A wheel chock is a movable wedge placed under a vehicle tire to lock the vehicle in position temporarily, used at loading docks, fleet yards, and on slopes. A wheel stop is an anchored concrete or rubber barrier fixed at the head of a parking stall to stop forward motion at a defined point. Chocks address OSHA dock-safety and DOT roadside-safety regulations; wheel stops address ADA accessibility and parking-stall layout. The two products share vocabulary but solve unrelated problems and are not interchangeable.
What Is the Core Difference Between a Wheel Chock and a Wheel Stop?
The single sentence that captures the difference: chocks are placed; stops are anchored. A chock is a tool that the operator picks up, places, and removes as the work cycle requires. A wheel stop is a structural element installed once and left in place for the service life of the parking lot.
That distinction drives every other comparison. Chocks are movable, lightweight, and replaceable. Wheel stops are anchored, weigh 40 to 200 pounds per unit, and are designed to absorb repeated tire impacts without moving.
The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration recognizes the distinction at 29 CFR 1910.178(k), which uses the term "wheel chocks" specifically and excludes parking-stall barriers. The American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) F1638 standard for parking-stall barriers similarly uses "wheel stop" and excludes movable chocks. Both regulatory authorities draw the line where this article does.
How Do the Two Products Compare Side-by-Side?
| Feature | Wheel Chock | Wheel Stop |
|---|---|---|
| Anchored or movable | Movable | Anchored |
| Weight per unit | 5 to 25 lbs | 40 to 200 lbs |
| Material | Rubber, urethane, aluminum, wood | Concrete, rubber, recycled plastic |
| Position | Under tire | At parking stall head |
| Operator action | Place and remove every cycle | Install once, replace when damaged |
| Use case | Loading dock, fleet yard, slope hold | Parking stall depth control |
| Primary regulation | OSHA 29 CFR 1910.178(k), DOT 49 CFR 392.20 | ADA Section 502, ASTM F1638 |
| Service life | 5 to 30 years (material dependent) | 12 to 30 years (material dependent) |
| Cost per unit (typical) | $20 to $250 | $25 to $95 plus install |
When Do You Use a Wheel Chock?
Wheel chocks belong in five primary scenarios:
1. Loading Dock Operations
When a forklift enters a parked truck trailer, OSHA 29 CFR 1910.178(k)(1) requires both the truck's brakes set and chocks at the rear wheels. The chock prevents the truck from rolling forward off the dock when forklift load shifts the weight. This is the highest-volume industrial chock use case in the United States.
2. Fleet Yard Parking on Slopes
Class 8 truck and trailer fleets park on yard surfaces that may not be perfectly level. Chocks at downhill tires prevent roll if the parking brake fails or if the trailer separates from the tractor. The U.S. Department of Transportation 49 CFR 392.20 governs parked-CMV brake-set requirements.
3. Aviation Ramp Parking
Aircraft parked on ramps for fueling, maintenance, or layovers use chocks at the main landing gear. The Federal Aviation Administration's Advisory Circular 150/5210-25 covers ramp ground-handling equipment standards. Aviation chocks are typically aluminum with rope handles.
4. RV and Towable Trailer Stabilization
RV owners use chock pairs and X-pattern stabilizers between dual tires to prevent side-to-side rocking when parked. This is the consumer-recreational use case at the edge of the industrial chock category.
5. Construction Equipment Slope Parking
Heavy-equipment operators chock tracked and wheeled equipment when parking on grades. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics injury data tracks several rollaway-equipment fatalities per year, most preventable with proper chocking.
When Do You Use a Wheel Stop?
Wheel stops belong in six primary parking-lot scenarios:
1. ADA Accessible Parking Stalls
Wheel stops at the head of an accessible parking stall prevent vehicles from encroaching on the access aisle. The U.S. Access Board ADA Standards Section 502 governs accessible parking layout.
2. Standard Parking Stall Depth Control
Wheel stops set the forward limit of the parked vehicle so that bumpers do not overhang sidewalks or landscaping.
3. Cart Corral Protection
Concrete wheel stops at corral edges prevent vehicles from rolling into shopping cart returns.
4. Light-Pole and Equipment Standoff
Wheel stops at light-pole bases keep parked vehicles from striking the pole.
5. Drive-Thru Lane Termination
Wheel stops at the end of drive-thru lanes prevent inadvertent rollover into adjacent traffic.
6. Fleet Yard Trailer Parking Layout
Heavy-duty wheel stops at the head of trailer-parking stalls control trailer position. See our wheel stops buyer's guide for the complete wheel-stop product taxonomy.
Can a Wheel Chock Replace a Wheel Stop?
No. The two products do not satisfy the same compliance requirements and are not interchangeable in either direction.
A wheel chock cannot satisfy ADA Section 502 because the chock is not anchored. A vehicle striking a chock can push the chock out of position, and an unanchored chock does not provide the consistent stall-depth boundary that ADA accessible parking requires.
A wheel stop cannot satisfy OSHA 29 CFR 1910.178(k) because the stop is not under the tire. The OSHA regulation specifically requires the chocks to be placed against the tire to prevent rolling. A wheel stop at the head of a parking stall is in front of the tire when the vehicle is parked, not under it.
The Cojo retrofit team has photographed multiple Oregon dock sites where managers had attempted to substitute wheel stops for chocks at loading positions. Each one was cited during OSHA general-industry inspections. The remediation was always the same: install proper chocks at every dock position and reuse the misplaced wheel stops at standard parking stalls elsewhere on the property.
Do Some Sites Need Both?
Yes -- most industrial properties need both products at the same site, in different locations.
A typical Hillsboro warehouse layout includes wheel chocks at every loading-dock door (mandatory under OSHA), heavy-duty wheel stops at every Class 8 trailer parking stall in the yard (parking-layout control), and standard wheel stops at every ADA and visitor parking stall at the front of the building (ADA Section 502 compliance). The same site uses three product subcategories that share vocabulary and visual similarity but address three different regulatory requirements.
What Does Each Cost in 2026?
Industry Baseline Range
| Product | Per-Unit Range | Installation |
|---|---|---|
| Rubber wheel chock, 8 to 12 inch | $20 to $50 | None (movable) |
| Heavy-duty rubber chock, 15+ inch | $40 to $90 | None |
| Urethane wheel chock | $40 to $180 | None |
| Aluminum aviation chock | $90 to $500 | None |
| Concrete wheel stop, 6x6x72 | $25 to $60 | $40 to $100 install |
| Heavy-duty concrete wheel stop, 8x6x84 | $50 to $95 | $80 to $200 install |
| Recycled rubber wheel stop | $35 to $80 | $40 to $100 install |
Current Market Reality
Both product categories track recycled-content sourcing and Pacific Northwest freight increases. Concrete wheel stops add a labor and anchor cost that chocks do not have; chocks deliver immediate operational use without an install crew. The total-cost comparison should account for the install cycle.
Where Has Cojo Specified Both Products at the Same Site?
In March 2026 Cojo specified the parking-products package for a Hillsboro warehouse expansion. The site received 24 heavy-duty rubber chocks (12 dock positions, 2 per position) for OSHA dock-safety compliance, 18 heavy-duty concrete wheel stops (8x6x84) at Class 8 trailer parking stalls in the yard, and 32 standard 6x6x72 concrete wheel stops at the front-building ADA and visitor stalls. The lead estimator (NICET Level III, OSHA-30 certified) walked the site with the warehouse facility manager and the OSHA-compliance officer to verify that every regulated area received the correct product class. See our OSHA wheel chock requirements guide for the dock-side compliance detail.
Get a Wheel Chock and Wheel Stop Specification Quote
The wheel-chock-vs-wheel-stop decision rarely cuts cleanly across an industrial site. Most sites need both, in different locations, for different reasons. Cojo's site walks identify which product belongs where and specify accordingly. Get a custom quote.