Apartment complex parking signs are not a single product line. A 240-unit complex needs a layered sign system: tenant-only stalls, numbered placards, visitor stalls, ADA accessible R7-8 / R7-8a pairs, fire lane signs around the perimeter, and a master ORS 98.812 tow-away sign at the property entrance. Each category answers a different liability and enforcement question, and each one has a different code reference.
Below: the signs an apartment complex actually needs, the spec we install on each category, and the order to think about them when scoping a refresh or a new build.
Quick Answer
A code-defensible apartment complex parking sign system includes six categories: ADA accessible R7-8 / R7-8a pairs at the federal 60-inch mounting height, fire lane signs at NFPA / IFC intervals around the perimeter, an ORS 98.812 tow-away sign at the property entrance, numbered tenant placards on assigned stalls, visitor parking signs with time limits, and reserved-staff signs where applicable. Industry baseline pricing on a 100 to 250-unit complex sign system runs $4,200 to $9,500 installed.
What Categories of Parking Signs Does an Apartment Complex Need?
Six categories cover the full code-and-enforcement footprint:
- ADA accessible signs (R7-8 + R7-8a) at every accessible stall, mounted at 60 inches per ADA Standard 502.6.
- Fire lane signs around the perimeter and at fire apparatus access entrances per NFPA 1 §18.2.3.5.1 and IFC 503.3.
- Master tow-away sign at the property entrance with ORS 98.812 verbatim language authorizing private-property tows.
- Numbered tenant placards on each assigned stall.
- Visitor parking signs with time limits and tow-warning addenda.
- Reserved staff signs where management or maintenance stalls are designated.
Skipping any of the six creates a specific liability gap. ADA gaps surface during accessibility audits. Fire lane gaps surface during Fire & Rescue inspections. ORS 98.812 gaps surface when a tow contractor refuses to tow because the entrance sign is unenforceable.
What ADA Sign Spec Applies to Apartment Complexes?
Apartment complexes are private property but the federal ADA Standard applies to common areas including parking lots. ADA Standard 502.6 controls the parking sign requirement at every accessible stall:
- Bottom of the lower sign on the post must be at least 60 inches above finished pavement.
- R7-8 base sign on every accessible stall.
- R7-8a "Van Accessible" plate on every van-accessible stall (one in every six accessible spaces minimum per ADA Standard 208.2.4).
The federal ADA Standards live at the U.S. Access Board and the federal text is at ADA.gov. Oregon Building Code accessibility provisions add to but do not relax the federal requirement on apartment property.
What Fire Lane Sign Spec Applies to Apartment Complexes?
NFPA 1 §18.2.3.5.1 and IFC 503.3 govern fire lane signage on apartment property:
- Sign visible from any vehicle position along the fire lane, typically a sign every 60 to 80 linear feet on long perimeter lanes.
- Red on white, ASTM D4956 Type III high-intensity prismatic sheeting minimum.
- ORS 98.812 tow-away language verbatim on the sign for private-property enforcement under Oregon law.
- 12-inch by 18-inch minimum size, larger 18-inch by 24-inch at the fire lane entrance.
NFPA references at nfpa.org and IFC at codes.iccsafe.org.
What Does the ORS 98.812 Master Tow Sign Need to Say?
Oregon Revised Statute 98.812 requires private-property tow signs to carry specific authorization wording. Without that wording, a tow contractor cannot legally remove a vehicle from the property, regardless of what other signs say. The full statute is at oregonlegislature.gov.
The master sign at the property entrance must include:
- The verbatim tow-away authorization language from ORS 98.812.
- The current tow contractor name and 24-hour phone number.
- The hours during which tow authority is in effect (typically 24 hours).
This is the single most-skipped sign on apartment property and the single most common cause of failed tow attempts.
What Cojo Delivered on a 240-Unit Northeast Portland Apartment Complex, March 2026
A property management firm overseeing a 240-unit apartment complex in Northeast Portland brought us in for a full sign refresh in March 2026 after a tenant turnover audit flagged the existing sign system as non-current. The site had:
- 6 ADA accessible stalls, 4 with signs mounted at 54 inches (below the federal minimum), 2 missing R7-8a van-accessible plates
- 1,200 linear feet of fire apparatus access road with 4 faded fire lane signs (no ORS 98.812 wording)
- 1 entrance with no master ORS 98.812 tow sign
- 220 numbered tenant stalls with mixed placards from three previous installers
- 14 visitor stalls with no time-limit signage
Our scope across two Saturdays:
- 6 R7-8 / R7-8a re-installs at the federal 60-inch height
- 16 fire lane signs (1 entrance, 14 in-line, 1 terminus) with ORS 98.812 wording
- 1 master ORS 98.812 entrance tow sign with current tow contractor data
- 220 numbered tenant placards on a uniform 0.080-inch aluminum stock with ASTM Type III sheeting
- 14 visitor parking signs with 24-hour limit and tow-warning addendum
Total install ran in the $7,800 to $11,200 range, consistent with the Industry Baseline Range for a 240-unit apartment complex sign system in Portland.
Industry Baseline Range
| Component | Cost |
|---|---|
| ADA R7-8 + R7-8a pair installed | $275 to $525 |
| Fire lane sign on new post | $185 to $325 |
| ORS 98.812 master entrance tow sign | $245 to $475 |
| Numbered tenant placard (per stall) | $35 to $85 |
| Visitor parking sign with time limit | $145 to $245 |
| Full 100 to 250-unit complex sign system | $4,200 to $9,500 |
Current Market Reality
ASTM D4956 Type III sheeting carries 3 to 5 week lead times in the Pacific Northwest. Aluminum sign blanks rose 11 percent in 2025. Custom-printed numbered tenant placards (1 through 240, e.g.) typically run a 2 to 3 week print queue at most regional suppliers. Plan a 5 to 7 week lead time on a full complex sign refresh.
What Order Should an Apartment Property Manager Tackle the Sign Categories?
Liability priority drives the order:
- ADA signs first. Accessibility audit liability is the highest-dollar exposure on most multifamily property.
- Fire lane and master ORS 98.812 sign next. Fire-code violations and unenforceable tow signs are the next-highest exposure.
- Numbered tenant placards third. Tenant-relations exposure but not regulatory.
- Visitor and reserved staff signs last. Operational, not regulatory.
A refresh that hits the first two tiers correctly clears 80 to 90 percent of liability exposure. The remaining tiers can be sequenced over the next budget cycle.
Where Does This Sit in the Broader Cojo Sign Service?
Apartment complex sign systems run alongside the rest of our sign service. Compare options in our parking sign buyer's guide, see the numbered tenant parking sign spec and the tenant parking only HOA spec, check the ORS 98.812 private property enforcement reference, and see how striping fits in apartment HOA parking lot striping. Our city service in Portland is at Portland parking sign installation.
FAQ
Q: Are apartment complex parking lots required to comply with ADA?
A: Yes. Apartment complex parking lots that serve common areas are subject to ADA accessibility requirements including the ADA Standard 502.6 sign requirement at every accessible stall. The Fair Housing Act adds dwelling-unit-related accessibility requirements but does not replace the parking-lot ADA framework.
Q: Can an apartment complex tow a vehicle without an ORS 98.812 master sign?
A: No. Oregon Revised Statute 98.812 requires the verbatim tow-away authorization wording on a posted sign before a private-property tow is enforceable. Without that sign at the property entrance, a tow contractor will refuse to remove a vehicle even if the property manager directs the tow.
Q: How many fire lane signs does a 240-unit apartment complex need?
A: Depends on the linear footage of fire apparatus access road. Typical guidance from Portland Fire & Rescue is one sign every 60 to 80 linear feet of fire lane plus an entrance sign and a terminus sign. A 240-unit complex with 1,000 to 1,500 feet of fire lane perimeter typically carries 14 to 20 fire lane signs.
Q: Do numbered tenant placards need to match the master sign material?
A: Best practice is yes. Mixed material on the same property reads as a sign system that has been patched together by multiple contractors over time, which signals to potential plaintiffs that the property is not maintained to a single defensible standard. We install all categories on the same 0.080-inch aluminum with the same ASTM Type III sheeting on every refresh.
Q: What's the typical lead time on a full apartment complex sign refresh?
A: 5 to 7 weeks from initial site walk to completed install. The longest-lead items are ASTM Type III sheeting fabrication (3 to 5 weeks) and custom numbered placard printing (2 to 3 weeks). Permit coordination where applicable adds 14 to 21 days.
Next Step
Cojo installs apartment complex parking sign systems across Oregon with full ADA, NFPA, IFC, and ORS 98.812 compliance. Compare options in our parking sign buyer's guide, or call to schedule a complex sign audit and refresh scoping call.