Curb stops and wheel stops are two distinct parking-lot products that get conflated in casual conversation. They serve different purposes and they're sold in different units. Curb stops are continuous linear concrete curbs (typically 6-inch barrier curb) that define the pavement edge along an entire perimeter or a long internal aisle, sold by the linear foot. Wheel stops are discrete 6 to 7-foot precast concrete or rubber blocks installed at the head of individual parking stalls to physically stop a vehicle's wheels at the stall depth, sold by the unit.
This article disambiguates the two, explains where each one fits, and points you to the right cluster for whichever your project needs.
Quick Verdict: Curb Stops vs Wheel Stops
| Decision Driver | Curb Stops (linear curb) | Wheel Stops (parking blocks) |
|---|---|---|
| Form | Continuous linear curb | Individual 6 to 7-foot units |
| Sold by | Linear foot | Unit |
| Typical price | $10 to $20 per LF installed | $40 to $120 per unit installed |
| Function | Pavement edge, perimeter, drainage | Stop vehicle at parking stall head |
| Material | Cast-in-place concrete (slipform or hand-formed) | Precast concrete or recycled rubber |
| Service life | 20 to 30 years | 8 to 20 years |
| Installation | Slipform machine or hand-form | Drilled and bolted to pavement |
| Code reference | ODOT 00759, ACI 318 | ASTM C857, local parking ordinances |
Current Market Reality
Both products are part of a complete parking-lot perimeter design but they answer different questions. A typical commercial parking lot has continuous curb stops along the perimeter (defining the pavement edge) and individual wheel stops at the head of each angled or perpendicular parking stall (stopping vehicles before they overshoot into the storefront or landscape island).
What Are Curb Stops?
Curb stops in this context are the continuous linear concrete curbs that define the parking-lot pavement edge. The term "curb stop" is regional — in Oregon and the Pacific Northwest the term usually means a linear curb (sometimes shortened to "curb"), while in some southern and midwestern states "curb stop" can refer to individual precast blocks.
For our purposes, curb stops are:
- A continuous concrete element poured along the parking-lot perimeter, drive aisle edge, or landscape island border
- Typically 6-inch face barrier curb per Oregon Standard Specification 00759
- 4,000 PSI air-entrained concrete with continuous #4 rebar per ACI 318 Building Code Requirements for Structural Concrete
- Installed via slipform machine or hand-formed against staked formwork
- Sold and quoted by the linear foot, typically $10 to $20 installed
For complete linear-curb spec see our concrete curb buyer's guide.
What Are Wheel Stops?
Wheel stops (also called "parking blocks" or "parking bumpers") are individual precast concrete or rubber blocks installed at the head of each parking stall to physically stop the vehicle's tires at the stall depth. The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA Parking Lot Design Guidelines) and the ASTM C857 Standard Practice for Minimum Structural Design Loading for Underground Precast Concrete Utility Structures (which covers similar precast products) inform the structural spec.
Wheel stops are:
- Discrete 6 to 7-foot units, typically 4 to 6 inches tall
- Precast concrete or recycled rubber composite
- Installed by drilling rebar dowels into the pavement and bolting/grouting the units in place
- Sold and quoted by the unit, typically $40 to $120 installed (concrete) or $50 to $150 (rubber composite)
- Used to define stall depth without continuous curbing across the parking field
Wheel stops are a different product cluster from linear curb. For complete wheel-stop spec, see our wheel stops product guide.
When Should You Use Curb Stops (Linear Curb)?
Choose linear curb when:
- The pavement edge needs continuous definition. Perimeter, drive aisle separators, landscape island borders.
- Drainage management is part of the curb's role. Continuous curb channels stormwater to inlets; individual wheel stops do not affect drainage.
- Pedestrian protection is required along a frontage. Continuous 6-inch face curb is the only product that stops vehicles along an entire pedestrian zone.
- The site is being newly built or fully repaved. Curb is poured during the same site-work phase as the asphalt mat.
When Should You Use Wheel Stops?
Choose wheel stops when:
- You need to stop vehicles at individual parking stall heads. Wheel stops prevent overshoot into adjacent landscape, sidewalks, or building walls.
- The parking stall depth has to be enforced. Without wheel stops, drivers tend to pull farther forward than the striping intends, eating into adjacent pedestrian zones.
- The site is a retrofit on existing curbed perimeter. Wheel stops can be added to existing parking stalls without disturbing the perimeter curb.
- ADA accessible parking spaces need stall-head delineation. Wheel stops are commonly specified to enforce the 18-foot stall depth on accessible spaces (though they cannot encroach on the access aisle).
On a 22,000 square foot Hillsboro retail center we curbed and striped in February 2026, the project included 480 LF of continuous 6-inch barrier curb along the perimeter (the curb-stop side) plus 96 individual precast concrete wheel stops at the head of each angled parking stall (the wheel-stop side). Both products on the same site, neither one substituting for the other.
Common Specification Confusion
Three points where the two products are most often confused:
"Curb stops" used to mean wheel stops: In some regional building codes and older specifications, "curb stop" is the term for what most contractors today call a wheel stop or parking block. A 1990s-era specification calling for "concrete curb stops" at each parking stall almost certainly means individual 6-foot blocks, not continuous linear curb.
Wheel stops used as a substitute for curb: Some property owners try to skip the perimeter curb cost by installing wheel stops at the edge of every drive aisle. This usually fails compliance: drainage doesn't work, pedestrian protection is gone, and the parking lot perimeter has no defined edge for snow removal or sweeping operations.
ADA stall depth measurement: ADA requires accessible parking spaces to be 18 feet deep with the wheel stop (if present) positioned to leave the access aisle clear. The wheel stop is part of the accessible-parking design, but the surrounding linear curb at the head of the access aisle is part of the perimeter design — different products, different scope items.
For best-practice perimeter design see best curb for commercial parking lot. When curb work is part of a paving project, our asphalt paving services crew sequences both elements.
Get the Right Product for Your Site
Most commercial parking lots need both: continuous curb for the perimeter, individual wheel stops at parking stall heads. They're complementary, not substitutable. We install both on every commercial site we curb and stripe.
Get a custom quote and we'll itemize linear-foot curb and per-unit wheel stops separately so you can budget each one accurately.