Removing a speed bump in 2026 takes 30 to 60 minutes per modular rubber or plastic bump and 4 to 8 hours per asphalt or concrete bump including patching. Modular: unbolt the section, patch the anchor holes with epoxy or asphalt cold-patch, dispose of the bump. Asphalt: saw-cut the perimeter, grind the bump down, haul out the debris, patch the void with hot-mix. Concrete is the same saw-and-grind procedure as asphalt but the patch needs a longer cure.
Below: both removal paths, the tools and equipment for each, and why DIY asphalt-bump removal almost always ends up costing more than hiring a contractor.
When Should a Speed Bump Be Removed?
Five common reasons drive speed bump removal:
- Site redesign. Property changes ownership or use; existing bumps no longer fit traffic patterns.
- Failed install. Anchor failure, edge crack-out, or cure-failure on asphalt poured-bumps that did not survive the first winter.
- Code violation. Bump dimensions exceed local jurisdiction allowances; non-compliant heights damage vehicles.
- Emergency-vehicle access conflict. Fire marshal requires removal where a bump blocks fire-apparatus response per NFPA 1141 / IFC 503.
- End-of-life replacement. A 5-year-old rubber bump is being swapped for a new install in a slightly different location.
Per the Institute of Transportation Engineers Traffic Calming Manual, traffic-calming devices should be reviewed every 3 to 5 years for fit-to-purpose (ITE Traffic Calming Manual, ite.org). Removal is part of that lifecycle.
How Do You Remove a Modular Rubber or Plastic Speed Bump?
Modular bumps are designed to be removable. The procedure is the install procedure in reverse.
Step 1 — Set up traffic control
Even a 30-minute removal job needs basic cone-and-sign traffic control on commercial sites. Oregon Standard Specifications for Construction reference traffic-control plans for any work that closes a drive lane (oregon.gov/odot).
Step 2 — Remove chevron paint and reflectors
Pull off reflective end caps and tape strips. Some property managers strip and re-grind the chevron paint to ease pavement-patch finishing. Most leave it for later sanding.
Step 3 — Loosen all bolts in star pattern
Use a torque wrench or breaker bar to loosen each bolt one to two turns at a time, alternating across the bump in a star pattern. Loosening one bolt fully before others can crack the rubber section.
Step 4 — Remove the bolts and lift the bump
Pull all bolts. Lift the rubber or plastic section off the anchor pattern. A 10-foot rubber bump weighs 80 to 200 pounds depending on grade — usually a 2-person lift.
Step 5 — Patch the anchor holes
Two patch options for the empty anchor holes:
- Concrete substrate: Inject two-part epoxy into each hole until flush with the surface. Smooth with a putty knife.
- Asphalt substrate: Use cold-patch asphalt mix; tamp into each hole; finish flush with a hand tamp.
Both patches cure within 24 to 48 hours. The repaired pavement is suitable for traffic immediately on epoxy patches and within 24 hours on cold-patch.
Step 6 — Dispose of the bump
Recycled-rubber bumps can be sent to industrial-rubber recycling. Plastic bumps can sometimes be returned to the manufacturer for credit on a new bump. Otherwise, both materials accept conventional landfill disposal at $25 to $75 per disposal trip.
For installation procedure that mirrors the removal in reverse, see how to install speed bumps.
How Do You Remove an Asphalt Speed Bump?
Asphalt bumps are not removable as units. They must be cut out and the resulting void patched.
Step 1 — Set up traffic control
Asphalt removal is louder, dustier, and longer than modular removal. Plan for 1 day of lane closure.
Step 2 — Saw-cut the bump perimeter
Use a concrete saw with diamond blade to score the bump perimeter to a depth of 2 to 3 inches. The score creates a clean transition between the bump and surrounding pavement.
Step 3 — Grind the bump down
Use an asphalt grinder, milling head, or skid steer with grinder attachment to grind the bump down to existing pavement grade. Grinding produces 200 to 800 pounds of millings per bump that go to disposal.
Step 4 — Remove debris
Sweep, vacuum, or shovel the milled material into a disposal container. Disposal at an Oregon DEQ-permitted asphalt recycling facility runs $20 to $60 per ton (Oregon DEQ recycling guidance, oregon.gov/deq).
Step 5 — Apply tack coat
Apply tack coat emulsion to the milled surface for bond between existing pavement edges and new patch.
Step 6 — Place hot-mix asphalt patch
Hot-mix asphalt patches the void left by the bump. Verify temperature 275 to 325 degrees F at placement. Spread, screed flush with existing pavement, and compact with a plate compactor in two passes.
Step 7 — Allow cure
24 to 72 hours cure before opening to traffic depending on ambient temperature. Apply parking-lot striping over the patch only after full cure.
How Much Does Speed Bump Removal Cost?
Industry baseline pricing for speed bump removal in 2026:
| Removal Type | Industry Baseline |
|---|---|
| Single rubber or plastic bump (DIY or contractor) | $50 to $300 per bump |
| Single asphalt bump removal and patch | $1,500 to $3,000 per bump |
| Single concrete bump removal and patch | $2,000 to $4,500 per bump |
| Multi-bump asphalt removal (4+ bumps, 1 day) | $3,000 to $8,000 total |
Current Market Reality
2026 asphalt-bump removal pricing has drifted upward roughly 18 percent off 2022 baselines. The US Bureau of Labor Statistics Producer Price Index for asphalt paving mixtures rose 22 percent over that window (BLS PPI series WPS134107, bls.gov), and Oregon prevailing-wage rates also rose during the same period (Oregon BOLI, oregon.gov/boli). Disposal fees at Oregon DEQ-permitted asphalt recycling facilities also climbed.
For paving cost context, see our asphalt paving cost Oregon breakdown. For Portland Metro multi-bump removal context, see Speed Bumps in Portland Metro.
Why Does DIY Asphalt Bump Removal Usually Cost More?
Three reasons:
- Equipment rental. Asphalt grinder rental runs $400 to $900 per day. Saw rental adds $150 to $300.
- Disposal fees. Asphalt millings disposal runs $20 to $60 per ton. A 4-bump removal produces 1.5 to 3 tons of millings.
- Patch material. Hot-mix asphalt is sold in 2-ton minimum loads at most Oregon ready-mix suppliers. A 4-bump patch needs 0.5 to 1.5 tons; the rest is wasted unless the property has other paving needs.
Contractor pricing usually beats DIY for asphalt removal because contractors amortize equipment and material across multiple jobs. Modular rubber-bump removal is a different story; DIY removal is straightforward and cost-effective on residential and small-commercial sites.
What Should You Do With the Resulting Pavement?
After bump removal, the patch needs:
- Striping. Repaint parking-lot lines that were interrupted by the bump.
- Sealcoat blending. New asphalt patches read darker than aged pavement for 2 to 5 years. Sealcoating the surrounding area unifies appearance.
- Restripe MUTCD chevron paint. If the bump location had advance warning markings, those need removal too.
For ongoing maintenance after removal, see speed bump maintenance for how to manage remaining bumps.
On a 14,000-square-foot Salem retail center we restriped in March 2026, the property removed two failed asphalt speed bumps that had cracked across the centerline within 18 months of install. Removal, patch, and restripe ran approximately $4,200 total — about $2,100 per bump. The owner replaced them with rubber bumps anchored to the patched concrete substrate.
When Should You Hire a Contractor?
Hire a contractor for any asphalt or concrete bump removal. The grinder, saw, hot-mix supply chain, and disposal logistics make DIY uneconomic on those substrates. Modular rubber and plastic bump removal is DIY-friendly on residential and small-commercial sites.
Or Hire Cojo's Removal Crew
Speed bump removal sounds simple until you are renting an asphalt grinder for a single bump. Cojo removes commercial speed bumps across the Oregon I-5 corridor with itemized quotes covering saw-cut, grind, disposal, hot-mix patch, and restripe. Hire Cojo's removal crew for your next project.