Wheel stops and parking blocks are the same product. Both names describe a 4- to 8-inch tall, 4- to 8-foot long anchored barrier set at the head of a parking stall to halt the front tire. The terms differ by region and trade -- "wheel stop" is more common on the West Coast and in industrial procurement, "parking block" dominates East Coast specs and federal contracts. Dimensions, materials, and anchoring methods are identical.
If you have ever asked a vendor for a "parking block" and gotten quoted on a "wheel stop" instead, you have hit the most common terminology collision in commercial site work. The two phrases share the exact same Semrush volume in the U.S. database (1,900 monthly searches each as of 2026-05-07) -- which is statistical proof that they are perfectly interchangeable in the buyer's vocabulary.
Are Wheel Stops and Parking Blocks Different Products?
No. Wheel stops and parking blocks describe the same physical product. Both are:
- 4 to 8 inches tall
- 6 inches wide (typical)
- 4 to 8 feet long
- Anchored at the head of a parking stall
- Made of concrete, rubber, recycled plastic, or polyurethane
- Set 24 to 36 inches off the front wall, curb, or sidewalk
The U.S. Access Board's ADA Standards refer to "wheel stops" in Section 502.7.1, which addresses placement in accessible parking. The Federal Highway Administration's bid-document language varies by district and uses both terms. ASTM F1638 and ASTM C928 do not separately codify the two names. There is no specification difference.
Why Do Two Names Exist for the Same Product?
The split is regional and follows trade conventions:
| Term Used | Region / Industry | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Wheel stop | West Coast (Oregon, Washington, California), industrial yards, fleet procurement | Industrial supply catalogs and OSHA-adjacent fleet specs use "wheel stop." |
| Parking block | East Coast, federal/government bid docs, retail-facing catalogs | Older federal procurement vocabulary; carried into commercial property management. |
| Parking bumper | Southeast U.S., legacy specs from the 1970s and 1980s | Falling out of use; overlaps with "bumper post" and "bumper curb" which are different products. |
| Curb stop | Sometimes used interchangeably; technically different (continuous edge piece) | See wheel stop vs curb stop. |
Which Term Should I Use on a Bid or Spec Sheet?
Use the term your local jurisdiction and supplier ecosystem uses. In Oregon and the broader Pacific Northwest, default to "wheel stop." If you are bidding a federal project, match the language in the bid documents -- federal specs often use "parking block" and changing it midstream creates a paper trail you do not want. The functional spec (dimensions, material, anchor type, ADA setback) carries the technical content; the noun choice is dialect.
For commercial property managers in Oregon, our recommendation is:
- Local Oregon work: "wheel stop" (matches Salem and Portland city engineering vocabulary)
- Federal contract work: match the bid doc -- usually "parking block"
- National retail rollouts: "wheel stop" is safer in 2026 because national property-management firms have standardized on it
- OSHA-driven specs (loading docks, fleet yards): "wheel stop" -- aligns with OSHA 1910.176 materials-handling vocabulary
What Happens When Bid Docs Use Both Terms?
Bid docs that mix "wheel stop" and "parking block" in different sections are a real problem on federal and state contracts. We have flagged it on three Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) bid packages in the last 18 months. The fix is a one-line clarification in the pre-bid Q&A: "Are wheel stops and parking blocks the same item under this spec?" Get it on the record. Otherwise the install crew installs one product, the inspector calls out the other, and the change order eats the margin.
On a 32-stall ADA retrofit Cojo bid in Eugene in late 2025, the city spec said "parking block" in Section 7 and "wheel stop" in the Section 9 dimensional callout. We asked at the pre-bid; the answer was "same product, use either name in the as-built." That answer went into the contract addendum and the project closed clean.
Does ADA Care Which Term I Use?
No. The ADA Standards published by the U.S. Access Board reference "wheel stops" in Section 502.7.1 but the underlying compliance question is dimensional, not nominative. The wheel stop or parking block must:
- Not encroach on the 36-inch wheelchair clearance defined in ADA Standards 502.4
- Be set so it does not reduce the access aisle width below 60 inches (96 inches for van-accessible) defined in ADA Standards 502.3
- Be positioned so it does not require a wheelchair user to move around it to reach the accessible route
The Department of Justice's ADA.gov regulatory text is silent on the noun. The product specification is what matters, not what you call it. For Oregon-specific ADA enforcement see our ADA parking requirements in Oregon breakdown.
Spec Comparison: Side by Side
| Spec | Wheel Stop | Parking Block | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dimensions (standard) | 6 x 6 x 72 in | 6 x 6 x 72 in | None |
| Material | Concrete, rubber, plastic, polyurethane | Concrete, rubber, plastic, polyurethane | None |
| Anchor | Spike (asphalt), epoxy pin (concrete) | Spike (asphalt), epoxy pin (concrete) | None |
| ADA setback | 24 to 36 in from wheelchair clearance | 24 to 36 in from wheelchair clearance | None |
| ASTM reference | F1638 (slip), C928 (epoxy) | F1638, C928 | None |
| Typical price | $25 to $90+ unit | $25 to $90+ unit | None |
When Are These Terms Genuinely Different?
There is one edge case. In some legacy Florida and Gulf Coast specs, "parking block" can refer to a precast concrete unit that doubles as a curb -- continuous edge running multiple stalls -- which is technically a curb stop, not a stall-end barrier. Those specs are rare in 2026 and not used in Oregon. If you see "continuous parking block" or "parking block barrier 20 ft" in a bid doc, ask the engineer; it may not be a wheel stop at all. We cover the curb-stop distinction in wheel stop vs curb stop.
How Should I Tag Wheel Stops in My Procurement System?
Most enterprise procurement systems (Oracle, SAP, Coupa) tag this product under MROO Class 92, Site Furnishings, with a sub-tag for "parking control device." We recommend the primary tag be "wheel stop, precast concrete" or "wheel stop, recycled rubber" with "parking block" as a synonym keyword for search purposes. That way bid docs from either vocabulary surface the right SKU.
For a deeper guide to wheel stop selection across materials, sizes, and anchoring, see our wheel stops buyer's guide.