Bulk speed bump pricing in 2026 usually delivers a 10 to 25 percent discount off single-unit list once your order crosses five units, widening to 25 to 40 percent at 20+ units for property managers with multi-site portfolios. The catch: bulk orders carry 4 to 8-week lead times from US manufacturers and 8 to 14 weeks from overseas freight. FHWA freight indices show ocean and inland freight added 6 to 12 percent to 2025 landed costs, and Oregon BOLI prevailing-wage rules raise install labor on commercial bulk projects.
Below: volume-tier pricing for plastic, rubber, asphalt, and concrete bumps, realistic lead times, and when bulk procurement actually saves money versus when it locks you into stale inventory.
What Counts as a Bulk Speed Bump Order?
Manufacturer volume tiers for speed bumps roughly follow this pattern across the major US suppliers:
- 5+ units: entry-level bulk discount. 10 to 18 percent off single-unit retail.
- 10+ units: mid-tier. 18 to 28 percent off retail.
- 20+ units: distributor-tier. 25 to 35 percent off retail.
- 50+ units: project-tier. 30 to 40 percent off retail, often with custom-color or custom-length options.
- 100+ units: institutional / municipal-tier. Direct factory pricing, typically requires a public-bid process.
The Institute of Transportation Engineers does not publish bulk-pricing guidance — these tiers come from Cojo's procurement experience and from US manufacturer published rate sheets in the parking-products category.
Industry Baseline Range
| Material | 1 Unit | 5+ Units | 10+ Units | 20+ Units |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plastic (10 ft) | $150 to $200 | $130 to $180 | $120 to $165 | $100 to $145 |
| Rubber (10 ft) | $250 to $400 | $215 to $345 | $190 to $310 | $160 to $275 |
| Asphalt (10 ft, installed) | $300 to $1,500 | $290 to $1,400 | $275 to $1,300 | $260 to $1,200 |
| Concrete precast (10 ft) | $400 to $2,000 | $370 to $1,800 | $340 to $1,650 | $300 to $1,500 |
Current Market Reality
2026 bulk pricing remains volatile because raw-material indices and freight costs continue to drift quarter to quarter. The US Bureau of Labor Statistics Producer Price Index for rubber and plastics products rose roughly 14 percent between 2022 and 2025 (BLS PPI series WPS07, bls.gov). Steel anchor hardware also tracked the broader steel index higher. Bulk commitments locked at the start of a quarter often beat single-unit spot prices by the end of that quarter.
Why Do Manufacturers Discount Bulk Orders?
Three reasons drive volume discounts:
- Production batching. A single 50-unit order runs as one production batch. Five separate 10-unit orders run as five batches. The labor-per-unit drops with batch size.
- Freight consolidation. A truckload of 30+ rubber speed bumps ships at the same freight rate as a partial-load of 10. The freight-per-unit drops by half.
- Inventory commitment. Bulk orders move inventory off the manufacturer's books faster than single-unit retail. Suppliers price that velocity in.
The savings flow through to property managers who can absorb 4 to 8 weeks of lead time and store the inventory until install dates.
How Long Are Bulk Lead Times in 2026?
Lead times for bulk speed-bump orders in 2026 by material:
| Material | Single Unit | 5 to 10 Units | 20+ Units |
|---|---|---|---|
| Plastic (US made) | 1 to 2 weeks | 2 to 4 weeks | 4 to 8 weeks |
| Rubber (US made) | 2 to 3 weeks | 3 to 6 weeks | 6 to 10 weeks |
| Rubber (overseas freight) | 8 to 14 weeks | 10 to 16 weeks | 12 to 20 weeks |
| Asphalt (poured on-site) | 1 to 3 weeks scheduling | 2 to 6 weeks scheduling | 4 to 10 weeks scheduling |
| Concrete precast | 3 to 5 weeks | 4 to 8 weeks | 6 to 12 weeks |
When Does Bulk Procurement Make Sense?
Bulk speed-bump procurement saves real money in three scenarios:
- Multi-site property portfolios. A property manager with 8 sites and 3 to 5 bumps per site needs 24 to 40 units. That order qualifies for the 20+ unit tier across all four materials.
- Large single-site projects. Distribution centers, hospital campuses, and university lots routinely need 15 to 30 bumps for a single restripe project.
- Annual replacement cycles. Property-management firms that handle 50+ Oregon properties usually batch year-end replacement procurement into one bulk order to lock in pre-spring pricing.
It does not make sense for one-off residential or single-property installs of fewer than 5 units. Single-unit retail pricing plus install labor beats bulk-plus-storage in those cases.
On a 60,000-square-foot Tualatin distribution center we evaluated in February 2026, the owner needed 18 heavy-duty rubber speed bumps. Single-unit retail for the spec'd model ran $385 each — $6,930 total. The 10+ unit bulk tier dropped per-unit price to $315 — $5,670 total. The savings funded most of the chevron-paint and reflector add-ons.
What Are the Hidden Costs of Bulk Procurement?
Bulk discounts hide three costs that erode the headline savings:
- Storage. 20+ rubber speed bumps occupy roughly 100 square feet of floor space. Property managers without warehouse access often rent space — $50 to $200 per month — for the 4 to 12-week window between delivery and install.
- Damage in transit. Bulk freight risks pallet-tip, forklift damage, and weather exposure during multi-stop transit. Manufacturer warranties typically cover defective product but not freight damage; that is the freight carrier's claim. Plan for 1 to 3 percent damage allowance on rubber and plastic orders.
- Spec-creep risk. A bulk order locked 6 weeks before install commits the buyer to a spec. If site conditions change — say, the property manager decides 8-foot bumps fit better than 10-foot — the order is non-cancelable past the manufacturer's hold-window.
For property managers comparing bulk versus per-job procurement, our speed bump cost guide and speed bump cost per foot breakdowns cover the per-unit math that anchors the comparison.
How Does Cojo Handle Bulk Procurement for Property Managers?
Cojo's procurement workflow for bulk speed-bump orders runs in four steps:
- Site survey across all properties in the portfolio. Linear-foot-of-bump count by site, including lane width, anchor substrate (asphalt or concrete), and traffic load.
- Material spec per site. Heavy-duty rubber for distribution centers, mid-grade rubber for retail, asphalt for high-volume drive aisles where lifespan beats modularity.
- Single bulk PO with staged delivery. Manufacturer ships in batches sized to install schedule, which avoids storage costs.
- Install scheduling across the portfolio. Cojo crews rotate through sites in install order, which holds prevailing-wage and mobilization costs flat across the portfolio.
For Portland Metro property managers running 5+ sites, our Speed Bumps in Portland Metro commercial guide walks through the regional supply chain, install crews, and code references. Our commercial striping Portland page covers paint-and-marking coordination for the same portfolios.
Get Bulk Speed Bump Pricing for Your Portfolio
Bulk pricing only beats spot pricing when site count, material spec, and install schedule align. Get a custom quote and Cojo's procurement team will build a portfolio number that includes hardware, install labor, and chevron paint — not just sticker discount.