Gutter curb is the right call when site stormwater management needs a defined drainage channel that conveys sheet flow to inlets without ponding on the parking surface. Flush curb (also called ribbon curb) wins when the site drains to a swale, bioretention basin, or detention pond and a vertical barrier would block the sheet flow. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA Stormwater Best Management Practices, Construction Stormwater General Permit) treats both profiles as conveyance elements, but they handle different jobs in the drainage system.
This article explains the geometric and hydraulic differences, the cost comparison, and the four scenarios where each curb type is the right call for your parking lot.
Quick Verdict: Gutter Curb vs Flush Curb
| Decision Driver | Gutter Curb | Flush Curb |
|---|---|---|
| Cross-section width | 24 to 30 inches (curb + gutter pan) | 12 to 18 inches |
| Curb face height | 6 inches | 0 to 2 inches |
| Drainage role | Channels flow along curb to inlets | Allows sheet flow off pavement edge |
| Cost per LF (installed) | $18 to $28 | $8 to $14 |
| Pedestrian protection | Yes (vertical face) | None (flush) |
| Vehicle override | Stops at curb face | No barrier |
| Best paired with | Inlet structures every 100 to 200 LF | Swale, bioretention basin, pond perimeter |
| Slipform-compatible | Yes (single-pass machine) | Yes |
Current Market Reality
Gutter curb pricing reflects the additional 24-inch gutter pan poured monolithically with the 6-inch face curb. The wider cross-section uses roughly 2.5 times the concrete of a standard 6-inch barrier curb, which is why per-LF pricing nearly doubles.
What Is Gutter Curb?
Gutter curb (also called "curb and gutter" or "integral curb and gutter") is a single monolithic pour combining a 6-inch face barrier curb with a 24 to 30-inch wide gutter pan sloped at 1/4 inch per foot toward the curb face. The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA Hydraulic Design Series HDS-3 Design Charts for Open-Channel Flow) calculates gutter capacity based on slope, cross-slope, and Manning's roughness coefficient.
The gutter pan creates a defined channel for stormwater conveyance. Sheet flow off the parking lot surface hits the pan, the pan slopes the water toward the curb face, and the flow runs along the gutter line to the next inlet. Inlets are typically spaced every 100 to 200 LF depending on contributing drainage area and design storm intensity.
The Oregon Standard Specification 00759 (ODOT Standard Specifications) carries curb and gutter as a standard pay item with a 4,000 PSI mix and a single-pass slipform method.
What Is Flush Curb?
Flush curb (often called "ribbon curb" or "header curb") is a 12 to 18-inch wide concrete band poured at or near pavement grade. The face height is 0 to 2 inches — barely above the asphalt mat. The curb defines the pavement edge structurally without creating a vertical barrier.
The Environmental Protection Agency promotes flush curb as a low-impact development (LID) feature because it allows sheet flow to leave the pavement at any point along its length, distributing runoff to vegetated swales, bioretention basins, or pervious shoulders rather than concentrating it at inlets. The EPA Green Infrastructure Toolkit treats flush curb as a baseline element of stormwater-friendly site design.
For installation specifics see ribbon curb installation drainage.
When Should You Choose Gutter Curb?
Choose gutter curb when:
- The site drains to a piped stormwater system. Inlets capture concentrated flow; gutter pans deliver the flow to the inlets.
- The lot has long perimeter runs without natural relief points. A 1,200 LF perimeter with no swale needs gutter curb to move the water.
- Pedestrian protection is required. The 6-inch face stops vehicles at parking-aisle speeds; flush curb does not.
- The site is in a dense urban setting. Portland Bureau of Environmental Services and Eugene Public Works typically require curb-and-gutter on commercial sites within designated stormwater districts.
On a 18,000 square foot Salem retail center we curbed in March 2026, the perimeter ran 540 LF of curb and gutter feeding into 4 catch basins at the corners. The 1/4 inch per foot gutter slope plus the 0.5 percent longitudinal slope to the inlets carried the 25-year design storm without ponding. The standard 6-inch barrier curb with no gutter pan would have created standing water at the inlets after every storm.
When Should You Choose Flush Curb?
Choose flush curb when:
- The site drains to a vegetated swale or bioretention basin. Flush curb allows sheet flow to spread evenly into the vegetation rather than concentrating at inlets.
- You're targeting LID or green-stormwater credit. Flush curb is part of every LID stormwater plan and earns LEED stormwater credits.
- The pavement edge needs to drain in multiple directions. A flush curb at the edge of a permeable-pavement test section, for example, lets water drain to whichever side has lower elevation.
- No pedestrian protection is required. Flush curb is purely a pavement-edge structural element.
Cost Comparison: Per Linear Foot
Industry Baseline Range
| Profile | Material | Labor | Installed Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gutter curb (curb and gutter monolithic) | $9 to $14 per LF | $9 to $14 per LF | $18 to $28 |
| Standard 6-inch barrier curb | $4 to $7 per LF | $6 to $13 per LF | $10 to $20 |
| Flush (ribbon) curb | $3 to $5 per LF | $5 to $9 per LF | $8 to $14 |
For full pricing context see our concrete curb buyer's guide. Curb and gutter is often poured during the same mobilization as parking-lot pavement — see asphalt paving services for sequenced site work.
Get the Right Drainage Curb for Your Site
Gutter-vs-flush is a stormwater design question, not a pure curb question. The site's drainage plan, the local stormwater code, and any LID credits available on the project all factor in. Our crews have poured both profiles on hundreds of Oregon commercial sites, and we coordinate with civil engineers on every drainage-sensitive job.
Get a custom quote and we'll review your civil drawings to spec the right profile for each section of your perimeter.