A speed table typically costs $5,000 to $15,000 per table installed in 2026, with standard asphalt installs on the lower end and brick-inlay or concrete designs on the upper end. The Federal Highway Administration's Traffic Calming ePrimer Module 3.3 lists national construction costs in a similar range when adjusted for inflation. The price spread comes from material, marked-crosswalk integration, traffic-control complexity, and site conditions. The numbers below are industry baselines; site-specific quotes should reflect your street.
What Does a Speed Table Cost in 2026?
Industry Baseline Range
| Configuration | Per-table installed |
|---|---|
| Standard 22-foot asphalt | $5,000 to $9,000 |
| Asphalt with marked crosswalk | $5,800 to $10,500 |
| Sinusoidal asphalt | $6,500 to $11,000 |
| Brick-inlay | $9,000 to $15,000+ |
| Concrete | $8,000 to $14,000 |
| Modular rubber | $4,500 to $8,500 |
Current Market Reality
Speed table costs in 2026 reflect three years of construction-cost inflation. Asphalt cement (PG-grade binder) is up roughly 18% across 2024 and 2025 per the BLS PPI series WPU0581. Aggregate prices climbed with diesel pass-through. Oregon prevailing-wage rates for paving work moved up with regional construction inflation, and traffic-control labor (flaggers, signage, advance warning) now commonly runs 12 to 18% of the line item on streets where lane closure is required. None of these costs are reverting in 2026.
Why Does the Price Range Span $10,000?
A speed table is not a stock product; it is a paving operation with specific geometry. Eight factors drive the line item:
What Affects the Per-Table Price?
- Material. Asphalt is the cheapest. Concrete adds 30 to 60%. Brick-inlay adds 50 to 90% over standard asphalt because hand-laid pavers and structural sub-base both cost more.
- Length and width. A 22-foot table on a 24-foot residential street costs less than the same table on a 36-foot collector street with two travel lanes plus parking. Curb-to-curb width drives material volume.
- Profile geometry. Sinusoidal ramp profiles cost 10 to 20% more than parabolic ramps because forming requires custom screed templates and careful hand-finishing.
- Marked crosswalk integration. A speed table with a marked pedestrian crossing on the flat top adds pavement marking labor, advance warning signage, and (sometimes) rectangular rapid-flashing beacons. Add $800 to $2,500.
- Sub-base preparation. A table over existing pavement that has cracking, oxidation, or inadequate sub-base needs spot rebuild before the table goes down. Add $500 to $2,000.
- Traffic control. A residential street install with a single lane closure during off-peak hours costs less than a collector-street install requiring 2 flaggers, full lane closure with detour, and night work.
- Mobilization. A single table on one street costs more per table than three tables on the same corridor.
- Permit and design review. Some Oregon cities require neighborhood-traffic-calming program approval, fire-marshal sign-off, and engineering review. Permit fees and engineering documentation add $300 to $1,200 per project.
How Does Speed Table Cost Compare with Speed Bumps and Speed Cushions?
| Device | Typical installed cost | When it wins |
|---|---|---|
| Speed bump (rubber) | $200 to $800 | Parking lots, low-speed access lanes |
| Speed hump (asphalt) | $1,500 to $5,000 | Residential streets without transit or fire-access concerns |
| Speed cushion | $2,500 to $8,000+ | Streets needing fire-access preservation |
| Speed table | $5,000 to $15,000+ | Streets with marked crosswalks, transit routes, or longer device length |
What Goes Into a Speed Table Quote?
A typical line-item breakdown for a standard 22-foot asphalt table:
| Line item | Cost range |
|---|---|
| Material (hot-mix asphalt, binder, aggregate) | $1,500 to $3,200 |
| Sub-base preparation | $400 to $1,500 |
| Paving labor (crew + equipment) | $1,800 to $3,500 |
| Traffic control | $500 to $1,800 |
| Mobilization | $400 to $900 |
| Pavement marking | $400 to $900 |
| Advance warning signage | $300 to $600 |
| Permit and engineering review | $200 to $1,200 |
How Much Does a Multi-Table Set Cost?
Most residential traffic-calming installs use 2 to 4 speed tables along a corridor to maintain consistent speed reduction between blocks. Set pricing reflects mobilization and traffic-control sharing:
- 2 tables: $9,500 to $17,500 ($4,750 to $8,750 per table)
- 3 tables: $13,000 to $25,000 ($4,300 to $8,300 per table)
- 5 tables: $20,000 to $40,000 ($4,000 to $8,000 per table)
Per-table cost drops with quantity because mobilization, traffic-control set-up, advance warning signage, and permit costs amortize across the whole job. For multi-table corridors Cojo specs the entire set in one work order to capture the volume break.
How Much Does a Brick-Inlay Speed Table Cost?
Brick-inlay tables cost $9,000 to $15,000+ per table because two trades are involved: paving crew for the asphalt ramps and structural slab, plus a hardscape crew for the brick or paver inlay. Material cost on the inlay alone runs $1,500 to $4,000 depending on paver selection. Hand-laying pavers takes 4 to 6 hours per table for a two-person crew. Brick-inlay tables are common in historic Portland and Eugene neighborhoods where design review requires visual integration with adjacent streetscape.
From Our Crew
In April 2025 Cojo installed three standard 22-foot asphalt speed tables on a Lake Oswego neighborhood greenway. The all-in contracted price for the three-table set landed within the $13,000 to $25,000 baseline range, broken down by line item exactly as the table above. The Lake Oswego Neighborhood Association cosponsored the project under the city's residential traffic-calming program, which reduced homeowner cost-share to roughly 30% of the contract.
What Cost-Share Programs Reduce Resident Cost?
Several Oregon municipalities run residential traffic-calming cost-share programs that fund speed table installs:
- Portland Bureau of Transportation, under Neighborhood Greenways and Traffic Calming
- Salem Public Works, residential traffic-calming program
- Eugene Public Works, paired with Vision Zero priority corridors
- Bend Municipal Code 8.05, governing the cost-share framework
Always verify current program eligibility, funding levels, and waitlist with the issuing jurisdiction before assuming a particular cost-share rate. For Eugene-area installs see Speed Table Installation Eugene.
Need a Speed Table Quote?
Cojo provides speed table installation across the Oregon I-5 corridor. We coordinate the city traffic-calming application packet, field survey, paving, traffic control, and pavement marking in one scope. See speed table dimensions for the geometry the city traffic engineer will require, speed tables guide for the broader product overview, or pair the install with our asphalt maintenance services. Get a custom quote.