A warehouse speed bump is a heavy-duty rubber, asphalt, or concrete unit installed in a warehouse aisle, on a loading-dock approach, or in a distribution-center yard to keep forklift and truck speeds safe. Warehouse bumps need to be rated for at least 10,000 pounds of repeat axle load and anchored with hardware that holds up to forklift impacts at 5 to 10 mph. OSHA 1910.178 requires forklifts to operate at speeds that let the operator stop safely, and speed bumps are a recognized engineered control for hitting that bar.
Below: how OSHA reads on this, product selection, anchor specs, and a warehouse install from our books. For non-forklift-rated bumps, see What Are Speed Bumps? Complete 2026 Buyer's Guide.
What does OSHA say about warehouse speed bumps?
OSHA 1910.178(n)(7) -- the powered-industrial-truck regulation -- requires forklifts to "travel at a speed that will permit them to be brought to a stop in a safe manner." OSHA does not specify a numeric speed limit. The federal rule is performance-based: the employer is responsible for engineering controls and training that produce safe stopping distances.
In practice, every warehouse-safety auditor expects to see at least one of three engineered controls:
- Convex mirrors at intersections (see convex mirrors and parking-lot safety)
- Speed bumps at high-traffic intersections, dock approaches, and pedestrian-crossing areas
- Painted speed-limit signs with chevron-marked floor patterns
Speed bumps are the most enforceable of the three. A mirror requires a driver to look; a sign requires a driver to read; a bump requires the forklift to physically slow. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) reports that approximately 85 forklift fatalities and 35,000 serious injuries occur annually in U.S. workplaces, and crushing-against-fixed-object incidents -- the type that bumps and wheel stops mitigate -- account for roughly 25 percent of those events.
What is different about a warehouse speed bump versus a parking-lot bump?
Five differences separate warehouse-grade from parking-lot-grade product:
| Element | Parking-lot bump | Warehouse bump |
|---|---|---|
| Axle-load rating | 4,000 to 6,000 lb | 10,000 to 30,000 lb |
| Anchor pattern | 4 to 6 anchors per 6 ft | 8 to 12 anchors per 6 ft |
| Material | Recycled rubber, asphalt, plastic | Recycled rubber (high-density) or steel-reinforced concrete |
| Cross-section | Parabolic, 3 to 4 in tall | Parabolic, 2.5 to 3 in tall (lower for forklift mast clearance) |
| Marking | Yellow-and-black chevron | High-contrast chevron plus floor stripes leading in |
Where in a warehouse should speed bumps go?
Five locations cover most warehouse risk:
1. Aisle intersections
Two-aisle and four-aisle intersections are the highest-fatality location for forklift collisions according to NIOSH. A 6-foot rubber bump 8 feet before the intersection forces a slow approach and gives the operator time to use a convex mirror or look both ways.
2. Dock-door approaches
A truck approaching a loading dock at 8 to 10 mph that fails to stop in time crashes into the dock-door frame, the leveler, or a warehouse worker. A bump 15 to 20 feet from the dock-door face slows the truck to walking speed before it reaches the dock seal.
3. Pedestrian crossings
Where a marked pedestrian path crosses an aisle, a bump on the aisle (not on the pedestrian path) forces forklifts to slow before the conflict point.
4. Yard entry from the street
A truck entering a yard from a public street at 25 mph and continuing into a yard with parked trailers and ground workers is a known fatality scenario. A bump 30 to 50 feet inside the gate enforces the transition from public-road speed to yard speed.
5. Battery-charging-room approaches
Forklifts entering a battery-charging room at speed have caused electrical-fault and thermal-runaway incidents. A bump at the door restricts entry to walking speed.
What anchor hardware does a warehouse bump need?
Warehouse-grade rubber bumps require 8 to 12 concrete anchors per 6-foot section -- roughly double the anchor count of a parking-lot install. Cojo's specification on the Tualatin DC install:
- 1/2-inch by 4-inch concrete wedge anchors
- Drill depth: 3.5 inches into the concrete slab
- Torque: 35 ft-lb per anchor
- Anchor spacing: every 9 inches along the bump centerline, plus 4 corner anchors
For an asphalt warehouse yard, switch to 5/8-inch by 6-inch asphalt-anchor spikes with epoxy injection to compensate for the softer substrate. Cojo's standard yard-install procedure injects a 2-ounce epoxy charge into each anchor hole before driving the spike, which improves pull-out resistance by approximately 40 percent in field testing.
For step-by-step install, see how to anchor a rubber speed bump.
Real install: Cojo's 60,000-square-foot Tualatin distribution center
In February 2026, Cojo installed eight rubber speed bumps in a 60,000-square-foot Tualatin distribution center. The site had two pedestrian-crossing fatalities-near-misses in the prior 18 months.
Specification:
- Eight 6-foot recycled-rubber bumps, 3 inches tall
- Yellow-and-black chevron molded into the rubber
- Reflective tape strips on each bump end
- Locations: two aisle intersections, three dock-door approaches, two pedestrian-crossings, one yard entry
- Total install time: 14 crew-hours
- Pre-install 85th-percentile forklift speed (radar-measured): 18 mph
- Post-install 85th-percentile forklift speed (radar-measured): 7 mph
The site safety manager attributes the speed reduction to the combination of bumps plus a refresher training session. ITE traffic-calming research confirms the multiplicative effect: bumps plus signage plus training produce sustained speed reductions, while bumps alone show some driver re-acceleration within 90 days.
What other engineered controls should pair with a warehouse speed bump?
Three controls compound the effect of a warehouse bump:
1. Wheel stops at dock-edge
A 3-inch bump alone does not prevent a runaway forklift from rolling off a dock-edge. Pair every dock-edge with a steel or concrete wheel stop bolted into the dock-floor 4 inches from the edge.
2. Pedestrian-aisle striping
Yellow or green floor stripes that define the pedestrian path tell forklift operators where conflicts occur. The bump enforces a slow approach to the conflict; the stripes tell the operator where to look.
3. Painted speed-limit text
The number "5 MPH" painted in 24-inch-tall white letters every 50 feet along the aisle reinforces the bump-imposed speed limit. OSHA inspectors frequently photograph this combination as evidence of an engineered control program.
Cost of installing speed bumps in a warehouse
Industry Baseline Range for a forklift-rated warehouse speed-bump install:
| Item | Industry Baseline Range |
|---|---|
| Heavy-duty rubber bump (6-ft section, installed) | $400 to $900+ |
| Steel-reinforced concrete bump (precast, installed) | $700 to $2,000+ |
| Anchor hardware (per bump) | $50 to $150 |
| Floor striping integration (per bump) | $80 to $200 |
| OSHA documentation packet | $250 to $600 |
Current Market Reality
2026 warehouse-install pricing reflects elevated commercial-insurance rates for after-hours work, Oregon prevailing-wage requirements, and OSHA documentation standards that did not exist in older baseline data sets.
For DC managers in Hillsboro, Tualatin, Wilsonville, and the broader Portland metro, contact Cojo for a site-specific assessment.