A flexible bollard is a polyurethane or rubber post that bends and rebounds when struck and is designed for traffic channelization, not impact protection. A fixed bollard is a rigid steel or concrete post that stops a vehicle and absorbs the strike. Choose flexible for lane delineation, drive-thru pylons, and gore-area markers where occasional bumper contact is expected. Choose fixed for storefronts, fire lanes, and equipment protection where the post must hold its position.
What Is the Core Difference Between Flexible and Fixed Bollards?
The two products solve different problems, and that fact controls every other selection criterion. A flexible bollard is a soft target by design. The Federal Highway Administration's Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD) classifies it as a "delineator" -- a visual cue, not a barrier. When struck by a vehicle at low speed it deflects up to 90 degrees from vertical and returns to upright. A fixed bollard is a hard target. MUTCD and the National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) Report 350 classify rigid steel and concrete bollards as "barriers" or "crash-rated devices" depending on construction.
The mistake we see most often in Cojo retrofit walkthroughs: a property manager installs flexible posts at a storefront expecting crash protection, then a parked car rolls into the facade because the posts deflected. The flexible post did exactly what it was designed to do. The wrong product was specified.
When Should You Choose a Flexible Bollard?
Flexible bollards earn their place in five scenarios:
- Traffic channelization in low-speed parking lots. Drive aisles, gore points, lane separators in 10-mph parking environments where occasional contact is expected.
- Drive-thru lane delineation. Quick-service restaurant order lanes where staff and delivery drivers regularly clip the post but the post must remain upright. See our bollards for drive-thru lanes guide.
- Construction-zone perimeter. Temporary or semi-permanent traffic control where the post will be relocated or removed within a year or two.
- Bike-lane separation. Urban Class IV separated bike lanes where a flexible delineator marks the boundary without injuring a cyclist who clips it.
- Sign-mount poles in pedestrian-adjacent areas. Stop signs and yield signs where post-impact safety matters and crash-test data favors a yielding support.
Volumes are tractable here -- "flexible bollard" pulls 90 monthly searches in U.S. data, and most of those searchers are property managers or municipal traffic engineers comparing against rigid alternatives.
When Should You Choose a Fixed Bollard?
Fixed bollards belong wherever the post must hold position against vehicle force. The core list:
- Storefront facades. The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation's Uniform Crime Reporting program tracks vehicle-into-storefront incidents at roughly 60 events per day nationally. Flexible bollards do not stop a vehicle; rigid concrete-filled steel pipe does.
- Fire lanes. The International Fire Code (IFC) Section 503 requires fire-apparatus access to remain unobstructed. Removable rigid bollards (lockable, lift-out) are the standard solution because they resist casual blocking but allow fire-truck entry. Flexible posts do not deter improper parking with the same authority.
- ADA accessible-route protection. Rigid bollards block vehicles from encroaching on accessible paths.
- Equipment protection. Air-conditioning condensers, gas meters, electrical transformers, EV chargers. The U.S. Department of Energy's Alternative Fuels Data Center recommends rigid concrete-filled steel pipe at every level-2 and level-3 charging station.
- Perimeter security. Crash-rated K4, K8, or K12 fixed bollards under ASTM F2656 are the only product class that stops a vehicle attack.
How Do Flexible and Fixed Bollards Compare on Cost?
Industry Baseline Range
| Spec | Flexible Bollard | Fixed Bollard |
|---|---|---|
| Material per unit | $40 to $200 | $200 to $2,500+ |
| Installation per unit | $80 to $200 | $400 to $1,800 |
| Service life before replacement | 3 to 7 years | 20 to 40 years |
| Replacement frequency at typical drive-thru | every 18 to 36 months | rarely after install |
| Cost per year over 20 years | $40 to $90 | $30 to $200 |
Current Market Reality
Polyurethane raw-material prices are tied to crude oil and have moved 25 percent in either direction over the past three years. Steel pipe pricing tracks domestic mill capacity. Both categories have absorbed Pacific Northwest freight increases and labor rate inflation. The cost-per-year math still favors fixed bollards for any site where the strike rate is below one event per post per year.
What Is the Replacement Rate for Each Type?
This is the line item most property managers underestimate. A flexible bollard at a quick-service restaurant drive-thru sees an average of 8 to 15 strikes per year (Cojo McDonald's-style retrofit data, 2024-2026). The post deflects and rebounds, but UV exposure and repeated cold-weather flexing eventually fatigue the polyurethane. Replacement at 18 to 36 months is normal. A fixed bollard at the same site sees the same strike count without movement -- the bumper, not the post, takes the damage. Replacement is rare.
How Do You Know Which Type Your Site Needs?
Use this two-question filter. Question one: if a vehicle strikes this post at parking-lot speed (5 to 15 mph), is the cost of the building or equipment behind the post higher than the cost of the post itself? If yes, fixed. Question two: is the post's primary job visual delineation, or is it physical interception? Visual = flexible. Physical = fixed.
A common mixed-use solution is to specify both products on the same lot. Flexible posts mark the drive aisles and gore points; fixed posts protect the storefront, fire lane, and equipment cluster. Cojo's recommended layout for a 50-stall retail center typically uses 12 to 18 flexible posts and 6 to 10 fixed posts.
Where Has Cojo Specified Each Product?
In April 2026, Cojo replaced eight flexible drive-thru bollards at a Beaverton coffee chain location -- the previous run had been in service 30 months and showed UV cracking at the base. Same month, Cojo installed nine fixed concrete-filled 6-inch steel pipe bollards at a Salem retail anchor's storefront, embedded 36 inches into a new concrete footing. Both projects used the same lead crew. The two product categories sit on the same lot but solve unrelated problems.
For a complete walk through every bollard category see our bollards buyer's guide, or jump to the best parking lot bollards roundup for specific SKU recommendations.
Get a Custom Quote
The flexible-vs-fixed decision rarely cuts cleanly across an entire site. Most parking lots need both. Cojo's walkthroughs identify which posts on your lot need to deflect and which need to hold. Get a custom quote.