Parking blocks cost $25 to $140 per unit material-only and $75 to $200+ per unit installed in 2026 baseline pricing, with the price-per-stall on a 50-stall commercial lot running $80 to $190 fully installed. Material choice (concrete is cheapest, polyurethane is premium), substrate (concrete vs asphalt), and crew mobilization drive the spread. Parking blocks and wheel stops are the same product -- the price math is identical regardless of which name your supplier or bid doc uses.
This article anchors on price-per-stall analysis because most property managers think in stalls, not units. A 50-stall lot needs 50 parking blocks (one per stall). A 200-stall lot needs 200 parking blocks. The math scales linearly, with bulk discounts compressing per-stall cost above 50 units and crew-mobilization spreading out across more stalls on larger jobs.
What Is the Difference Between Parking Blocks and Wheel Stops?
There is no functional difference. Parking blocks and wheel stops describe the same product -- a 4- to 8-inch tall, 4- to 8-foot long anchored barrier at the head of a parking stall. The pricing is identical. The terms differ by region and trade tradition, not by spec. We cover the regional naming distinction in wheel stops vs parking blocks and the broader pricing breakdown in wheel stop cost.
How Much Do Parking Blocks Cost by Material?
Industry Baseline Range -- Material Only (per unit)
| Material | Standard 6x6x72 | Heavy-Duty 8x6x84 |
|---|---|---|
| Concrete (precast 4,500 psi) | $25 to $60+ | $50 to $110+ |
| Recycled rubber (90+ percent post-consumer) | $35 to $90+ | $90 to $180+ |
| UV-stabilized recycled HDPE | $25 to $65+ | -- |
| Polyurethane (industrial-grade) | $80 to $140+ | $130 to $260+ |
Current Market Reality
Ready-mix concrete spot prices in the Willamette Valley are up roughly 12 percent over 2024 driven by aggregate and cement cost inflation. Recycled-tire rubber feedstock has swung 18 to 25 percent year-over-year through 2024-2026. Crude-oil-tracked HDPE resin has been more volatile. Fuel surcharges and crew minimums push real prices above baseline. The only reliable way to know your actual cost is through an on-site assessment.
What Is the Price Per Stall on a 50-Stall Lot?
Industry Baseline Range -- 50-Stall Lot, Per-Stall Cost
| Material Choice | Per-Stall Installed | Total |
|---|---|---|
| Standard concrete 6x6x72 | $66 to $161+ | $3,300 to $8,050+ |
| Standard rubber 6x6x72 | $76 to $191+ | $3,800 to $9,550+ |
| Standard plastic 6x6x72 | $66 to $166+ | $3,300 to $8,300+ |
| Polyurethane premium | $116 to $251+ | $5,800 to $12,550+ |
Current Market Reality
Per-stall pricing compresses on bigger jobs because crew mobilization spreads across more units. A 50-stall lot carries roughly $5 to $16 per stall in mobilization; a 200-stall lot drops mobilization to $1 to $4 per stall. Material cost per unit also drops 10 to 15 percent at 100-plus unit volumes. The only reliable way to know your actual cost is through an on-site assessment.
What Does a 100-Stall Lot Cost?
Industry Baseline Range -- 100-Stall Lot
| Component | Range |
|---|---|
| Standard rubber 6x6x72 (100 units), material at bulk pricing | $3,150 to $8,100+ |
| Installation labor (100 units, 2- to 3-day install) | $2,800 to $6,500+ |
| Anchor hardware | $600 to $1,500+ |
| Mobilization | $400 to $1,000+ |
| Total installed | $6,950 to $17,100+ |
| Per-stall | $69 to $171+ |
What Does a 200-Stall Lot Cost?
Industry Baseline Range -- 200-Stall Lot
| Component | Range |
|---|---|
| Standard rubber 6x6x72 (200 units), material at volume pricing | $5,950 to $15,500+ |
| Installation labor (200 units, 4- to 6-day install) | $5,500 to $12,500+ |
| Anchor hardware | $1,200 to $3,000+ |
| Mobilization | $500 to $1,200+ |
| Total installed | $13,150 to $32,200+ |
| Per-stall | $66 to $161+ |
What Drives the Top of the Range?
The "$+" portion of every range above shows up when:
- Substrate prep is needed. Asphalt under 2 inches thick or concrete with cracks deeper than 1/4 inch around the anchor point requires strengthening. Add $4,000 to $15,000+ per lot.
- Removal scope is in play. Removal-and-replace jobs run 30 to 50 percent above fresh install because of demolition, debris haul, and substrate patching.
- Cold-weather install. Below 50 degrees F, ASTM C881 epoxy is restricted and ASTM C928 rapid-hardening cementitious adhesive (15 to 25 percent material premium) is required.
- ADA upgrade scope. ADA-profile parking blocks at every accessible stall add 25 to 40 percent unit cost over standard SKUs.
- Color-matched or custom dimensions. Custom orders run 25 to 40 percent unit-cost premium and 21- to 35-day lead time.
What Codes Apply?
ADA Standards Section 502.7.1 governs accessible-stall placement. OSHA 1910.176 governs loading-dock and materials-handling area design. ASTM standards include:
- ASTM C39 -- compressive strength testing
- ASTM F1638 -- slip resistance and visibility
- ASTM C928 -- packaged dry rapid-hardening cementitious materials
- ASTM C881 -- epoxy resin systems
For Oregon-specific ADA compliance see ADA parking requirements in Oregon and our wheel stops buyer's guide.
How Should You Budget for a Parking Block Project?
A property-management budgeting approach Cojo recommends:
- Count the stalls that need barriers. Not every stall requires a parking block -- only stalls where overhang risk, ADA clearance, or facade protection is in play.
- Count the ADA stalls separately. ADA stalls usually need a different SKU (ADA-profile or half-width) at a 25 to 40 percent unit-cost premium.
- Identify the substrate -- asphalt, concrete, or mixed. Concrete substrate runs 30 to 50 percent more per unit than asphalt because of epoxy and cure time.
- Multiply by per-stall installed cost -- use $80 to $190 per stall as a baseline, with concrete substrate skewing toward the higher end.
- Add mobilization ($250 to $1,200 depending on job size) and substrate prep if needed.
- Add 15 to 25 percent contingency for unforeseen substrate conditions.
- Verify with a site quote before committing to a budget number.
Cost Comparison: Parking Blocks vs Continuous Curb
For a 200-foot frontage:
Industry Baseline Range
| Solution | Range |
|---|---|
| 33 parking blocks (one per stall, 6-foot stalls) | $2,475 to $6,270+ installed |
| 200 ft poured concrete curb stop | $3,000 to $9,000+ installed |
Get a Site-Specific Quote
Parking-block cost depends on substrate, material, ADA scope, and removal needs. The baseline ranges above are useful for budgeting but the only reliable cost is an on-site assessment. Cojo provides free site assessments across Oregon for commercial parking-block installs. For city-specific service see wheel stop installation in Eugene.