A commercial tire spike strip is only legally defensible on private property when it's paired with proper Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD)-compliant signage. The minimum sign package: an R5-1 "Do Not Enter" at the decision point upstream of the strip, a W4-4 "Severe Tire Damage" warning at the lane mouth, and at least one custom property-specific warning sign at any line-of-sight gap. Without this chain, the strip reads more like an unmarked hazard than a recognized vehicle-flow control device — which materially weakens any liability defense after a wrong-way incident.
This guide is the placement spec. For background, see our commercial tire spike strips guide. For the install procedure see how to install a tire spike strip exit lane.
What signs are required for a parking lot exit spike strip?
The required signs for a parking lot tire spike strip exit lane are the MUTCD R5-1 "Do Not Enter" placed at the decision point upstream of the strip (typically 50 to 75 feet ahead), the MUTCD W4-4 "Severe Tire Damage" placed at the lane mouth within 30 feet of the strip, and at least one custom property-specific warning sign at any line-of-sight gap or where the lane geometry obscures the upstream signs. The Federal Highway Administration's MUTCD governs the controlling specifications (see FHWA MUTCD chapter 2B).
The Three Required Signs
1. R5-1 "Do Not Enter"
The R5-1 is a 30-inch by 30-inch white circle on a red background showing "DO NOT ENTER" in white text. Its job is to communicate at the decision point -- where a wrong-way driver would commit to entering the exit lane -- that the lane is not for entry. MUTCD specs:
- Color: Red background with white circle and white text
- Standard size: 30 in by 30 in (smaller 24-in version permitted in low-speed parking-lot context)
- Mounting height: 7 ft minimum to bottom of sign in commercial parking lots (5 ft minimum allowed in low-traffic settings)
- Distance from spike strip: 50 to 75 ft upstream typical
- Retroreflectivity: ASTM Type IV or higher sheeting (ASTM D4956)
2. W4-4 "Severe Tire Damage" or equivalent warning
The W4-4 is the MUTCD-classified warning that goes at the lane mouth, typically a 30-inch by 30-inch yellow diamond reading "SEVERE TIRE DAMAGE" or "TIRE DAMAGE" with the spike-symbol pictogram. Its job is to warn any driver who has missed the upstream R5-1 that a tire-damage device exists immediately ahead.
- Color: Yellow background with black text and pictogram
- Standard size: 30 in by 30 in
- Mounting height: 7 ft minimum to bottom of sign
- Distance from spike strip: within 30 ft of the strip, typically 15 to 25 ft
- Retroreflectivity: ASTM Type IV or higher
3. Custom property warning sign
Where the lane geometry creates a line-of-sight gap (a curve, a building corner, a landscape feature), a custom property warning sign covers the gap. Common phrasing: "ONE WAY EXIT ONLY -- DO NOT ENTER -- SEVERE TIRE DAMAGE." This sign is not a MUTCD-classified sign per se, but follows MUTCD warning-sign conventions for color (yellow) and retroreflectivity (Type IV).
Sign Placement Geometry
The three signs work as a chain. Each one catches drivers who missed the previous one. Standard placement geometry for an 8-foot strip in a 10-foot exit lane:
| Sign | Distance upstream of strip | Side of lane | Height to bottom |
|---|---|---|---|
| R5-1 Do Not Enter | 50 to 75 ft | Right shoulder | 7 ft |
| Custom warning (if needed) | 25 to 50 ft | Right shoulder or median | 7 ft |
| W4-4 Severe Tire Damage | 15 to 25 ft | Right shoulder | 7 ft |
Pavement Markings That Pair With Signage
The vertical signage chain works best when paired with pavement markings reinforcing the one-way direction:
- White directional arrows pointing OUT (away from strip, toward exit) painted in the lane
- White lane-edge stripes
- Optional "ONE WAY" or "EXIT" lettering painted on the pavement before the strip
For striping work bundled with spike-strip installs, see our Eugene parking lot striping page.
Sign Material and Lifespan
| Material | Lifespan | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| ASTM Type IV reflective sheeting on aluminum | 7 to 10 years | Standard commercial spec |
| ASTM Type VIII or IX (high-intensity prismatic) | 10 to 12 years | Premium spec for night-traffic-heavy sites |
| Aluminum substrate | 15+ years | Substrate outlasts the sheeting; replace sheeting before substrate |
Why ADA Bypass Affects Sign Placement
If the property has an ADA-compatible bypass lane separate from the spike-strip lane, signage at the decision point must clearly direct accessible traffic to the bypass and other traffic to the exit-only lane. A poorly worded sign chain that reads as "exit only" without an obvious bypass call-out creates ADA accessible-route obstruction concerns. The U.S. Access Board's ADAAG Section 4.3 governs accessible-route signage and obstruction (see U.S. Access Board ADAAG).
For deeper detail on the legal framework, see our are tire spikes legal on private property cluster article.
What about lighting?
Two lighting considerations matter on commercial spike-strip signage:
- Sign retroreflectivity depends on incoming headlight illumination. In sites with low ambient lighting and low headlight angles (parking-garage exits, recessed lots), signs may need supplemental fixed lighting or upgraded ASTM Type VIII/IX sheeting.
- Strip itself should be visible at night. Some manufacturers provide reflective tape or LED-illuminated edges. Especially important where the strip is recessed in-ground and visually subtle.
Common Signage Mistakes
Five mistakes routinely create liability exposure:
- Single sign, no decision-point R5-1 -- a property installs the W4-4 right at the strip but no R5-1 upstream; a wrong-way driver has no early warning
- Faded sheeting beyond minimum retroreflectivity -- signs that were code-compliant 8 years ago no longer meet MUTCD maintained-retroreflectivity standards
- Sign mounted too low -- below 5 ft height puts the sign in vehicle blind-spot range
- Wrong color -- R5-1 must be red and white; substituting an off-the-shelf "WRONG WAY" sign with different colors fails MUTCD compliance
- Custom signs with non-MUTCD wording -- "no entry," "stop -- spikes," and other freelance phrasing weakens the legal defense
Oregon-Specific Notes
Oregon's MUTCD adoption follows the federal manual. For installs that interface with state highway frontage, ODOT's adopted MUTCD (with Oregon-specific amendments) governs (see ODOT Traffic Engineering manuals). For installs entirely on private property with no public-way interface, federal MUTCD applies as the recognized standard.
Inspection and Maintenance
A signage chain should be inspected annually:
- Visual inspection of sheeting condition (no obvious fading, bullet holes, or vandalism)
- Verify mounting height is still 7 ft minimum
- Verify sign is plumb and faces oncoming traffic
- Verify post and base are sound
We include signage inspection in our annual spike-strip maintenance contract. For the full maintenance protocol, see tire spike strip clearance height for related ongoing inspection items.
Get a Signage-Compliant Quote
We include MUTCD-compliant signage on every commercial tire spike strip install across the Oregon I-5 corridor. Senior crew members hold NICET Level III, OSHA-30, and ODOT-certified flagger credentials.
Compliance disclaimer: Always verify current MUTCD revisions and your local jurisdiction's adopted version. This article reflects May 2026 specifications.