A tubular marker is a short, lightweight, retroreflective tube used for temporary lane shifts in active work zones. A delineator is a taller, permanent retroreflective post used to mark the edge of a lane or path. Tubular markers belong to MUTCD Section 6F.66; delineators belong to MUTCD Section 3F. Use a tubular marker when the install will be in place for 90 days or fewer; use a delineator when the install is permanent or seasonal.
This guide explains the spec gap, the cost gap, and how Cojo phases tubular markers and delineators on Oregon parking-lot projects.
What is a tubular marker?
A tubular marker is a 18 to 36-inch tall, 2 to 3-inch diameter retroreflective tube anchored by a weighted rubber base or a screw-down fastener. Most are bright orange for work-zone visibility, with one or two retroreflective sheeting bands.
Tubular markers are designed for short-term, high-flexibility deployment. They can be set down and picked up by hand, they tolerate being run over, and they cost roughly half what a permanent flex-post delineator costs.
What is a delineator post?
A delineator is a taller (36 to 48-inch) retroreflective post anchored permanently to pavement via epoxy, mechanical anchor, or in-ground concrete. Most parking-lot delineators are flexible polymer; some are rigid metal. Color is white on the right, yellow on the left, per MUTCD Section 3F.04.
For the full delineator family overview, see our what is a delineator post hub.
What is the core decision rule?
How long will the install be in place?
| Duration | Recommended Product |
|---|---|
| Up to 30 days | Tubular marker |
| 30 to 90 days | Tubular marker (with periodic re-set) |
| 90 days to 1 year | Channelizer or removable base-mount delineator |
| 1+ year (permanent) | Surface-mount or in-ground delineator |
How does MUTCD spec each product?
The MUTCD treats tubular markers and delineators as different device classes.
Tubular marker (MUTCD Section 6F.66)
- Minimum 18 in tall (28 in for higher-speed work zones)
- Orange sheeting in active work zones, white acceptable for short non-work-zone use
- One 4-in or two 2-in retroreflective bands
- Weighted base or pavement anchor
- Crashworthiness per NCHRP 350 / MASH if placed in roadway clear zone
Delineator (MUTCD Section 3F.04)
- 4 ft minimum mounting height on public ROW (parking-lot variance common)
- White on right, yellow on left, no orange in permanent applications
- ASTM D4956 Type III, IV, or IX sheeting
- Permanent anchor (surface-mount, base-mount, in-ground)
State-highway-adjacent work in Oregon coordinates through Oregon DOT. Parking-lot interior installs do not typically require a permit, but sidewalk-adjacent work in Portland, Salem, Eugene, and Bend each have separate jurisdictional rules.
When does a tubular marker beat a delineator?
Five high-frequency parking-lot scenarios:
- Overnight or weekend re-strip -- the lot needs lane channelization for 12 to 48 hours during cure; tubular markers go up at the start of the shift and come down before opening.
- Construction-phase taper -- when a 30-day re-pave or re-seal phases in the lot, tubular markers redirect traffic into the open half.
- Snow-event detour -- a parking lot that needs to redirect entry during a single-day snow plowing event.
- Pop-up event lanes -- school car-line setups for first-day-of-school week, holiday valet at a hotel, farmer's market overflow.
- Pothole or sinkhole isolation -- a 1-day or 1-week tubular marker barrier around an active repair zone before permanent fix.
In each case, the install will be removed before the 90-day mark. Tubular markers are the right call.
When does a delineator beat a tubular marker?
Anywhere the install is permanent or seasonal-recurring at the same location:
- Drive-thru queue edges
- School car-line dividers (year-round, not just first week)
- ADA path-of-travel edges
- Lot-perimeter edge marking
- Lane-line marking on large open lots
A tubular marker installed at a drive-thru edge for 12 months will end up faded, bent, kicked over, and visually out of place. Buy delineators.
How much does each option cost?
Industry Baseline Range
| Product | Installed Cost (per unit) |
|---|---|
| Tubular marker (28 in, weighted base) | $25 to $60 |
| Tubular marker (36 in, anchored) | $40 to $90 |
| Flex-post delineator (36 in surface-mount) | $40 to $85 |
| Flex-post delineator (48 in surface-mount) | $55 to $120 |
| Removable base-mount delineator | $80 to $200 |
Current Market Reality
Tubular markers and channelizers come from the same supply chain (work-zone safety devices) and have seen similar 8 to 12 percent price increases over the past 18 months. For a single-night re-strip job in Oregon, a 25-marker tubular setup typically lands at $1,400 to $2,800 turnkey including traffic-control labor. The same lot, set up with permanent delineators, would run $2,500 to $5,000 -- but the delineators are still in place a year later, while the tubular markers are not.
The amortization math always tips toward tubular markers for short-term work and delineators for permanent installs. The decision rule is duration, not unit cost.
Real install: phased re-strip
In April 2026, Cojo restriped a 28,000-square-foot Eugene office complex over a single weekend. We deployed 18 tubular markers to channelize traffic around the active stripe-cure zones during Saturday and Sunday. By Monday morning, the tubular markers were back on the truck and the lot was operational with fresh paint. No permanent delineators were needed because the lot's geometry did not change -- only the paint refresh.
For a parking lot where geometry IS changing -- new lane separation, new ADA path, new drive-thru queue -- the tubular markers come down at project close and a permanent delineator pattern goes in on the same day. We phase both products on the same crew rotation.
For Eugene-specific delineator pricing and ODOT references, see our delineator installation Eugene Oregon page.
How to decide
Three questions:
- How long will the install be in place? Under 90 days = tubular marker. Over 90 days = delineator.
- Active work zone? Yes = tubular marker (orange). No = delineator (white or yellow).
- Permanent geometry change? Yes = delineator. No = tubular marker.
If two answers point to tubular marker, buy tubular markers. If two answers point to delineator, buy delineators.
Cojo specs and installs both products across Oregon parking-lot work. Contact Cojo for a phasing quote, or browse our striping services for the painted layer.