Wheel Stop Placement for ADA Compliance
What does ADA require for wheel stop placement in accessible parking stalls?
The ADA does not require wheel stops in accessible parking spaces, but if you install them they must not reduce the 36-inch minimum wheelchair clearance inside the access aisle, and they must be placed so the projecting front bumper of a parked vehicle does not encroach on the accessible route. Place a 6-foot wheel stop centered behind the stall, 30 inches from the curb face, and paint it ADA blue.
Key takeaways
- ADA Standards for Accessible Design Section 502 governs accessible parking; wheel stops are not mandated but are not prohibited
- The 36-inch wheelchair access dimension comes from 28 CFR Part 36 and applies inside the access aisle, not the parking stall itself
- A bumper that overhangs into the access aisle voids compliance even when the stall is dimensionally correct, and a wheel stop is the cheapest fix
- ADA-related stall paint is blue (not required by federal ADA but required by ORS 447.233 in Oregon)
- Most ADA wheel stop violations come from placement errors, not the product
Does ADA require wheel stops in accessible parking spaces?
No. The U.S. Access Board's ADA Standards for Accessible Design (ada.gov/law-and-regs/design-standards) specify dimensions, slope, signage, and access route continuity for accessible parking, but the standard is silent on wheel stops as a required device. The U.S. Department of Justice's ADA Title III regulations (28 CFR Part 36) defer to the design standards for parking specifications.
That said, accessible stalls face a quiet compliance failure: vehicle front bumpers routinely overhang the front of the stall by 18 to 30 inches. If the access aisle sits in front of the stall, that overhang shrinks the protected wheelchair-route width below the 36-inch minimum. A correctly placed wheel stop is the simplest fix.
How does the 36-inch clearance rule actually work?
The 36-inch dimension is the minimum continuous accessible route width per ADA 403.5.1. When a vehicle's front bumper protrudes into a route that is theoretically 60 inches wide, the practical clear path can drop to 30 inches or less, which is non-compliant.
A wheel stop installed 30 inches from the front curb face, centered in the stall, prevents the bumper from crossing the access aisle line. Standard sedan front overhang from front axle to bumper is roughly 32 to 38 inches, which means a 30-inch setback keeps the bumper inside the stall envelope on most vehicles.
Where exactly should the wheel stop sit in the stall?
Place the wheel stop:
- Setback from front curb or wall: 24 to 30 inches (centerline of wheel stop to face of curb)
- Lateral position: centered between the two stall stripes
- Length: 6 feet standard (4 feet acceptable on narrow stalls)
- Orientation: parallel to the stall stripes, perpendicular to the parking direction
- Height above pavement: 4 inches (standard precast or rubber)
A stall depth of 18 feet with a 30-inch wheel stop setback gives 15.5 feet of usable parking depth, which accommodates pickup trucks, full-size SUVs, and ADA-spec vans without front-bumper encroachment. For van-accessible stalls, the same rule applies but verify the stall is at least 18 feet deep before installing — a shorter stall forces a closer setback that pinches truck-class vehicles.
What color and markings does an ADA wheel stop need?
Federal ADA does not specify wheel stop color, but Oregon does. ORS 447.233 and the Oregon Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices direct that markings serving accessible parking conform to the federal MUTCD color code. The de facto Oregon standard:
- Wheel stop body color: blue (matches the international symbol of accessibility background)
- Reflective tape strip: ASTM Type III high-intensity, white, 1-inch wide, full length on the front face
- Stencil: optional white "ADA" on the top face for high-traffic lots
Latex traffic paint matched to MUTCD blue (FED-STD-595C 15090) is the budget option; thermoplastic blue is the long-life option. Painting wheel stops at install rather than after is faster and gives a cleaner edge.
What anchoring rules apply on accessible stalls?
The same anchoring rules apply as standard stalls — see our guides on anchoring wheel stops in asphalt and anchoring wheel stops in concrete. The only ADA-specific requirement: anchor heads cannot protrude above the wheel stop top surface. A protruding bolt is a tripping hazard for someone transferring out of a wheelchair across the stop.
Use countersunk anchors, recess them at least 1/4 inch below the surface, and patch with epoxy. On rubber wheel stops, the manufacturer-supplied anchor sleeves already meet this requirement.
What are the most common ADA wheel stop placement mistakes?
From Cojo's ADA retrofit work in Salem and Eugene, the four placement mistakes that fail inspection most often:
- Wheel stop installed flush against the front curb — bumper still overhangs, defeats the purpose
- Wheel stop installed perpendicular (straddling two stalls) instead of parallel to stripes — creates ambiguous parking position
- Wheel stop placed inside the access aisle instead of the parking stall — directly violates 36-inch wheelchair clearance
- Painted yellow instead of blue — fails Oregon MUTCD color code for accessible stalls
A 14,000-square-foot Salem retail center we retrofitted in March 2026 had all four mistakes across three accessible stalls. The fix took half a day: pull old stops, patch anchor holes, layout-mark new positions 28 inches from the curb, set new blue rubber stops with reflective tape. Total cost was 22 percent of what a re-stripe-and-curb-cut alternative would have run.
Industry Baseline Range
| Item | Range |
|---|---|
| Recycled rubber ADA blue wheel stop, 6-foot, supplied | $55 to $95 |
| Concrete blue-painted wheel stop, 6-foot, supplied | $40 to $75 |
| Reflective tape strip, ASTM Type III, per stop | $4 to $9 |
| Installation per stop, asphalt anchor | $30 to $65 |
| Installation per stop, concrete epoxy + rebar | $40 to $80 |
| Layout marking + setback verification, per accessible stall | $18 to $35 |
Current Market Reality
2026 wheel stop pricing is running roughly 12 to 18 percent above the 2024 baseline. Asphalt patch material is up because of refinery throughput constraints, anchor hardware imports carry an updated tariff, and labor for accessible-stall layout has risen because the qualified-contractor pool has not grown as fast as ADA retrofit demand. Expect installed pricing to keep drifting upward through the 2026 striping season.
How does this fit with broader ADA parking requirements?
Wheel stop placement is one of seven ADA accessible parking dimensions to verify (stall width, access aisle width, slope, route continuity, signage, surface, and the wheel stop / bumper question). For the full compliance framework see our ADA parking requirements Oregon reference. If you are building or restriping in the I-5 corridor, request a wheel stop installation Salem site visit; we walk every accessible stall against current ADA Section 502 spec before quoting.
The corollary articles in this product silo cover wheel stop spacing in a parking stall, how far a wheel stop should sit from the curb, and the broader ADA parking wheel stop specs. Read those alongside this guide before specifying for an accessible stall.
If you want a single project handled end to end — site walk, ADA spec verification, supply, install, and a re-stripe touch-up — start with our wheel stops buyer's guide and then contact Cojo for a quote.
Reviewed by Cojo lead estimator. Always verify current ADA and Oregon ORS 447 requirements with your local jurisdiction. This article reflects 2026-05 specifications.