Fixed vs Removable Bollards: A Direct Answer
Use a fixed bollard when the protected geometry needs 24-hour vehicle blocking and access is never required. Use a removable bollard when authorized vehicles (fire trucks, service vans, event staff) need to pass through but daily traffic must be blocked. The verdict comes down to access cadence: fixed wins on cost and impact rating, removable wins on flexibility and code-compliance for fire-lane and service-access applications.
A fixed bollard is embedded in concrete and stays in place for its 25 to 40 year service life. A removable bollard slips into a below-grade socket and locks at the surface; it can be lifted out in seconds with the correct key or padlock. Both meet ASTM F2656 or ASTM F3016 crash-ratings when specified as tested systems, but the rating cert applies to the assembly as installed ASTM F2656.
When Should You Pick a Fixed Bollard?
Fixed bollards are the default choice for any application where vehicle-blocking is permanent and unmediated.
What Are the Fixed-Bollard Scenarios?
- Storefront facades where 24-hour protection is required
- Federal-building perimeters where DHS BIPS-12 K12 / M50 ratings are mandated DHS BIPS-12
- EV charger pedestals where NEC Article 625 physical protection applies NFPA 70
- Warehouse forklift travel paths where OSHA 29 CFR 1910.176(a) requires permanent obstruction protection OSHA Materials Handling
- Drive-thru menu boards and ATM cabinets where ASTM F3016 low-speed crash-rating applies ASTM F3016
- Pedestrian-priority plazas with no vehicle-access requirement
Fixed bollards have no moving parts, no lock mechanism to fail, no socket to fill with debris, and no replacement-cycle on hardware. Service life is the longest of any bollard type.
When Should You Pick a Removable Bollard?
Removable bollards are the right choice anywhere authorized access through the protected geometry is required on a recurring or emergency basis.
What Are the Removable-Bollard Scenarios?
- Fire lanes where NFPA 1 Section 18.2.3 access requirements mandate authorized-access provisions NFPA 1
- Service vehicle entries at retail backs-of-house and food-service deliveries
- Event-perimeter gates for stadiums, arenas, and outdoor venues
- Emergency-vehicle paths at hospitals, schools, and public facilities
- Loading-zone access controls with scheduled but not continuous traffic
- Pedestrian plaza day-mode versus night-mode access controls
The trade-off is a hardware replacement cycle every 7 to 10 years on the locking mechanism even when the pipe and socket last 30+ years. Most failure modes show up at the lock, not the structural member.
How Do Fixed and Removable Bollards Compare?
| Feature | Fixed | Removable |
|---|---|---|
| Mounting | Embedded in concrete (24 to 48 inch footing) or surface-mounted | Drop-in pipe in below-grade socket |
| Crash rating | ASTM F2656 / F3016 available | ASTM F2656 / F3016 available (system-tested) |
| Service life | 25 to 40 years | 25 to 40 years (pipe), 7 to 10 years (lock hardware) |
| Lock mechanism | None | Padlock, internal-cam, triangular-key, magnetic |
| Replacement cycle | Decades | Recurring on hardware |
| Cost | Lower per unit | 1.5 to 2.5x fixed cost |
| Access flexibility | None | Authorized-only access in seconds |
Industry Baseline Range
| Application | Typical Spec | Industry Baseline Range Per Unit Installed |
|---|---|---|
| Fixed steel pipe (4-inch) | Schedule 40 concrete-filled | $250 to $700 |
| Fixed steel pipe (6-inch) | Schedule 40 concrete-filled | $400 to $1,200 |
| Fixed K4 crash-rated | F2656 system | $700 to $1,800 |
| Fixed K12 crash-rated | F2656 federal system | $4,500 to $10,000+ |
| Removable steel pipe (4-inch) | Drop-in with padlock | $400 to $900 |
| Removable steel pipe (6-inch) | Drop-in with internal cam | $600 to $1,500 |
| Removable F3016 low-speed | Tested removable system | $1,200 to $2,800 |
Current Market Reality
Steel surcharges remain elevated through Q2 2026 and have widened the cost gap between fixed and removable bollards because the removable variant requires both a structural pipe and a precast or cast-in-place socket. Lock-hardware availability has tightened on the higher-security internal-cam and magnetic mechanisms, and lead times are running 4 to 8 weeks. For comparison against the more sophisticated retractable design, see our retractable vs removable bollard comparison.
What Lock Mechanisms Are Available for Removable Bollards?
Four mechanisms cover most of the U.S. market:
- Padlock and chain — lowest cost ($25 to $80 hardware), most field-serviceable, lowest security tier. Vulnerable to bolt-cutter attack. Suitable for low-threat fire-lane and service-access applications.
- Internal-cam lock — moderate cost ($150 to $400 hardware), tamper-resistant. Requires manufacturer-specific key. Common at retail back-of-house.
- Triangular-key fire-department key — universal across most U.S. fire jurisdictions, allows any responding fire crew to access without site-specific keys. Many AHJs require this mechanism for fire-lane removable bollards.
- Magnetic / RFID — highest cost ($800 to $2,500 hardware), keyless authorized access. Used at corporate campuses, government facilities, and high-traffic event venues.
The right lock for a fire-lane application is whichever mechanism the local AHJ specifies. Salem Fire Department, Portland Bureau of Fire and Rescue, and Eugene-Springfield Fire each maintain their own approved-hardware lists, and substitution requires a written variance.
How Do Both Types Get Installed?
Fixed bollards are installed by either embedding a pipe in fresh concrete (new construction) or core-drilling an existing slab and bonding the pipe with structural epoxy (retrofit). Surface-mount baseplates are an option where coring is not feasible.
Removable bollards require a precast or cast-in-place below-grade socket with drainage. The socket is the critical detail — undersized sockets cause binding when the pipe expands in heat, and over-sized sockets allow vehicle-impact damage to shear the pipe at grade. Standard socket spec is 0.25 inches larger than the pipe diameter with a 4-inch-deep gravel sump for drainage.
On a 9,200-square-foot Portland fire-lane retrofit completed January 2026, Cojo crews installed sixteen 6-inch removable bollards at the back-of-house service drive and four 6-inch fixed bollards at the storefront. The project replaced a previous chain-and-padlock gate that had been struck three times in 18 months. Site preparation and slab repair around the sockets was handled as part of our asphalt maintenance services.
Cojo serves the Portland service area and the rest of Oregon for both fixed and removable bollard installations.