How to Paint and Stripe Wheel Stops
What is the right way to paint a wheel stop?
Clean the stop with degreaser and dry it completely. Mask the surrounding asphalt. Apply two coats of acrylic latex traffic paint or chlorinated rubber solvent paint, depending on substrate (latex on rubber stops, solvent on concrete). Use safety yellow for standard stalls, ADA blue for accessible stalls per Oregon MUTCD. Add a 1-inch ASTM Type III reflective tape strip on the front face for night visibility. Total cure time is 24 to 48 hours before vehicle traffic.
Key takeaways
- Latex traffic paint bonds well to rubber wheel stops; solvent paint bonds better to concrete
- ADA-accessible stalls require blue painted wheel stops in Oregon (ORS 447.233 + state MUTCD)
- Reflective tape adds night-visibility per OSHA 1910.144 color-code recommendations
- Cure time before traffic is 24 hours minimum, 48 hours in temperatures below 60 degrees F
- Repainting cycle is 12 to 18 months for latex, 3 to 5 years for thermoplastic on concrete
What kind of paint works on wheel stops?
The substrate decides the paint:
- Concrete wheel stops: chlorinated rubber traffic paint, MMA (methyl methacrylate), or thermoplastic. The Federal Highway Administration's pavement marking guidance covers MMA and thermoplastic specifications. Solvent-based products penetrate concrete and resist freeze-thaw better than waterborne products.
- Rubber and recycled-rubber wheel stops: acrylic latex traffic paint. Solvent paints can soften vulcanized rubber and reduce the bond. Latex flexes with the rubber substrate and survives compression cycles.
- Plastic wheel stops: specialty polyolefin-compatible paint. Most generic traffic paints will not bond. Some plastic stops come pre-pigmented; verify whether painting is needed before ordering.
For ADA-accessible stalls, the color is blue regardless of substrate. The Federal Standard 595C color reference is 15090 (close to PMS 286). Most traffic-paint brands stock this exact color labeled "ADA blue" or "handicap blue."
What colors does each stall type use?
Oregon's MUTCD reference and ORS 447.233 set the de facto color code for parking-lot wheel stops:
| Stall Type | Wheel Stop Color | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Standard customer | Safety yellow | High contrast, OSHA 1910.144 caution color |
| ADA accessible | Blue (FED-STD 15090) | Required match to ISA symbol background |
| Fire lane | Red | If present at all; many fire codes prohibit in-lane stops |
| Loading zone | Yellow with diagonal black stripes | OSHA 1910.144 striped-warning convention |
| Reserved / VIP | White | Owner discretion; not a regulated color |
| Electric vehicle charging | Green or unpainted | OSHA neutral; some lots use green to mark EV stalls |
How do you actually paint a wheel stop, step by step?
The procedure for painting a wheel stop on-site without removal:
1. Clean the stop
Degrease with a non-residue concrete cleaner (TSP substitute or a citrus degreaser). Use a stiff brush to remove dirt, oil, tire-rubber transfer, and old loose paint. Rinse with fresh water. Allow to dry fully — at least 4 hours in direct sun, longer in shade or humidity.
2. Mask the surrounding asphalt
Lay 2-inch painter's tape on the pavement around the base of the stop. Add a 12-inch wide strip of cardboard or paper masking on each side to catch overspray and drift. Asphalt that gets traffic paint on it will not match adjacent unpainted asphalt — this matters in newly seal-coated lots.
3. Apply primer (optional)
For concrete stops with chalking surfaces or rubber stops with mold release, apply one coat of bond primer. Most acrylic latex traffic paints are self-priming on rubber; concrete typically needs a primer in the first repaint.
4. Apply two coats of color
Use a 4-inch foam roller or an airless sprayer with a 0.013 to 0.017 tip for fast work. Thin the paint per manufacturer spec — most acrylic latex traffic paints want 8 to 12 percent water for spray application. Apply the first coat in even passes, let it tack-dry (15 to 30 minutes in sun, 45 to 60 in shade), then apply the second coat perpendicular to the first.
5. Apply reflective tape
After the second coat is dry to the touch (typically 1 to 2 hours), apply a 1-inch by 6-foot ASTM Type III high-intensity reflective tape strip on the front vertical face of the stop. Press firmly with a roller; bond strength on tape is pressure-sensitive.
6. Cure before traffic
Latex needs 24 hours minimum before vehicle traffic, 48 hours below 60 degrees F. Solvent paint and thermoplastic cure faster (1 to 4 hours) but should not be exposed to heavy traffic for 24 hours. Mark the stalls with traffic cones during cure.
What about stenciling a wheel stop?
Stencils on wheel stops are common for reserved or designated stalls. The most common stencils:
- "ADA" in white on blue accessible stops (3-inch letter height)
- "RESERVED" in white on yellow standard stops (2-inch letter height)
- "EV" in green on white EV-charging stalls
- "VAN ACCESSIBLE" in white on blue van-accessible stops, when the federal sign is missing
Apply the stencil after the second color coat is fully cured (4 to 8 hours), use the same paint type, and mask carefully. Stencil paint that drifts onto the body color reads as sloppy and invites complaints from accessible-parking advocates.
For more on stencil work across the lot, our line-striping basics guide covers application equipment and paint selection.
Why does ADA require blue and not yellow?
ADA itself does not require any specific paint color on wheel stops — the federal standard is silent. Oregon enforces blue through ORS 447.233 by referring to the state MUTCD, which adopts the federal MUTCD's pavement-marking color conventions. Blue is the international color of accessibility and matches the ISA symbol background.
For the full dimensional and placement spec on accessible stalls, see ADA wheel stop placement.
How long does the paint actually last?
Lifecycle expectations on Oregon parking-lot wheel stops:
| Paint Type | Substrate | Typical Lifespan |
|---|---|---|
| Acrylic latex traffic paint | Rubber | 12 to 18 months |
| Acrylic latex traffic paint | Concrete | 9 to 15 months |
| Chlorinated rubber solvent | Concrete | 18 to 30 months |
| MMA (methyl methacrylate) | Concrete | 3 to 5 years |
| Hot-applied thermoplastic | Concrete | 4 to 7 years |
| Pre-pigmented rubber | Rubber | Color of substrate, no repaint cycle |
Industry Baseline Range
| Item | Range |
|---|---|
| Acrylic latex traffic paint, gallon | $25 to $60 |
| Chlorinated rubber solvent traffic paint, gallon | $40 to $85 |
| Hot-applied thermoplastic, 50-pound bag | $90 to $180 |
| ASTM Type III reflective tape, 1-inch x 50-foot roll | $25 to $65 |
| Per-stop labor to clean and paint (existing stop, on-site) | $18 to $45 |
| Per-stop labor with stencil and reflective tape | $28 to $68 |
| Mobilization fee (small lots, under 25 stops) | $150 to $400 |
Current Market Reality
Traffic paint prices climbed roughly 18 percent from 2024 to 2026, driven by titanium dioxide and acrylic resin supply. Reflective tape prices are stable but availability is patchy — order 4 to 6 weeks ahead during the spring striping season. Cojo's installed price for a full repaint pass on a 50-stall lot is running $1,400 to $2,800 depending on stencil counts and accessible-stall details.
A 7,200-square-foot Eugene retail center we repainted in April 2026 had 38 standard stalls, 2 ADA stalls, and 1 fire-lane stop. We used acrylic latex on rubber stops, chlorinated rubber on the concrete fire-lane stop, applied ASTM Type III tape to all stops, and stenciled the two ADA stops. The job took 6 crew-hours and finished within the wheel stop installation Eugene service-area mobilization window.
Start with the wheel stops buyer's guide if you are spec'ing a new lot, or contact Cojo for a paint-and-tape pass on an existing lot.
Reviewed by Cojo lead estimator. This article reflects 2026-05 paint and reflective-tape spec.