Plastic speed bumps carry an industry baseline of about $40 to $200 per unit before installation, making them the cheapest product in the speed-bump category on paper. The trade-off is durability. ITE Traffic Calming Manual data and our own field experience put plastic units in Oregon's freeze-thaw climate at 18 to 36 months of service life versus 3 to 5 years for comparable rubber. Over a 5-year horizon, that inverts the cost story.
Below: what plastic speed bumps actually cost in 2026, why "cheap" plastic frequently costs more than rubber long-term in Oregon, and the situations where plastic is the right call.
What Drives Plastic Speed Bump Pricing?
The price of a plastic speed bump depends on five factors: section length, weight rating, anchor hardware, reflective tape, and quantity discounts. A 6-foot residential-grade plastic section with bolt-down hardware typically prints near the bottom of the range. A 10-foot heavy-duty modular plastic section with reflectors and end caps prints near the top.
Industry Baseline Range — Plastic Speed Bumps (2026)
| Component | Industry Baseline Range |
|---|---|
| 4-foot light-duty plastic section | $40 to $90 per unit |
| 6-foot standard plastic section | $80 to $150 per unit |
| 10-foot heavy-duty modular plastic | $150 to $200+ per unit |
| Anchor hardware kit (concrete) | $20 to $45 per kit |
| Anchor hardware kit (asphalt) | $25 to $60 per kit |
| Reflective tape add-on | $10 to $25 per section |
| Installation labor (per bump, 10-12ft span) | $150 to $400+ |
Current Market Reality
2026 plastic speed bump pricing has drifted upward 8 to 14 percent over the past 24 months due to resin costs and freight surcharges. Federal Highway Administration freight indices show shipping costs for parking-lot products climbed sharply in 2024 and 2025 (FHWA Freight Analysis Framework, fhwa.dot.gov). Mobilization fees, traffic-control labor, and Oregon prevailing-wage installs (Oregon BOLI prevailing-wage rates, oregon.gov/boli) also push the installed total above sticker price on commercial sites.
Why Is Plastic Cheaper Than Rubber or Asphalt?
Plastic speed bumps use injection-molded HDPE or polyurethane that costs less to manufacture than recycled-rubber compounds and far less than poured-asphalt installs. The savings show up at the cash register, not over the life of the product.
Per-Unit Material Comparison
| Material | Per-Unit Price | Typical Lifespan (Oregon) | 5-Year Cost (1 bump replaced as needed) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Plastic | $40 to $200 | 18 to 36 months | $80 to $400 (1 to 2 replacements) |
| Rubber | $80 to $400 | 3 to 5 years | $80 to $400 (no replacement) |
| Asphalt | $300 to $1,500 | 7 to 10 years | $300 to $1,500 (no replacement) |
| Concrete | $400 to $2,000 | 15 to 25 years | $400 to $2,000 (no replacement) |
How Does Oregon Climate Change the Math?
Oregon's I-5 corridor sees roughly 30 to 60 freeze-thaw cycles per winter according to the Oregon Climate Service (climate.oregonstate.edu). Plastic speed bumps under sustained freeze-thaw stress crack at the anchor points, embrittle in UV-exposed sections, and warp where snowplows clip them. Rubber compounds tolerate the same cycle with negligible degradation.
On a 14,000-square-foot Salem retail center we restriped in March 2026, we replaced four plastic speed bumps the property had installed in late 2023. The original install cost the owner roughly $720 in product. The replacement product plus our labor ran approximately $1,400 — a total of $2,120 over 28 months for what should have been a 5-year asset. We installed rubber bumps on the replacement. Past that point, the math favors rubber for any Oregon site north of Medford.
When Does Plastic Make Sense?
Plastic speed bumps earn their place in three scenarios:
- Temporary or seasonal installs. Construction zones, special-event parking, school-pickup-line deployments where the bump comes out in 6 to 18 months.
- Indoor parking structures. No UV, no freeze-thaw, no snowplow exposure. Plastic lasts 5+ years indoors.
- Light-duty residential driveways. A 4-foot plastic bump on a private driveway with sub-25 vehicles per day will hit its rated life. The OSHA 1910.176 forklift-aisle context that pushes warehouses toward heavy-duty rubber does not apply.
Outside those cases, the per-unit savings disappear by year 3.
What Is the Total Installed Cost of a Plastic Speed Bump?
Sticker price covers the product. Installed cost adds anchor hardware, drilling labor, paint, reflectors, and traffic control. A typical residential install on existing asphalt runs:
- Plastic bump section (10 ft span): $80 to $150
- Anchor hardware kit: $20 to $45
- Drilling and bolt-down labor (45 to 90 minutes): $80 to $200
- Reflective tape and paint chevron: $30 to $80
- Mobilization (single-bump install): $100 to $300
Total residential installed cost: roughly $310 to $775. Multi-bump commercial installs amortize mobilization across units and drop the per-bump installed cost by 15 to 30 percent.
For deeper per-foot pricing across all materials, see our breakdown of speed bump cost per foot.
How Does Plastic Compare to Rubber on Lifetime Cost?
Lifetime cost is the metric that matters for property managers comparing bids. Run the numbers across a 5-year horizon for a single parking-lot speed bump:
| Year | Plastic (replace at month 30) | Rubber (no replacement) |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | $400 (product + install) | $500 (product + install) |
| 2.5 | $400 (replacement product + install) | $0 |
| 5-year total | $800 | $500 |
For the rubber side of the comparison, see our rubber speed bump cost guide and the rubber vs asphalt comparison. For the asphalt option that beats both over a 10+ year horizon, our asphalt paving cost Oregon breakdown covers the install math.
Where Should Property Managers Buy Plastic Speed Bumps?
Industrial-supply distributors carry the broadest product range. Big-box hardware stores stock light-duty residential units. Cojo sources commercial-grade plastic units from US manufacturers when a client specifically requests plastic for a temporary or indoor application — and we will tell you when rubber is the better long-term call.
For Portland Metro property managers comparing options across multiple sites, our Speed Bumps in Portland Metro commercial guide covers regional supply, install crews, and code references.
What About Public Roads?
The Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices does not list a formal speed-bump device standard for public roadways (MUTCD 2009 Edition with 2024 revisions, mutcd.fhwa.dot.gov), and most Oregon city traffic-calming programs specify asphalt or rubber on public streets — plastic is rarely accepted. Portland PBOT's traffic-calming menu (portland.gov/transportation), Salem PW Chapter 79, and Eugene EPP all default to durable materials. Plastic on public streets is largely a private-driveway or temporary play.
Get a Quote on the Right Speed Bump for Your Site
Plastic, rubber, asphalt, and concrete each win in different conditions. The right answer depends on your traffic volume, climate exposure, install constraints, and ownership horizon. Get a custom quote and our estimator will walk through the trade-offs for your specific property.