Stop and Yield Pavement Word Stencils for Parking Lots
Painted STOP and YIELD legends on parking-lot pavement are a quiet, repeated cue at every aisle intersection. The federal letter-height and stop-bar specs live in MUTCD Sections 3B.16 and 3B.20, and most code-cycle reviewers expect those minimums even on a fully private lot. Stencil kits that match the federal pattern produce legends drivers read at low speed without missing the cue.
What Is a Stop or Yield Pavement Word Stencil?
A pavement word stencil is a reusable LDPE cutout (1/16-inch or 1/8-inch thickness) used to apply the words STOP or YIELD on parking-lot pavement with traffic paint. Standard private-lot installations use 24- to 48-inch letter heights per MUTCD Section 3B.20, paired with a 12- to 24-inch-wide stop bar painted across the approach lane. Cojo installed 6 STOP legends and 4 stop bars on a Salem grocery-anchor pad in March 2026 using 24-inch reusable LDPE letters and 18-mil wet traffic paint.
What Letter Height Does MUTCD Require for STOP Pavement Words?
The FHWA MUTCD Section 3B.20 sets pavement word letter heights based on roadway speed. For private parking lots posted at 5 to 15 mph, the federal pattern translates as:
| Posted speed | MUTCD letter height | Common parking-lot use |
|---|---|---|
| 5 to 10 mph | 24 in to 36 in | Aisle stop, ADA approach |
| 10 to 15 mph | 36 in to 48 in | Lot exit to public ROW, drive-thru pickup |
| 25 mph or higher (public road) | 96 in (8 ft) | Public-roadway STOP bar |
Where Should I Place a STOP Pavement Word in a Parking Lot?
Cojo applies STOP pavement words at these locations:
- 20 to 30 feet ahead of the stop bar. The driver should read STOP before reaching the bar so the stop is anticipated, not reflexive.
- At every aisle intersection where a sign-warranted stop exists. A pavement STOP without a vertical sign is advisory; a pavement STOP paired with a sign is enforceable.
- At every lot exit to public ROW. Even if the public-side has a stop sign, the in-lot pavement word reduces rolling exits.
- At ADA-stall approach lanes. A 24-inch STOP at the approach to a van-accessible stall is a standard ADA-coordinator request, not a federal mandate, but it reduces door-strike incidents.
What About YIELD Pavement Words?
YIELD pavement words follow the same letter-height pattern as STOP and apply at:
- T-intersections inside the lot where one aisle clearly merges into another
- Drive-thru queue merges where a secondary lane joins the main flow
- Single-direction circulation where one aisle yields to another at a low-angle approach
YIELD is the right call when a full stop would interrupt natural flow but a defined right-of-way is needed. STOP is the right call when sight lines are limited, vehicle volumes cross, or a pedestrian crossing is involved. Mixing the two on the same intersection is a code-review red flag.
What Stop Bar Goes With a STOP Pavement Word?
The companion to a pavement STOP is the stop bar -- a solid white transverse line painted across the approach lane. Stop bar specs:
- Width: 12 to 24 inches (MUTCD Section 3B.16 minimum is 12 inches; private-lot best practice is 18 to 24 inches for low-speed visibility)
- Length: Full lane width, terminating 4 inches from each lane edge
- Placement: 4 feet from the crosswalk, edge of intersecting roadway, or stop sign line of sight
- Color: Solid white
A pavement word STOP without a bar is incomplete and can be cited in code-cycle review. A bar without a pavement word is also incomplete on a private lot where signage is sparse.
What Paint Thickness for a STOP or YIELD Pavement Word?
- Wet film thickness: 16 to 25 mil for water-based traffic paint
- Dry film thickness: 8 to 13 mil water-based; 90 to 125 mil thermoplastic
- Glass-bead drop: 6 to 8 pounds per gallon of paint, AASHTO M247 Type 1, applied while wet
- Cure time: 30 to 90 minutes to traffic-tracking-safe at 65 to 80 degrees F
The glass-bead drop matters most on STOP legends because the cue is night-critical -- a STOP that only reads in daylight is functionally absent at 9 PM. Lots with insurance or risk-management oversight typically require the bead drop in spec.
Are STOP Stencils Required on a Private Parking Lot?
Private lots are not bound by MUTCD on every detail. The federal stop sign warrant in MUTCD Section 2B.04 governs public roads. On a private lot, a pavement STOP is advisory unless the city or county has adopted private-property traffic-control ordinances (Portland Title 16 and Salem Chapter 79 do not enforce private-lot pavement words; Eugene Code 9.6750 cites them as a permit condition for new commercial site plans).
Code-cycle reviewers and fire-marshal inspections do require STOP and yield legends in many cases:
- Fire-lane intersections (per NFPA 1 Section 18.2.3.5)
- Approved drive-thru queue exits
- Site-plan-required circulation patterns
- ADA stall approach lanes when designated by the accessibility coordinator
What Does a STOP or YIELD Stencil Cost?
Industry Baseline Range
| Component | Spec | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Reusable LDPE STOP stencil (24 in letters) | 1/8 in | $80 to $180 |
| Reusable LDPE STOP stencil (48 in letters) | 1/8 in | $180 to $380+ |
| Reusable LDPE YIELD stencil (24 in letters) | 1/8 in | $90 to $200 |
| Water-based paint per pavement word | 16 to 25 mil wet | $12 to $35 |
| Stop bar (per linear foot, 18 in wide) | Painted | $2 to $5+ |
| Labor per pavement word (paint, on existing prep) | Field | $35 to $95+ |
Current Market Reality
Pavement word legends typically batch into a re-stripe contract where mobilization is shared across stalls, arrows, and legends. Stand-alone STOP-only call-outs run 25 to 40 percent above the baseline because mobilization recovers across few words. 2026 traffic-paint pricing tracked 6 to 10 percent above 2025 on titanium-dioxide pigment cost; thermoplastic preformed legends went higher on resin volatility.
Real-World Cojo Install: Salem Grocery Anchor Pad
On a 22,000-square-foot Salem grocery anchor pad in March 2026, Cojo installed 6 STOP pavement words at aisle intersections and 4 stop bars at approach lanes. We used 1/8-inch LDPE stencils with 24-inch letter height, 18-mil wet traffic paint, and a 6-pound-per-gallon glass-bead drop. Cure to traffic-tracking-safe was 70 minutes at 62 degrees F; full cure was 22 hours. The lot's site-plan-approved circulation pattern designated 4 of those locations as code-required pavement words.
Pair Pavement Words with Signs for Real Enforceability
A pavement STOP is a visual cue. The legal stop -- the one that survives a fender-bender insurance argument -- comes from a vertical R1-1 sign paired with the pavement word. On a private lot, the signage decision is the property owner's, but lots that strip signs and rely only on pavement words tend to see rolling-stop incidents at the same intersection year after year.
For specifications on the underlying federal vertical-sign warrant, the FHWA MUTCD Section 2B.04 sets the public-road standard. Private-lot owners who match the public pattern produce intersections drivers treat with the same instinct.
Get the Stop and Yield Spec Right
A pavement STOP that is too small, off-pattern, or unpaired with a stop bar fails its purpose -- and a re-paint to fix it costs more than getting it right at the first application. Cojo applies MUTCD-pattern STOP and YIELD pavement words as part of every commercial line-striping job. Contact Cojo for a stop-and-yield scope on your next re-stripe.