Delineator color is not a styling choice. The federal MUTCD assigns specific colors to specific roadway functions, and the rule applies on private parking lots wherever the channelization is read by drivers as a roadway extension. This guide walks through the color assignments, the regulatory citation, and the ODOT supplements that apply on Oregon work.
The 60-word direct answer: Per MUTCD Section 3F.04, white delineators mark the right edge of a roadway in the direction of travel. Yellow delineators mark the left edge or separate opposing traffic. Blue delineators mark fire hydrants. Red marks no-entry and wrong-way locations. The same color rules apply to parking-lot channelization that mimics a public roadway.
What Are the MUTCD Delineator Color Rules?
MUTCD Section 3F.04 is the operative federal section. The color assignments:
| Color | Application | Direction |
|---|---|---|
| White | Right-side edge of roadway | Same direction of travel |
| Yellow | Left-side edge or separates opposing traffic | Opposite direction or two-way |
| Blue | Fire hydrant location | Either side, perpendicular to road |
| Red | No-entry, wrong-way, or end-of-road | Faces the wrong-way driver |
| Green | Side roads or driveway entrances on a public road | Optional, less common |
How Do MUTCD Color Rules Apply on Private Parking Lots?
Private parking lots are not regulated by MUTCD by force of law (MUTCD applies to public rights of way and federally aided roads). But MUTCD is the de facto standard for private channelization where:
- The lot is open to the public
- Channelization is read by drivers as a continuation of public roadway
- Liability counsel wants to point to a recognized national standard
- The local building code adopts MUTCD by reference (which Oregon does for many roadway-adjacent contexts)
In practice, Oregon parking-lot owners follow MUTCD color rules for any delineator that channelizes vehicles past a transition (drive-thru entry, parking-aisle one-way, exit-only lane). Decorative pedestrian channelization is the only category where color is genuinely flexible.
What Color Goes Where on a Parking Lot?
Translating MUTCD onto a typical commercial lot.
Drive-Thru Pickup Lanes
Yellow on the left of each lane (separates opposing flow if a counter lane exists, or marks the left edge if one-way). White on the right of each lane.
One-Way Parking Aisles
White on the right side of the travel direction. Yellow only if there is a counter-flow.
Exit-Only Lanes Facing the Wrong Way
Red delineators facing the entry side. White or yellow on the correct-direction side per the standard rules.
Fire Hydrants
Blue delineator at the hydrant, typically perpendicular to the road. Some jurisdictions install a blue raised pavement marker in the road plus a blue delineator on the hydrant approach.
School Drop-Off Lanes
White on the right edge of the queue lane. Yellow only if there is a counter-flow lane separating drop-off and exit.
For spacing rules, see delineator spacing MUTCD.
What Do ODOT Supplements Add?
ODOT's Sign and Delineator Manual follows MUTCD with state-specific clarifications. The two relevant additions for parking-lot work:
- ODOT Type IV sheeting baseline. ODOT publicly maintained delineators run Type IV per ASTM D4956. Private lots that connect to ODOT roadways often match this. For sheeting type detail, see delineator retroreflectivity MUTCD.
- ODOT-recommended placement at intersection approaches. Where a private lot exit feeds an ODOT roadway, ODOT prefers white delineators on the right approach for the last 50 to 100 feet of private channelization.
City code overlays (Portland Title 33, Salem Chapter 79, Eugene EPP) generally defer to MUTCD on color and add geometry rules.
What Are the Federal Color Standards (Pantone, RAL, Hex)?
For procurement, the regulatory color names map to formal color standards.
| MUTCD Color | Approximate Match |
|---|---|
| White | Pure white retroreflective sheeting |
| Yellow | Federal Standard 595B color 13591 (highway yellow) |
| Red | FED-STD 11136 (red) |
| Blue | FED-STD 15102 (blue) |
| Green | FED-STD 14066 (green) |
White and yellow are the production-volume colors and run at the baseline price. Blue, red, and green run a slight premium for volume and stocking.
Industry Baseline Range
| Color | Cost Premium per Post |
|---|---|
| White or yellow | $0 (baseline) |
| Blue | $3 to $10 |
| Red | $3 to $10 |
| Green | $5 to $15 |
Current Market Reality
Through 2026, blue delineator demand has risen with municipal hydrant-marking programs, narrowing the cost gap to white and yellow. Red and green remain low-volume colors and most distributors stock them only on order, which can add 1 to 2 weeks to a delivery window.
A Real Cojo Install Reference
In March 2026, Cojo channelized a 14,000-square-foot Springfield retail center with a new mobile-order pickup lane. The lane needed two-color delineation: white on the right of the queue (forward direction), yellow on the left between the queue and the through-lot drive aisle (counter-flow). We installed 12 federal yellow flex posts on the median and 14 white flex posts on the right edge, all on spring bases for plowing. The MUTCD color logic communicated the lane structure to drivers without any additional signage.
That site is a textbook MUTCD-compliant private channelization. For Springfield-specific guidance, see delineator installation in Springfield.
Common Color Mistakes Cojo Catches in Existing Installs
These show up regularly on inherited maintenance accounts:
- White delineators on the left of a one-way lane. The driver's expectation is yellow.
- Mixed colors within a single channelization run. Inconsistent reads slow down driver perception.
- Custom-color "branded" delineators that violate MUTCD. Branded color delineators are not retroreflective-rated and are generally non-compliant for any roadway-adjacent use.
- Faded yellow drifting toward white. UV-degraded yellow can read white at distance and contradict the channelization logic.
- Blue delineators installed somewhere other than a hydrant. Driver expectation for blue is hydrant only; using blue for branding or decoration confuses emergency responders.
Get a MUTCD-Compliant Color Spec
Cojo specifies and installs delineators per MUTCD color rules across Oregon. Our submittal packages cite Section 3F.04 and ASTM D4956 sheeting types, and we document each station's color and direction on as-built drawings. Contact Cojo for a site walk, or browse our striping services.