How Many Barricade Covers Do You Need for a Marathon?
Sizing a barricade-cover order for a marathon trips up a lot of first-time race directors. Order too few and your sponsor branding stops halfway down the chute; order too many and you’ve spent budget on covers that sit in a warehouse. The good news: the math is simple once you break the course into zones.
Here’s the framework we walk race directors through when they request a quote.
Start with the barricade count, not the mileage
You don’t cover the whole 26.2 miles — you cover the barricaded sections. Those are almost always the start corral, the finish chute, and a handful of high-visibility turns and crossings. Count the actual barricades in those zones. A standard steel barricade is about 7.5 feet wide, so a 150-foot finish chute per side is roughly 20 barricades, times two sides is 40 covers.
Prioritize the finish line
If budget is tight, brand the finish line first. It’s where every finisher photo, broadcast shot, and sponsor activation happens. A fully covered finish chute delivers more branded impressions than any other stretch of the course.
Add sponsor and turn zones
After the finish, add the start corral (high pre-race photo volume) and two to four marquee turns or spectator zones. These are where course photographers and spectators cluster.
Sample zone math
| Zone | Typical barricades | Covers (both sides) |
|---|---|---|
| Finish chute (150 ft) | 20 | 40 |
| Start corral (100 ft) | 14 | 28 |
| 4 marquee turns | 24 | 24 (outer side) |
| Total | — | ~92 covers |
Once you have a rough zone count, send it with your quote request and we’ll refine it — and because mesh covers fold flat and reuse, next year’s race starts with the covers you already own.