterly inspection; you will catch most failures within a quarter of when they happen.
ADA accessible stalls have a stricter maintenance bar because non-compliance carries direct liability. Inspect every accessible stall every quarter for:
For dimensional and color details, see our ADA wheel stop placement guide. The Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries enforces ORS 447.233 with civil penalties of up to $1,000 per non-compliant accessible stall — far more than a maintenance pass costs.
Cojo's standard wheel stop maintenance contract for commercial Oregon properties covers:
A 50-stall retail lot with 2 ADA stalls runs $1,800 to $3,200 per year on contract. Lots that go contract-free spend roughly the same on emergency replacements and reactive paint passes but lose the inspection log that property managers use for liability defense.
A 14,000-square-foot Salem retail center we maintain has been on Cojo contract since 2024. Annual scope: 4 inspections, 1 spring repaint, average 3 stop replacements per year, ADA compliance log. In 2024 the lot had 6 stop replacements (initial cleanup year). 2025 dropped to 3. 2026 is tracking 2 — quarterly catch-and-fix prevents the freeze-thaw escalation that drives most replacements.
The property manager's annual maintenance spend on Cojo contract is roughly 38 percent below what the same lot's previous owner spent on emergency replacements without a contract. The savings come from catching cracks at 1/8 inch instead of 1/2 inch.
| Item | Range |
|---|---|
| Quarterly inspection, 50-stall lot, mobilization included | $180 to $400 |
| Annual maintenance contract, 50-stall lot, 2 ADA stalls | $1,800 to $3,200 |
| Per-stop replacement (extract + patch + set + anchor + paint) | $85 to $185 |
| Annual repaint pass, 50-stall lot | $1,200 to $2,400 |
| Reflective tape replacement, per stop | $9 to $22 |
| Crack-fill epoxy injection, per crack | $12 to $30 |
| ADA compliance verification, per accessible stall | $20 to $45 |
Maintenance contract pricing rose roughly 11 percent from 2024 to 2026, driven by labor and fuel. Reactive emergency replacement pricing rose roughly 22 percent over the same period because mobilization costs are absorbed against fewer stops. Owners on contract are seeing the gap widen each year — the contract premium pays itself back faster than it did 24 months ago.
Property managers running a wheel stop program for the first time should start with the wheel stops buyer's guide and then contact Cojo for a baseline inspection. For Salem-area properties, see wheel stop installation Salem.
Reviewed by Cojo lead estimator. This article reflects 2026-05 inspection thresholds and FHWA crack-width guidance.
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