Rolled curb is the right choice for residential subdivisions, HOA shared driveways, and any location where homeowners need to drive over the curb to access individual properties without a dedicated curb cut at every drive. Barrier curb is the right choice for commercial parking lots, storefront perimeters, and any location where the curb has to physically stop vehicles. Rolled curb (sometimes called "mountable curb" in some regional codes, though the terms are not perfectly synonymous) typically uses a 4 to 5 inch face with a steeply rounded top profile. Barrier curb uses a 6 to 8 inch face with a flat top and near-vertical front per Oregon Standard Specification 00759 and the AASHTO Green Book A Policy on Geometric Design of Highways and Streets Figure 4-2.
This article disambiguates rolled curb from related profiles, gives you the side-by-side comparison, and identifies the four scenarios where each is the right call.
Quick Verdict: Rolled vs Barrier Curb
| Decision Driver | Rolled Curb | Barrier Curb |
|---|---|---|
| Face height | 4 to 5 inches | 6 to 8 inches |
| Top profile | Rounded (full radius) | Flat with slight batter |
| Vehicle override | Designed for daily residential use | Designed to prevent |
| Common application | Residential subdivisions, HOA drives | Commercial parking, storefronts |
| Pedestrian protection | Limited | Primary purpose |
| Snow plow compatibility | High (rounded profile) | Moderate (vertical face vulnerable) |
| Cost per LF (installed) | $9 to $14 | $10 to $20 |
| Service life | 20 to 30 years | 20 to 30 years |
Current Market Reality
Rolled curb is uncommon on commercial parking lots in Oregon because most jurisdictions require defined curb cuts at every driveway entry rather than allowing continuous rolled curb that vehicles can cross anywhere. Residential subdivisions, particularly in unincorporated county developments, are where most rolled-curb work happens.
What Is Rolled Curb?
Rolled curb is a 4 to 5 inch face concrete curb with a fully rounded top profile, typically a 3 to 4 inch radius arc that transitions smoothly from the curb face to the back-of-curb landscape grade. The geometry intentionally lacks a vertical face — the rounded profile lets a passenger vehicle's tire sidewall roll over the curb at speeds under 15 mph without damage.
Rolled curb is most common in residential subdivisions where each lot has its own driveway connecting to a shared road. Rather than constructing a separate curb cut at every driveway (the alternative used with barrier curb), the rolled profile lets homeowners cross the curb anywhere along their property frontage. The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA Roadside Design Guide) classifies rolled curb as a non-redirective element similar to mountable curb but with a more aggressively rounded profile.
The term "rolled curb" is sometimes used interchangeably with "mountable curb." The technical distinction: mountable curb has a flat sloped top (1:3 typical), while rolled curb has a continuously curved top. In commercial work the distinction matters; in residential work the terms often blur. For commercial mountable-curb specifics see our mountable curb vs barrier curb breakdown.
What Is Barrier Curb?
Barrier curb is a 6 to 8 inch face concrete curb with a flat top, typically 6 inches wide, and a near-vertical front face (1:6 maximum batter per AASHTO). The geometry stops a passenger vehicle at parking-aisle speeds and provides clear pedestrian protection along storefronts, accessible routes, and landscape islands. The 8-inch heavy-duty version handles AASHTO H-20 truck loading at dock aprons and warehouse perimeters.
For full barrier-curb spec see our concrete curb buyer's guide.
When Should You Choose Rolled Curb?
Choose rolled curb when:
- The site is residential subdivision work. Most county-permitted residential streets in Oregon allow rolled curb as the standard residential profile.
- Multiple driveways need to connect to a shared road. Rolled curb eliminates the need for individual curb cuts at every driveway entry.
- HOA shared driveways or private streets. Maintenance access (snowplow, garbage, mail) crosses the curb at varied points; the rolled profile accommodates this.
- Snow plowing is on a shared maintenance contract. Rolled curb's rounded profile is far more forgiving to plow blade contact than a vertical face.
When Should You Choose Barrier Curb?
Choose barrier curb when:
- The site is a commercial parking lot. Barrier curb is the default commercial spec.
- Pedestrians walk adjacent to the curb. The 6-inch face stops vehicles at parking-aisle speeds.
- Defined curb cuts are required by code. Most municipal commercial codes specify curb cuts at driveways, not continuous rolled curb.
- Truck or trailer impact is expected. 8-inch heavy-duty barrier curb handles AASHTO H-20 loading.
On a 28,000 square foot Tigard medical-office site we curbed in late 2025, the perimeter ran 620 LF of 6-inch barrier curb with three defined commercial curb cuts at the entry/exit drives. The owner had asked about rolled curb after seeing it on a nearby residential subdivision. We walked through the commercial code (Tigard Community Development Code Chapter 18.765 requires defined commercial driveways with curb cuts, not rolled curb) and the pedestrian-protection requirement at the entry plaza. Barrier curb was the only compliant option.
Cost Comparison
Industry Baseline Range
| Profile | Material | Labor | Installed Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rolled curb (4-inch face) | $4 to $6 per LF | $5 to $8 per LF | $9 to $14 |
| Barrier curb (6-inch face) | $4 to $7 per LF | $6 to $13 per LF | $10 to $20 |
| Heavy-duty barrier curb (8-inch face) | $5 to $9 per LF | $7 to $14 per LF | $12 to $23 |
For drive-thru and commercial-specific guidance see best curb for drive-thru lane. When curb is part of a paving rebuild, our asphalt paving services handle both pours.
Get the Right Profile for Your Project
Rolled curb has a clear residential niche. Barrier curb is the commercial default. The right profile depends on whether the curb is permitting through a residential development code, a commercial site code, or an HOA private-road agreement. We've installed both on Oregon sites, and we'll quote whichever profile your code review supports.
Get a custom quote and we'll review your code requirements and site plan to spec the right curb.