Speed bump installation costs in 2026 run from about $200 per rubber bump bolted to existing pavement up to $1,500+ per asphalt bump poured in place at a small commercial lot. The bump material itself is 40 to 60 percent of the line; labor, anchors, paint, and traffic control split the rest. Single-bump jobs sit at the high end because mobilization and traffic-control setup are mostly fixed costs.
Below: installation cost broken out by bump type, by component, and by quantity. Pairs with our speed bump cost overview and our speed bump dimensions reference.
What Does Speed Bump Installation Actually Cost?
Industry Baseline Range -- Installation Only (excludes the bump itself in some types):
| Bump Type | Material (per bump) | Install Labor + Hardware | Total Installed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rubber speed bump (4-foot) | $80 to $250 | $150 to $400 | $230 to $650 |
| Rubber speed bump (6-foot) | $130 to $350 | $180 to $500 | $310 to $850 |
| Rubber speed bump (10-foot, 2 sections) | $230 to $500 | $300 to $700 | $530 to $1,200 |
| Plastic speed bump (per section) | $40 to $150 | $80 to $250 | $120 to $400 |
| Asphalt speed bump (cast in place) | $80 to $250 (mix) | $300 to $1,200 | $380 to $1,500 |
| Concrete speed bump (precast or pour) | $300 to $1,000 | $400 to $1,000 | $700 to $2,000 |
| Removable rubber speed bump | $150 to $400 | $200 to $500 | $350 to $900 |
Current Market Reality
Three forces have moved 2026 speed bump install pricing past historical baselines:
- Hot-mix asphalt prices have outpaced general inflation -- Bureau of Labor Statistics PPI data shows asphalt mix material costs significantly above 2019 levels, with delivery surcharges now standard from most plants
- Recycled-rubber bump material has tightened -- supply-chain disruptions in recycled-tire crumb feedstock have raised modular rubber bump pricing 15 to 30 percent above 2020 levels
- Prevailing-wage labor on public-works speed bump installs adds 25 to 35 percent over private commercial work
For per-foot pricing across material options, see our speed bump cost guide.
Component-Level Install Breakdown
A typical rubber speed bump install on existing asphalt parking lot pavement breaks down as follows:
| Component | Material | Labor | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Layout and chalk-line | -- | $30 to $80 | $30 to $80 |
| Drill anchor holes (4 to 6 per section) | -- | $40 to $100 | $40 to $100 |
| Anchor hardware (lag bolts + epoxy) | $20 to $60 | $20 to $50 | $40 to $110 |
| Set bump and torque bolts | -- | $40 to $100 | $40 to $100 |
| Paint chevron pattern | $15 to $40 | $40 to $100 | $55 to $140 |
| Reflectors / reflective tape | $10 to $40 | $20 to $50 | $30 to $90 |
| Advance warning sign and post (if added) | $80 to $200 | $100 to $300 | $180 to $500 |
| Component | Material | Labor | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Form lumber and stakes | $30 to $80 | $80 to $200 | $110 to $280 |
| Hot-mix asphalt | $80 to $250 (per bump) | $80 to $200 | $160 to $450 |
| Screed and shape parabolic profile | -- | $80 to $200 | $80 to $200 |
| Edge taper and compaction | -- | $50 to $150 | $50 to $150 |
Fixed-Cost Line Items
Three line items do not scale with bump count and dominate small-quantity jobs:
Mobilization
$400 to $1,200 per visit. Crew, truck, anchor drill or paving crew with screeds, materials transport. Single-bump installs absorb the full mobilization on one bump. A 5-bump job amortizes the same fee across all 5 bumps.Traffic Control
$200 to $1,200 fixed or by hour. Active parking-lot work needs cone-and-flag protection. Public-road work needs a permitted traffic-control plan ($300 to $1,500 just for the plan).Permit / Engineering (Public Streets Only)
Private parking lots typically do not require permits. Public-street installs in Portland (PBOT), Salem, Eugene require a city permit and traffic-calming-program approval -- $200 to $1,500 in administrative fees plus 30 to 90 days of process time.How Bump Type Drives Install Labor
Rubber Modular Speed Bumps
Fastest install -- 30 to 60 minutes per section after drill-out. Bolts to existing pavement with lag screws and epoxy. No mix delivery, no cure time. Single-section bumps install for $230 to $650 each. Multi-section runs (10 to 12 feet across a wide lane) install for $530 to $1,200 each.Plastic Speed Bumps
Cheapest material; install similar to rubber. Less durable in cold-weather Oregon -- snaps in freezing temperatures. Most contractors steer owners toward rubber for any commercial use. Plastic is acceptable for short-term, residential-only, or temporary installs.Asphalt Cast-In-Place Speed Bumps
Mid-range cost; longest-lasting. Requires hot-mix delivery (usually a 2-ton minimum charge), forming, screeding the parabolic profile by hand, and cure time before traffic. 90-minute to 2-hour active install per bump plus same-day cure. Higher labor; lower material per bump because no manufactured assembly.Concrete Speed Bumps
Highest cost; longest lifespan. Either cast-in-place (form-and-pour) or precast units delivered and set. Cure time before traffic is 24 to 72 hours. Best for permanent installs at heavy-traffic lots. The Federal Highway Administration's traffic-calming guidance covers material-selection trade-offs.Removable Speed Bumps
Bolt-down rubber bumps designed to come up for snow removal or seasonal use. Higher-cost hardware (recessed anchor inserts) but same install workflow. $350 to $900 installed each.How Quantity Drives Per-Bump Cost
Mobilization and traffic control are largely fixed per visit:
| Quantity | Typical Per-Bump Install Cost (rubber) |
|---|---|
| 1 bump | $500 to $900 |
| 2 to 4 bumps | $400 to $700 each |
| 5 to 10 bumps | $330 to $600 each |
| 11+ bumps | $280 to $550 each |
Real Cojo Speed Bump Install Reference
In Q4 2025 we installed 6 rubber modular speed bumps on a 30,000-square-foot retail parking lot in Salem. Spec'd as 6-foot black-and-yellow rubber bumps on the main drive aisle, anchored with 3/8-inch by 4-inch lag bolts in epoxied holes. Painted yellow chevron pattern on each bump and W17-1 advance warning signs at each entrance.
The job took one day -- mobilization at 7 AM, layout and drilling complete by noon, bumps set and bolts torqued by 2 PM, paint and reflectors complete by 4 PM. Per-bump installed cost averaged $480 across the 6-bump run. A single-bump install at the same site would have run roughly $750.
Site Conditions That Push Install Cost Up
Six site conditions add cost beyond the baseline:
- Reinforced or thick concrete -- pavement >6 inches with rebar adds drilling time. Add $30 to $100 per bump.
- Post-tension or structural slab -- requires x-ray scanning before drilling. Add $200 to $800 per bump.
- After-hours work -- night, weekend, or holiday for active retail. Add 25 to 50 percent to labor.
- Cold-weather install -- below 40 degrees F, epoxy cure slows. Add $30 to $150 per bump.
- Permit required -- public streets, certain HOAs. Add $200 to $1,500.
- Prevailing wage -- public-works projects. Add 25 to 35 percent to labor.
What's Usually NOT Included in a Speed Bump Install Quote
Watch for these line items typically billed separately:
- Advance warning signs (W17-1 SPEED HUMP / SPEED BUMP) and posts
- Permits and traffic-calming-program fees (public streets only)
- Pavement repair beyond the bump footprint
- Striping along the surrounding drive aisle
- Removable-bump sleeve hardware (vs simple lag bolts)
How to Save on Speed Bump Installation
Five legitimate ways to bring per-bump cost down:
- Batch multiple bumps on one mobilization. Per-bump cost drops 30 to 40 percent going from 1 to 5 bumps.
- Pick rubber over asphalt if 3 to 5-year service life is acceptable. Faster install, no hot-mix delivery.
- Coordinate with paving or striping work. Adding bumps to a re-stripe mobilization avoids a separate trip.
- Skip the warning sign and post if local code does not require it. The bump itself plus painted chevrons is often sufficient on private parking lots.
- Use 4-foot single-section bumps on narrow drive aisles -- avoid the multi-section premium.
Get a Speed Bump Installation Quote
Cojo installs rubber, asphalt, concrete, and removable speed bumps across the Oregon I-5 corridor with itemized line-item proposals -- you see what the bump costs, what the install labor costs, and what mobilization adds. Contact Cojo for a fixed-scope quote.
For per-foot pricing across material options, see our speed bump cost guide. For concrete-specific pricing, see concrete speed bump cost.