Speed bump maintenance in 2026 runs on a quarterly inspection schedule covering anchor bolts, chevron paint visibility, reflector condition, and edge integrity, plus an annual deep-inspection that adds anchor torque verification and structural assessment. Modular rubber and plastic bumps need bolt re-torquing every 12 to 18 months and chevron repaint every 12 to 18 months on water-based latex (or 3 to 5 years on thermoplastic). Asphalt bumps need crack-fill at the first sign of edge crack-out and a full repaint on the same chevron cycle. The ITE Traffic Calming Manual finds properly maintained bumps deliver their full lifespan. Neglected bumps fail at 40 to 60 percent of expected life.
Below: the quarterly and annual inspection checklists, repair-versus-replace decision criteria by material, and Oregon-specific climate considerations.
What Is the Quarterly Inspection Checklist?
Property managers should walk every speed bump every 3 months. The checklist:
- Anchor bolts. Press down on each corner of the bump. Movement greater than 1/8 inch indicates loose anchor. Look for rust streaks at bolt heads.
- Chevron paint visibility. Inspect at 50 feet during daylight. Paint that is no longer clearly visible at 50 feet has dropped below 70 percent visibility and needs touch-up or full repaint.
- Reflector condition. Walk the perimeter of each bump. End caps that have been clipped by snowplows or vehicles need replacement. Reflective tape with peeled edges needs reapplication.
- Edge integrity. For rubber bumps, look for cracking or curling at lane-edge ends. For asphalt bumps, look for crack-out at leading and trailing edges.
- Pavement around the bump. Check for pavement settlement, cracking, or ponding water that could indicate sub-base failure under the bump.
- Advance warning sign condition. Verify the W17-1 sign and post are upright, reflective face is clean, and visibility is unblocked.
Document each inspection with photos. Liability insurance often requires inspection records.
What Is the Annual Deep-Inspection?
Once per year (most property managers schedule this in the spring after Oregon's freeze-thaw season), conduct a deeper inspection:
- Anchor torque verification. Spot-check 2 to 3 bolts per bump with a calibrated torque wrench. Anchors that have lost more than 20 percent of spec torque need re-torquing across the whole bump in star pattern.
- Structural assessment. Lift each modular bump section briefly to verify no sub-bump pavement settlement. Asphalt-poured bumps cannot be lifted; visual inspection of the parabolic profile substitutes.
- Material lifespan check. Compare current condition against expected lifespan benchmarks (below). Plan replacement budgeting accordingly.
- MUTCD compliance review. Verify chevron pattern, reflector spacing, and advance warning sign placement still match current Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices guidance (MUTCD 2009 with 2024 revisions, mutcd.fhwa.dot.gov). Standards updates can render previously-compliant marking non-compliant.
- ADA pathway review. Verify bump still does not encroach on accessible routes per ADA Standards (ada.gov).
What Are the Lifespan Benchmarks Per Material?
Per ITE references and Cojo field experience in Oregon's I-5 corridor climate:
| Material | Expected Lifespan | Annual Maintenance Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Plastic | 18 to 36 months | $40 to $120 per bump |
| Rubber | 3 to 5 years | $60 to $150 per bump |
| Asphalt (poured) | 7 to 10 years | $80 to $200 per bump |
| Concrete (precast or cast-in-place) | 15 to 25 years | $50 to $130 per bump |
For the broader cost context, see our speed bump cost guide.
When Should You Repair Versus Replace?
| Condition | Repair Path | Replace Path |
|---|---|---|
| Anchor bolt loose | Re-torque to spec | — |
| 1 to 2 anchor failures | Re-anchor at new location 3 to 4 inches off failed point | — |
| 3+ anchor failures on same bump | — | Full bump replacement |
| Chevron paint faded | Repaint per speed bump painting marking | — |
| Edge crack-out under 6 inches (asphalt) | Crack-fill with hot-pour | — |
| Edge crack-out greater than 6 inches (asphalt) | — | Section grind and re-pour |
| Centerline crack across bump (asphalt or concrete) | — | Full bump replacement |
| Rubber section curled or warped | — | Section replacement |
| Reflector clipped | Replace end cap | — |
| W17-1 sign damaged | Replace sign or post | — |
For removal procedure when full replacement is the right call, see how to remove speed bump.
How Do Oregon Winters Affect Maintenance?
Oregon's I-5 corridor sees roughly 30 to 60 freeze-thaw cycles per winter per Oregon Climate Service (climate.oregonstate.edu). Three winter-specific maintenance items:
- Snowplow damage on Bend and Eastern Oregon sites. Reflective end caps that protrude above the bump surface get clipped by plows. Some Bend property managers remove rubber bumps entirely for the November-to-March snow season.
- Sand and salt exposure. Latex chevron paint degrades faster under sand-and-salt application. Thermoplastic or solvent-based paint extends repaint cycles in winter-treated lots.
- Freeze-thaw stress on plastic bumps. Plastic compounds embrittle in sustained freeze-thaw. Inspect plastic bumps in March (after the freeze-thaw season) for crack-propagation that may force early replacement.
For coastal-county sites (Lincoln, Tillamook, Curry, Coos), saltwater corrosion adds an additional inspection item for stainless-grade hardware on anchor points.
For Oregon paving-and-marking maintenance context, see our asphalt paving cost Oregon breakdown. For Portland Metro multi-bump portfolio maintenance, see Speed Bumps in Portland Metro.
What Maintenance Records Should Property Managers Keep?
Three records support liability protection and budget forecasting:
- Inspection log. Date, inspector, photos, defects identified, action taken. Quarterly cadence.
- Repair log. Date, repair type, contractor (if applicable), cost. Per-incident.
- Repaint log. Date, paint type, repaint reason. Per-bump per-cycle.
Most commercial-property insurance policies request these records during claim review. Cojo provides itemized maintenance records on every service visit.
On a 14,000-square-foot Salem retail center we maintained on a quarterly cadence through 2025, the property's four rubber speed bumps reached 5-year lifespan in March 2026 with no early-replacement events. The maintenance program totaled approximately $2,800 across the 5 years — $140 per bump per year in inspections, repaints, and reflector replacements. Compared with the $4,000-plus replacement cost for four bumps reaching end-of-life, the $2,800 maintenance investment delivered full ITE-cited lifespan.
What Triggers a Maintenance Call to a Contractor?
Most property managers handle quarterly inspections in-house and call a contractor for:
- Re-anchoring after multiple anchor failures
- Crack-fill or section grind on asphalt bumps
- Chevron repaint cycles (especially thermoplastic, which requires specialized application equipment)
- Annual torque verification on multi-bump portfolios
- Removal-and-replacement at end of lifespan
For commercial-portfolio maintenance contracts, Cojo offers quarterly inspection plus on-call repair services to property-management firms across the Oregon I-5 corridor.
Get a Maintenance Quote
Speed bump maintenance is the difference between a 5-year asset and a 2.5-year asset. Get a maintenance quote and Cojo's commercial-portfolio team will scope quarterly inspections, repaint cycles, and on-call repair across your sites.