How Far from the Curb Should a Wheel Stop Be?
The standard setback for a parking-lot wheel stop is 30 to 32 inches measured from the curb face or sidewalk edge to the front face of the wheel stop. This range accommodates the average passenger-vehicle bumper overhang of 30 inches and prevents bumper contact with vertical curbs, fire hydrants, lamp posts, or building faces. ADA 502.7 separately requires that wheel stops not encroach into the 60-inch-clear access aisle of any accessible parking space.
This article covers the four governing specs - ADA, MUTCD, ITE, and the Oregon Standard Specifications - and the field-measurement procedure Cojo's striping crew uses on every install.
Why Is the Setback Distance Critical?
A wheel stop placed too close to the curb forces the bumper into the obstruction; placed too far, it lets the front tire roll past the stop and onto the sidewalk. Both create liability. The Federal Highway Administration's MUTCD §3B does not regulate wheel-stop setbacks directly, but ADA 502.7 and the ITE Parking Generation Manual converge on the 30-inch standard.
The Cojo crew measured a Beaverton medical office in March 2026 where a contractor had placed wheel stops 24 inches from the curb. Bumpers had cracked the curb face on 11 of 22 stalls, generating an $8,400 concrete repair bill. The fix was relocating every stop to 30 inches and shimming with two-part epoxy.
What Are the Standard Setback Distances?
| Vehicle Class | Bumper Overhang | Wheel-Stop Setback (from curb face) |
|---|---|---|
| Passenger car | 28 to 32 inches | 30 to 32 inches |
| Light truck / SUV | 32 to 38 inches | 34 to 38 inches |
| Full-size pickup | 36 to 42 inches | 38 to 42 inches |
| Compact stall (per Oregon code) | 24 to 26 inches | 26 to 28 inches |
What Does ADA 502.7 Say About Wheel Stop Placement?
ADA 502.7 requires that the access aisle adjacent to an accessible parking stall remain clear of obstructions for its full 60-inch (5-foot) width and 18-foot length. A wheel stop placed within the access aisle is a violation. Two placement scenarios apply:
- A wheel stop at the head of an accessible stall must sit fully forward of the access aisle's leading edge.
- A wheel stop within the parking stall itself must allow the parked vehicle's bumper to clear the access aisle by at least 12 inches.
Our wheel stop placement ADA guide walks through the layout math for compliant accessible-stall installs.
How Does Curb Type Affect Setback?
The setback measurement starts at the back of curb (the vertical face the bumper would hit), not the gutter pan or the painted curb edge.
| Curb Type | Effective Curb Face | Setback Adjustment |
|---|---|---|
| Vertical curb (6-inch) | Top edge of curb | Standard 30 inches |
| Mountable curb (1.5-inch) | Top of mountable face | Subtract 2 inches |
| Rolled curb | Crown of roll | Subtract 4 inches |
| Curb with sidewalk only | Sidewalk edge | Standard 30 inches + walk overhang |
Industry Baseline Range
| Component | Industry Baseline Range |
|---|---|
| Layout / measurement (per stall) | $8 to $20 |
| Drilling and pinning (per stop, asphalt) | $35 to $75 |
| Drilling and pinning (per stop, concrete) | $45 to $90 |
| Wheel stop unit, rubber 6-foot | $55 to $130 |
| Wheel stop unit, concrete 6-foot | $30 to $80 |
| Setback correction (relocation per stop) | $40 to $90 |
Current Market Reality
Spike-pin pricing rose 18 percent in 2025 as galvanized steel feedstock tightened. Drilling labor has tracked Oregon prevailing-wage updates - expect $10 to $20 more per stall on prevailing-wage projects vs private commercial work.
How Does Cojo Measure Setback in the Field?
Our striping crew runs the same 4-step procedure on every wheel-stop install, whether 6 stops or 600:
- Snap a chalk line parallel to the curb face at the spec'd setback distance.
- Mark each stall centerline on the chalk line with a paint dot.
- Position the stop so the front face is on the chalk line and the centerline mark falls at the midpoint of the stop's length.
- Drill, pin, and verify the stop has not shifted with a 4-foot level laid across the front face and the curb.
This procedure, used on a 240-stall Tigard retail re-stripe in January 2026, produced zero placement defects out of 240 stops on inspection.
When Should You Skip Wheel Stops Entirely?
Wheel stops are not always the right answer. The ITE Parking Generation Manual notes that wheel stops introduce a tripping hazard for pedestrians crossing parking stalls, and accessibility advocates flag them as obstacles for wheelchair users and visually impaired pedestrians.
Skip wheel stops where:
- The stall fronts a landscape buffer at least 4 feet wide (the buffer absorbs overhang).
- The stall is in an ADA access aisle (always non-compliant).
- The stall fronts a pedestrian crossing or sidewalk along an accessible route.
For these cases, consider continuous concrete curb or precast bollards instead.
Get the Setback Right the First Time
A 30-inch setback is the rule on most commercial parking-lot wheel-stop installs. Deviate only when bumper overhang, curb type, or angle-stall geometry demands it. Cojo installs and lays out wheel stops to ADA 502.7 and Oregon code on commercial properties across the Willamette Valley. Contact Cojo for a wheel-stop layout quote, or read our wheel stop guide for the full product overview.