The traffic paint versus thermoplastic question is not actually a paint question -- it is a traffic-count and climate question with cost implications. Below roughly 5,000 average daily traffic (ADT) on a parking lot or local road, paint wins on total cost. Above 10,000 ADT or in heavy freeze-thaw climates, thermoplastic wins on total cost despite its higher per-foot install price. This decision matrix walks through the four variables that decide which one is right for your project.
What is the quick answer?
For a Pacific Northwest commercial parking lot under 5,000 ADT and a five-year horizon, traffic paint is cheaper, faster to install, and adequate. For an arterial road, an industrial driveway moving heavy trucks, or any project where reopening the lot quickly is non-negotiable, thermoplastic is the right call. The crossover is at roughly 5,000 ADT or a 5-year horizon, whichever comes first. For a deeper TCO walk-through, see traffic paint vs thermoplastic cost comparison.
How do the two materials compare?
| Spec | Traffic Paint | Thermoplastic |
|---|---|---|
| Material form | Liquid coating | Hot-applied resin (350 to 440 F) or preformed sheet |
| Mil thickness installed | 6 to 8 mil dry | 90 to 125 mil |
| Cure time | 15 to 30 min | 1 to 5 min (cool to no-pickup) |
| Lifespan (5,000 ADT lot) | 12 to 24 months | 60 to 96 months |
| Lifespan (highway, 15,000+ ADT) | 6 to 12 months | 36 to 60 months |
| Per linear foot installed | $0.30 to $0.65 | $1.20 to $3.50 |
| Equipment | Airless striper | Hand-liner or ride-on melter, or hand torch |
| Substrate temp floor | 50 F (waterborne) | 50 F |
| Cold-weather option | Solvent alkyd (35 F) | Preformed (substrate must still be 50 F+) |
When does traffic paint win the matrix?
Traffic paint is the right call when:
- Parking lot under 5,000 ADT. Most retail centers, HOAs, schools, and small office complexes fall here. The Federal Highway Administration's National Household Travel Survey reports that the majority of suburban commercial lots see well under 5,000 daily vehicles.
- Tight repaint budget with predictable annual maintenance. Traffic paint pays for itself when the property manager has line-item budget for a 12-to-24-month repaint cycle.
- Frequent layout changes. Retail centers re-tenanting, school zones changing bus loops, airport employee lots resequencing -- paint can be re-laid easily; thermoplastic requires grinding.
- Cold-weather rush jobs. Solvent alkyd traffic paint cures down to 35 F substrate; thermoplastic application still needs 50 F substrate even though the material itself is hot.
When does thermoplastic win?
Thermoplastic is the right call when:
- Public road, intersection, or arterial. Above 5,000 ADT, the wear curve flips and paint needs annual repainting. The Oregon DOT's pavement marking specification (Section 00867) defaults to thermoplastic on most state-maintained surfaces.
- High-traffic retail anchor stores. Big-box drives, warehouse club fuel lanes, and major hospital entrances see truck and high-frequency car traffic that grinds paint off in months.
- Reopen-now project. Thermoplastic cools to no-pickup in 1 to 5 minutes, versus 15 to 30 minutes for waterborne paint. For drive-thru and fuel-lane work this matters.
- Five-year property hold. When the owner is planning to repaint zero to one times in five years, thermoplastic's $1.20-to-$3.50 per linear foot install beats five rounds of paint at $0.30 to $0.65 per linear foot.
For a chemistry-side comparison rather than a material-side one, our traffic paint chemistry comparison walks the five paint resin systems in detail.
How does climate change the matrix?
Pacific Northwest moderate climate is friendly to both materials. Three climate factors push the decision:
- Freeze-thaw. Eastern Oregon, Idaho, and the Cascades shoulder belt see 60+ freeze-thaw cycles per winter. Paint micro-cracks; thermoplastic holds. Push toward thermoplastic in those zones.
- High-desert UV. Bend, Redmond, and central Oregon see UV well above coastal average. Paint fades faster, especially yellow. Push toward thermoplastic, or to MMA cold-plastic if substrate is concrete.
- Wet substrate windows. Coastal Oregon's wet shoulder seasons compress the painting window. Thermoplastic needs the same dry substrate but cures fast enough to use a 30-minute weather break.
What about budget?
The cheapest option day-one is traffic paint. The cheapest option over five years on a 5,000-plus ADT lot is thermoplastic. Run the math like this:
| Year | Traffic Paint Total | Thermoplastic Total |
|---|---|---|
| 0 (install) | $1,500 | $4,800 |
| 1 | $1,500 | $4,800 |
| 2 (paint repaint) | $3,000 | $4,800 |
| 3 | $3,000 | $4,800 |
| 4 (paint repaint) | $4,500 | $4,800 |
| 5 | $4,500 | $4,800 |
| 6 (paint repaint) | $6,000 | $4,800 |
Cojo install reference -- a real decision
In February 2026, a property manager off Coburg Road in Eugene asked us to bid two options on the same 22,000-square-foot retail lot: full thermoplastic re-stripe versus three rounds of waterborne paint over five years. The lot moves about 3,800 ADT (counted via in-lot pneumatic tube over 7 days). At 3,800 ADT, the paint option pencils out cheaper over five years -- our recommendation was waterborne acrylic on a 24-month cycle. Thermoplastic would have been the right answer above 5,000 ADT or if the manager planned a 7-year hold. We re-striped in waterborne acrylic in March, 14 gallons across 76 stalls and 4 ADA spaces. For Eugene-area supply context see our traffic paint supply Eugene Oregon page.
Get a paint-vs-thermoplastic recommendation.