Fire lane sign installation in Portland sits at the intersection of three code regimes: NFPA 1 fire code, the International Fire Code adopted by the City of Portland, and Oregon Revised Statute 98.812 for the tow-away language that gives the sign legal teeth on private property. A fire lane sign that looks correct but lacks the ORS 98.812 wording is unenforceable. A sign with the correct wording but mounted in the wrong place under IFC 503 fails Portland Fire & Rescue review.
Below is what we deliver on a Portland fire-lane install, the code stack we work against, and what a defensible fire-lane sign system looks like once the crew rolls out.
Quick Answer
Cojo installs fire lane signs across Portland to NFPA 1 §18.2.3.5.1 and IFC 503 visibility and width specifications with ORS 98.812 tow-away language for private-property enforcement. Standard install is a red-on-white 12-inch by 18-inch reflective aluminum sign on a 2-inch galvanized round post, with sign density set to maintain visibility from any parked position along the fire lane. Pricing runs $185 to $375 per fire lane sign installed.
What Codes Govern Fire Lane Sign Installation in Portland?
Portland fire lane sign installation is governed by four code references that all apply on the same install:
- NFPA 1 §18.2.3.5.1 sets the marking and signage requirement for fire apparatus access roads, including width, visibility, and sign placement intervals. Reference at nfpa.org.
- International Fire Code §503.3 requires fire apparatus access roads to be marked and identified by approved signs or other approved means, with placement maintained throughout the access road. Reference at codes.iccsafe.org.
- Oregon Revised Statute 98.812 sets the verbatim tow-away language any private-property sign must carry to authorize a tow under Oregon law. Available at oregonlegislature.gov.
- Portland Title 32 sign code applies where the fire lane sign sits within 10 feet of public right-of-way, which is common at fire lane entrances along city-frontage streets.
Portland Fire & Rescue is the authority having jurisdiction on the NFPA / IFC review. The Bureau of Development Services handles Title 17 permit submissions where applicable.
What Does Cojo Specify on a Portland Fire Lane Sign Install?
Our Portland default specification:
- Sign blank: 0.080-inch aluminum, alodine-treated, 12 inches by 18 inches minimum per IFC 503.3 visibility guidance. Larger 18 inches by 24 inches on signs at the fire lane entrance.
- Sheeting: ASTM D4956 Type III high-intensity prismatic minimum, red legend on white field per NFPA 1 §18.2.3.5.2 color reference.
- Legend: "FIRE LANE NO PARKING" plus the ORS 98.812 tow-away authorization wording verbatim. Custom legends are reviewed against ORS 98.812 before printing.
- Mounting height: 60 inches minimum to bottom of sign for ADA-adjacent fire lanes; 84 inches minimum for vehicle-traffic-only fire lanes per Portland Fire & Rescue practice.
- Post: 2-inch galvanized round post into a 12-inch concrete footing, set 24 inches deep to clear the PNW frost line.
- Sign density: A sign visible from any vehicle position along the fire lane. On long fire lanes the typical interval is one sign every 60 to 80 linear feet plus an entrance sign and a terminus sign.
What Cojo Delivered on a Southwest Portland Apartment Complex, March 2026
A property manager overseeing a 240-unit apartment complex in Southwest Portland called us in March 2026 after Portland Fire & Rescue cited the property for inadequate fire lane signage following a routine inspection. The site had:
- 1,200 linear feet of fire apparatus access road around the perimeter
- 4 existing fire lane signs, all faded ASTM Type II, none with ORS 98.812 tow language
- 1 fire lane entrance with no entrance sign and no curb-paint correlation
Our scope across two Saturdays:
- 1 fire lane entrance sign 18 inches by 24 inches with ORS 98.812 tow legend
- 14 in-line fire lane signs on 80-foot intervals around the perimeter
- 1 terminus sign at the fire lane discharge point
- All 16 signs ASTM D4956 Type III sheeting, red on white per NFPA 1 §18.2.3.5.2
- 16 new 2-inch galvanized round posts, 12-inch concrete footings, 24-inch frost depth
- Portland Fire & Rescue inspection scheduled and passed two weeks after install
Total install ran in the $3,800 to $5,400 range, consistent with the Industry Baseline Range for a 1,200-foot fire lane sign system in Portland.
Industry Baseline Range
| Component | Cost |
|---|---|
| In-line fire lane sign on new post | $185 to $325 |
| Fire lane entrance sign (18 inches by 24 inches) | $245 to $425 |
| Existing-post fire lane refresh | $135 to $245 |
| Portland Fire & Rescue inspection coordination | $250 to $500 (per project) |
| Full 1,000 to 1,500 foot fire lane sign system | $3,200 to $6,400 |
Current Market Reality
ASTM D4956 Type III red sheeting carries 3 to 5 week lead times in the Pacific Northwest. Aluminum sign blanks rose 11 percent in 2025, and Portland Fire & Rescue inspection scheduling can run 2 to 3 weeks behind on first-quarter post-rainy-season demand. Plan a 4 to 6 week lead time on any Portland fire lane sign install with Fire & Rescue review.
Why Does the ORS 98.812 Wording Matter on Every Portland Fire Lane Sign?
A fire lane sign in Portland that says "FIRE LANE NO PARKING" without the ORS 98.812 tow-away authorization wording does two things:
- Satisfies the IFC 503 visibility requirement for fire apparatus access.
- Fails to authorize a tow under Oregon law if a vehicle parks in the lane.
ORS 98.812 sets specific wording requirements for private-property tow signage. A sign without that wording can be cited for fire-code violation but the property manager cannot direct a tow contractor to remove the offending vehicle. Every Portland fire lane sign Cojo installs carries the ORS 98.812 wording verbatim on the same blank as the fire lane legend, eliminating the gap between code compliance and enforcement authority.
What Should a Portland Property Manager Verify Before Closing a Fire Lane Sign Install?
A defensible Portland fire lane sign install gives the manager:
- NFPA 1 §18.2.3.5.1 visibility and width verification with photo log.
- IFC 503.3 sign placement throughout the fire apparatus access road.
- ORS 98.812 tow-away language verbatim on every sign authorizing a tow.
- Portland Fire & Rescue inspection sign-off on file.
- ASTM D4956 sheeting cert sheet matching installed grade.
- GPS log of every installed sign with as-built date.
Without all six, the install is not finished from a code-defensibility standpoint regardless of what is bolted to the posts.
Where Does This Sit in the Broader Cojo Sign Service in Portland?
Fire lane sign work runs alongside the rest of our Portland sign service. Review the spec in our fire-lane sign spec NFPA reference, compare options in the best fire lane signs roundup and the fire lane signs for property bundle, see how fire lane striping fits in fire lane striping requirements Oregon, and check our broader parking sign buyer's guide. Full Portland sign service at Portland parking sign installation.
FAQ
Q: What does NFPA 1 require for fire lane sign placement in Portland?
A: NFPA 1 §18.2.3.5.1 requires fire apparatus access roads to be marked and identified by approved signs or other approved means, with the marking maintained at all times. Portland Fire & Rescue interprets this as a sign visible from any parked vehicle along the fire lane, typically meaning sign intervals of 60 to 80 linear feet on long fire lanes plus entrance and terminus signs.
Q: Does Portland Title 17 apply to every fire lane sign?
A: Only where the fire lane sign sits within 10 feet of public right-of-way, which is common at fire lane entrances along city streets. Signs deeper in the private lot generally do not trigger Title 32 review. We confirm permit applicability per-sign on every Portland scoping call.
Q: Why must Portland fire lane signs include ORS 98.812 tow language?
A: Without the ORS 98.812 wording, the property manager cannot direct a tow contractor to remove a vehicle parked in the fire lane under Oregon private-property tow law. The fire-code violation can be cited, but the tow itself is unenforceable. Including the ORS 98.812 wording on every fire lane sign closes the gap.
Q: How long does Portland Fire & Rescue inspection scheduling take?
A: Routine post-install inspection scheduling typically runs 2 to 3 weeks. First-quarter scheduling after the rainy season backlog can extend to 4 weeks. Emergency or violation-driven inspections can be scheduled in 5 to 7 business days.
Q: Can Cojo handle Portland Fire & Rescue violation remediation?
A: Yes. Fire lane sign violation remediation is a routine engagement for our crew. We coordinate the remediation scope, the Fire & Rescue inspection schedule, and the documentation needed to clear the violation.
Next Step
Cojo installs and refreshes fire lane signs across Portland to NFPA 1 + IFC 503 with ORS 98.812 tow-away language and Portland Fire & Rescue inspection coordination. Compare options in our parking sign buyer's guide, or call to schedule a fire lane sign site walk for your Portland property.