In nearly every commercial parking-lot scenario, concrete curb wins on a 15 to 20 year horizon. Its 20 to 30 year service life beats asphalt curb's 8 to 12 by enough margin to swallow the higher upfront cost. Asphalt curb only wins when the budget is locked under $10 per linear foot, the lot is on a short repaving cycle anyway, or the curb run is internal to a parking field with no pedestrian protection role. The American Concrete Pavement Association (ACPA Concrete Information Series) puts the structural difference plainly: concrete curb is a reinforced 4,000 PSI structural element; asphalt curb is a hot-mix bituminous extrusion that bonds to the lot surface but isn't structural on its own.
This article gives you the verdict-first comparison, the per-foot cost breakdown, the service-life math, and the four scenarios where each curb type is the right call.
Quick Verdict: Concrete Curb vs Asphalt Curb
| Decision Driver | Winner | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Service life | Concrete | 20 to 30 years vs 8 to 12 years |
| Upfront cost | Asphalt | $5 to $12 per linear foot vs $10 to $20 |
| 15-year lifecycle cost | Concrete | One install vs two installs of asphalt |
| Pedestrian protection | Concrete | Vertical face holds against passenger vehicles |
| Repaving compatibility | Asphalt | Bonds to the new asphalt mat in the same operation |
| Freeze-thaw resistance | Concrete | Air-entrained concrete handles 30+ cycles per year |
| Cold-weather installation | Asphalt | Pours at 50 degrees F vs concrete needing 50 degrees F minimum cure temp |
| Custom radius work | Concrete | Hand-forms to any radius vs asphalt extruder fixed profile |
Current Market Reality
Curb pricing in Oregon climbed roughly 18 percent between 2023 and 2026 driven by Portland cement spot pricing, diesel cost feeding into hot-mix delivery, and CCB-licensed labor rates that absorbed two consecutive minimum-wage increases. The $10 to $20 per linear foot range for concrete curb reflects published industry baselines; sites with restricted access, demolition of failing curb, or mid-pour rebar inspections will quote higher.
How Concrete Curb Is Built
A commercial concrete curb is a 6-inch face barrier or 4-inch face mountable profile poured at 3,000 to 4,000 PSI per ACI 318 Building Code Requirements for Structural Concrete. The curb either runs through a slipform machine producing 50 to 100 linear feet per hour, or it is hand-formed against staked wood forms at 20 to 30 linear feet per hour. Continuous #4 rebar runs the length of the pour. Expansion joints get cut every 10 to 15 linear feet per the Oregon Standard Specification 00759, and the curb cures 7 days before traffic loading.
For a complete walk-through of the install method, see our concrete curb buyer's guide.
How Asphalt Curb Is Built
Asphalt curb (sometimes called "extruded asphalt curb" or "asphalt berm") is produced by a curb-extruder machine such as the Leeboy 8810 or LayMor 100 that rides on the freshly paved asphalt surface. A small auger feeds hot-mix asphalt through a forming shoe, leaving a continuous 4 to 6 inch high curb bonded to the parking-lot mat. The Asphalt Institute (Asphalt Pavement Design Guide) notes that asphalt curb is a non-structural extension of the asphalt pavement, not a load-bearing element. There is no rebar. Production runs 200 to 400 linear feet per hour because the machine simply rolls along the new pavement.
The trade-off: the bond to the underlying asphalt is what holds the curb in place. If the asphalt mat fails, the curb fails with it.
Cost Comparison: Per Linear Foot
Industry Baseline Range
| Curb Type | Material + Labor (per LF) | Lifecycle Cost over 20 Years |
|---|---|---|
| Concrete, 6-inch barrier, hand-formed | $14 to $20 | $14 to $20 (single install) |
| Concrete, 6-inch barrier, slipformed | $10 to $14 | $10 to $14 (single install) |
| Asphalt, 4-inch extruded | $5 to $8 | $10 to $16 (two installs) |
| Asphalt, 6-inch extruded | $7 to $12 | $14 to $24 (two installs) |
The breakeven point is roughly year 8 to 10. After that, concrete curb is the cheaper option in cumulative spending. For full per-foot cost analysis, see our parking lot curbing cost breakdown and our deep extruded curb cost vs poured analysis.
When Should You Choose Concrete Curb?
Choose concrete curb when any of these conditions apply:
- Pedestrians walk adjacent to the curb. A 6-inch concrete face stops a passenger vehicle at parking-aisle speeds. An asphalt curb compresses and shears under impact.
- The site holds the property for 15+ years. Lifecycle math favors concrete.
- The lot has freeze-thaw exposure above 25 cycles per year. Most of Oregon east of the Cascades and the I-5 corridor north of Salem hits this. Air-entrained concrete handles freeze-thaw far better than bituminous extrusion.
- ADA accessible routes connect to the curb. Concrete is the only curb material that meets ADA Standards Section 405 for ramp construction.
- Curb radii are tight. The asphalt extruder fixed profile cannot turn under a 25-foot inside radius without ripping.
On a 22,000 square foot Hillsboro tech-park parking lot we restriped and re-curbed in February 2026, the property manager initially asked for asphalt curb to save $4 per linear foot. After we walked the perimeter and counted 14 stormwater inlets and 6 ADA ramp connections, we wrote the proposal for 6-inch concrete barrier curb. The lifecycle math was a no-brainer at year 12 when the next mill-and-overlay would otherwise have required a complete curb rebuild.
When Does Asphalt Curb Win?
Asphalt curb is the right answer in narrow situations:
- Internal drive-aisle separators in low-traffic lots. No pedestrians, no impact loading, no ADA route.
- Temporary or short-term lots scheduled to be redesigned in under 8 years.
- Tight repaving budgets where the asphalt extruder can run in the same shift as the paver. This is the operational efficiency case: one mobilization, two products.
- Mountainous or remote sites where concrete delivery exceeds 60 minutes from batch plant. Concrete trucks have limited reach; asphalt hot-mix has a longer practical haul radius.
If your project meets all of these conditions, asphalt curb saves money. Otherwise, concrete is the right call.
Get the Right Curb for Your Site
Concrete vs asphalt is a 20-year financial decision, not a per-foot one. We've installed both materials on hundreds of Oregon commercial parking lots, and we walk every site before quoting because the right answer depends on what the curb actually has to do at that location.
Get a custom quote for your parking lot, or learn more about our integrated asphalt paving services when curb work is part of a larger lot rebuild. For locale-specific pricing benchmarks see our concrete curb installation Eugene page.