Concrete speed bumps run $400 to $2,000 per unit installed in 2026 — the highest upfront cost of any speed bump material. The premium buys a 15 to 25-year service life, which is two to three times the lifespan of rubber and roughly equal to permanent cast-in-place asphalt. On high-traffic commercial lots where the cost of re-installing every few years matters more than the upfront number, concrete is often the cheapest choice on a per-year basis.
Below: concrete bump pricing broken out by build method, what actually drives the per-unit cost, and how to think about the long-term economics. Pairs with our speed bump cost overview and the concrete vs asphalt speed bumps comparison.
What Does a Concrete Speed Bump Cost in 2026?
Industry Baseline Range:
| Build Method | Material Only | Installed Each |
|---|---|---|
| Form-and-pour cast-in-place | $200 to $600 | $700 to $1,500 |
| Precast unit, set and anchor | $400 to $1,000 | $900 to $1,800 |
| Architectural finish (exposed aggregate, integral color) | $500 to $1,200 | $1,100 to $2,200+ |
| Heavy-duty / industrial spec | $500 to $1,000 | $1,200 to $2,000+ |
| Single-bump job (any method) | -- | Add $300 to $600 mobilization absorption |
Current Market Reality
Two forces drive 2026 concrete speed bump pricing past historical baselines:
- Ready-mix concrete prices remain elevated. Bureau of Labor Statistics PPI data for ready-mix concrete shows material-and-delivery costs significantly above 2019 levels. Short-load delivery surcharges (common for single-bump pours) add $100 to $300 per delivery.
- Form-and-pour labor has outpaced general inflation. Skilled finishing labor for parabolic-profile concrete shaping carries a premium over flat-slab work, and prevailing-wage thresholds in Portland and Salem add 25 to 35 percent over rural Oregon sites.
For per-foot pricing comparisons across all materials, see our speed bump cost guide.
What Drives Concrete Speed Bump Cost?
1. Build Method
Form-and-pour cast-in-place is cheaper per unit but requires forming, hand-finishing the parabolic profile, and 24 to 72-hour cure time before traffic. Precast units arrive ready to set and anchor; faster install but higher material cost and freight.2. Length and Cross-Section
A standard parking-lot concrete speed bump is 10 to 12 feet across a single drive aisle, 12 to 24 inches in travel direction, and 3 to 4 inches tall at center. Longer bumps (full two-lane width, 22 to 24 feet) cost roughly proportionally more.3. Concrete Strength and Mix
4,000 psi air-entrained mix is standard. 5,000 psi mix for heavy-duty industrial spec adds 10 to 20 percent. Air entrainment is mandatory in Oregon freeze-thaw exposure -- non-air-entrained concrete cracks within two seasons.4. Reinforcement
Most parking-lot concrete bumps use #3 or #4 rebar in a cage to control crack propagation. Reinforcement adds $40 to $150 in steel per bump plus labor to tie. Industrial-spec bumps may use heavier #5 rebar.5. Finish
Smooth gray broom finish is cheapest. Sandblast, exposed-aggregate, integral-color, or stamped finishes add $100 to $400 per bump for architectural applications.6. Site Access and Concrete Delivery
Single-bump pours absorb full short-load delivery surcharges ($100 to $300). Concrete-pump access for hard-to-reach lots adds $400 to $1,000 per visit. Tight-access pours (parking decks, enclosed lots) add 20 to 40 percent to labor.7. Cure-Time Logistics
Active retail or grocery sites cannot afford 72-hour traffic exclusion on a drive aisle. Accelerated mix and cure blankets shorten cure to 24 to 36 hours but add $50 to $200 per bump. Off-hours pours (night, weekend) are common for retail to bridge cure-time exposure.Why Pick Concrete Over Other Speed Bump Materials?
Three reasons concrete wins:
- Service life. A properly built concrete speed bump in an Oregon commercial parking lot lasts 15 to 25 years. Rubber bumps last 3 to 7 years; asphalt bumps last 7 to 12 years.
- No anchor maintenance. Rubber bumps eventually develop loose anchor bolts; asphalt bumps eventually crack at the base. Monolithic concrete has no anchor or interface to maintain.
- Aesthetic consistency. In retail and pedestrian-priority sites, a concrete bump matches surrounding hardscape. Rubber bumps read as utility; concrete reads as architecture.
Why NOT Pick Concrete?
Three reasons concrete loses:
- Highest upfront cost. Concrete bumps cost 2 to 4x rubber on Day 1.
- No removability. Once poured, removing a concrete bump requires saw-cut, jackhammer, and pavement repair -- $1,500 to $3,500 to undo a single bump.
- Cure-time disruption. 24 to 72 hours of traffic exclusion or detour during cure is hard for many active sites.
For seasonal use, removability priority, or short-term sites, rubber is the better choice. The choice depends on site profile, not material superiority.
Form-and-Pour vs Precast: Which Costs Less?
| Factor | Form-and-Pour | Precast Set |
|---|---|---|
| Material cost | $200 to $600 | $400 to $1,000 |
| Install labor | $400 to $900 | $300 to $700 |
| Cure time on-site | 24 to 72 hours | None (pre-cured) |
| Surface finish | Hand-shaped | Factory-finished |
| Single-bump scenario | Higher (mobilization absorbs full delivery) | Lower (no concrete delivery) |
| Multi-bump scenario | Lower (one delivery, multiple pours) | Higher (per-unit material price) |
Real Cojo Concrete Speed Bump Install
In Q3 2025 we cast-in-place 4 concrete speed bumps at a Eugene-area medical office complex with heavy daily traffic and a hard requirement for 20-year minimum service life. Spec'd as 12-foot wide cross-section, 24 inches travel direction, 4 inches tall at center, 4,000 psi air-entrained mix with #4 rebar cage, broom finish painted with yellow chevron pattern.
The 4-bump pour took one day with a same-day mobilization for forming and rebar placement, plus one additional day for paint and signage after 36-hour cure. Per-bump installed cost averaged $1,180 -- toward the upper end of the baseline range because the 12-foot cross-section is on the longer side of typical and the medical-complex site needed off-hours scheduling.
Lifespan-Adjusted Cost Analysis
The cheapest bump on Day 1 is not always the cheapest bump per year of service life:
| Material | Installed Cost (per bump) | Service Life | Cost per Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rubber 6-foot | $310 to $850 | 3 to 5 years | $80 to $280 |
| Rubber 12-foot | $530 to $1,200 | 4 to 6 years | $100 to $300 |
| Asphalt cast-in-place 12-foot | $400 to $1,500 | 7 to 12 years | $50 to $215 |
| Concrete form-and-pour 12-foot | $700 to $1,500 | 15 to 25 years | $35 to $100 |
| Concrete precast 12-foot | $900 to $1,800 | 15 to 25 years | $40 to $120 |
Get a Concrete Speed Bump Quote
Cojo casts and installs concrete speed bumps across the Oregon I-5 corridor. We pour our own bumps in 4,000 psi air-entrained mix with proper rebar reinforcement, hand-shape the parabolic profile, and stripe the bump on the same mobilization. Contact Cojo for a fixed-scope quote.
For full installation logistics, see speed bump installation cost. For the material trade-off, see concrete vs asphalt speed bumps.