FOR ROAD & DOT CREWS
Custom hi-vis work jackets for road and DOT crews — ANSI Class 2 & 3, branded, ready for the right-of-way.
ANSI/ISEA 107 hi-vis work jackets for paving crews, road construction, traffic-control teams, and DOT contractors. Embroidered or screen-printed with company logo and crew names. Bulk pricing for state DOT contractors, asphalt and concrete crews, and utility right-of-way teams.
The short version: Custom hi-vis work jackets for road and DOT crews are ANSI/ISEA 107 Class 2 (background visibility) or Class 3 (full-body visibility) jackets in fluorescent yellow-green or orange-red, with retroreflective tape arrangement that meets the standard. We custom-print these with company logo, crew identification, and reflective name strips for foreman/lead positions. Typical orders run 20–200 jackets per company, with PO and net-30 terms standard for DOT contractors.
Why road and DOT crews need ANSI 107 hi-vis
The Federal Highway Administration’s 23 CFR 634 rule requires all workers in a federal-aid highway right-of-way to wear high-visibility safety apparel that meets ANSI/ISEA 107 Class 2 or Class 3, depending on traffic speed and conditions. State DOT contracts almost universally adopt the same standard, and most utility right-of-way contracts include hi-vis requirements that match. A regular work jacket — even an excellent one — doesn’t meet that requirement.
What does meet it is a jacket with the right combination of fluorescent background material (yellow-green or orange-red), retroreflective tape arranged in the ANSI-specified pattern, and minimum total background plus retroreflective material areas. The custom branding has to be applied in a way that doesn’t compromise the certification. We work with manufacturers that build to spec and we add the custom company branding using methods (screen print, heat-transfer, embroidered patches in approved zones) that preserve ANSI compliance.
Where custom hi-vis work jackets get used
| Buyer | Use case | Volume | Branding |
|---|---|---|---|
| DOT general contractors | Paving, milling, bridge, and roadway-construction crews | 40–300 per company | Company logo + crew lead name |
| Traffic-control companies | Flaggers and traffic-control set-up crews | 20–150 per company | Company logo + “Traffic Control” |
| Asphalt & concrete contractors | Paving and concrete-placement crews | 30–200 per company | Company logo |
| Utility right-of-way crews | Pipeline, gas, water, and telecom in roadway corridors | 40–500 per utility | Utility logo + crew ID |
| State DOT employees | Maintenance, inspection, and emergency-response crews | 50–2,000 per state | State seal + DOT designation |
| Municipal public works | City street and sewer crews | 20–150 per municipality | City seal + dept name |
| Airport ground crews | FAA Class 3 ramp / airfield staff | 50–400 per airport | Airport authority logo |
Class 2 vs. Class 3: which one your crew needs
| Class | Required when | Background material | Retroreflective tape |
|---|---|---|---|
| Class 1 | Off-roadway only (parking lots, off-highway sites) | 217 sq in min | 155 sq in min |
| Class 2 | Roadway speeds under 50 mph, complex backgrounds | 775 sq in min | 201 sq in min |
| Class 3 | Roadway speeds 50+ mph, low light, freeway work | 1,240 sq in min | 310 sq in min |
| Class E | Pants supplement — combined with Class 2 or 3 = Class 3 | (pants only) | (pants only) |
The practical rule of thumb: state DOT crews and contractors on freeway/interstate work need Class 3. Crews on slower-speed roadway, paving, and traffic-control work usually wear Class 2. Off-roadway prep work (yard staff, equipment yard) is Class 1. Most state DOT contracts default to Class 3 for safety regardless of speed.
What you can customize on a hi-vis work jacket
The ANSI standard constrains where and how you can apply branding, but there’s still meaningful room for company identification. The general rule: any custom embellishment can’t reduce the background material or retroreflective tape coverage below the ANSI minimums. In practice, that means front-chest and back-panel branding fits comfortably within the spec; large back-panel screens require careful layout to preserve compliance.
| Element | Customization | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Front-chest logo | Embroidered or heat-transfer company logo | 3–4″ logo placement is standard; doesn’t affect compliance |
| Back-panel imprint | Company name + crew designation | Placed within the retroreflective bands; must not cover required tape area |
| Color | Lime yellow-green (most common) or orange-red | Match utility brand preference; some states standardize |
| Style | Bomber, parka, vest, or rain jacket | Class 3 typically requires sleeves for full coverage |
| Insulation | Quilted-lined for cold weather, unlined for fall/spring | Insulated jackets add roughly $20–$35 per unit |
| Name stripes | Embroidered or heat-transfer last-name above back tape | Common for foreman and inspector positions |
| FR options | ANSI/ISEA 107 + NFPA 70E flame-resistant combination | Required for electrical and arc-flash exposure |
Need a single sample for the safety officer?
We’ll produce one ANSI Class 2 or Class 3 jacket with your company logo for safety-officer review and crew sizing before the bulk run.
Bulk pricing for hi-vis work jackets
Pricing on custom hi-vis work jackets for road and DOT crews depends on class (2 or 3), lining (uninsulated vs. quilted), branding complexity, and quantity. The table below covers an unlined ANSI Class 2 bomber-style jacket with front-chest embroidered logo + back-panel imprint. Class 3 adds roughly $8–$14 per unit; insulated jackets add $20–$35; FR-rated runs roughly 35–50% higher.
| Quantity | ANSI Class 2 unlined (logo + back imprint) | ANSI Class 3 quilted-lined | Lead time |
|---|---|---|---|
| 12–24 | $74–$86 each | $112–$130 each | 2–3 weeks |
| 25–49 | $66–$76 each | $102–$118 each | 2–3 weeks |
| 50–99 | $58–$68 each | $92–$106 each | 3 weeks |
| 100–249 | $52–$60 each | $82–$96 each | 3–4 weeks |
| 250–499 | $46–$54 each | $74–$86 each | 4 weeks |
| 500+ | Quoted | Quoted | 4–6 weeks |
Procurement: DOT contractors, prevailing-wage jobs, and federal-aid projects
Road and DOT crew apparel procurement runs on purchase orders with net-30 terms. State DOT contractors typically have established vendor relationships and detailed compliance documentation requirements: COI with the project owner named as additional insured, W-9, sometimes DUNS/SAM.gov registration for federal-aid projects, and EEO certification on prevailing-wage jobs. We’re set up to provide all of those on day one.
For utility right-of-way crews on long-term contracts, the most common workflow is an annual master order with quarterly auto-shipment of replacement jackets as crews rotate or jackets get retired. We hold the spec on file and ship against the standing PO; the utility just updates the next-quarter quantity by email.
Lead time and ANSI compliance documentation
First-time custom orders ship 3–4 weeks after artwork approval. Re-orders against an existing spec ship in 2–3 weeks. Federal-aid projects sometimes require submission of ANSI certification documentation as part of the project safety plan; we can provide manufacturer compliance statements and lab test certificates on request.
The peak production window for hi-vis work jackets in northern climates is October through December as crews gear up for winter construction season. In southern climates, the demand is more even year-round. We recommend ordering at least 4 weeks before your first cold-weather workday or your project start date.
Safety officer or procurement lead?
Send your spec (Class 2 or 3, insulated or unlined, count), and the project name. We’ll quote within one business day with full ANSI compliance documentation.
Frequently asked questions about custom hi-vis work jackets
Does branding void the ANSI/ISEA 107 certification?
No — when done correctly. Custom branding applied in approved zones, using approved methods (embroidery in the chest area, heat-transfer or screen printing on the back within the retroreflective band layout), preserves the certification. Our manufacturers retest after branding to confirm continued compliance, and we can provide that documentation.
Class 2 or Class 3 — which one does my crew need?
Use Class 3 for any work on or near roadways with speeds of 50+ mph, low-light conditions, or freeway/interstate work. Use Class 2 for slower-speed roadway work, paving, flagger operations, and most state DOT contractor work. When in doubt, Class 3 is always acceptable where Class 2 is required; the reverse is not true.
Can we get an FR (flame-resistant) version?
Yes. We carry ANSI 107 hi-vis jackets that are also NFPA 70E rated for arc-flash exposure (typically HRC 2 or HRC 4). These are required for utility line workers, oil and gas, and any crew with electrical or flash-fire hazard exposure in addition to roadway exposure. FR hi-vis runs about 35–50% higher than non-FR.
How does winter insulation affect ANSI compliance?
Insulation doesn’t affect compliance — the ANSI 107 certification is on the outer shell and the retroreflective layout. Quilted, fleece-lined, or 3M Thinsulate-lined versions are all available within the certified product family.
What’s the rating life of a hi-vis jacket before fluorescent fade?
Fluorescent fabric and retroreflective tape both degrade with UV exposure. ANSI 107 jackets are typically rated for 2–3 years of regular use before the fluorescent color shifts out of spec. We recommend replacing on a rotational schedule and inspecting for tape delamination or fade quarterly.
Can we run different colors for different crew functions?
Yes. The standard pattern is lime yellow-green for crew and orange-red for traffic-control or supervision. We can produce both colors in the same PO at the same per-unit pricing.
Do you stock sizes through 5XL for very large crews?
Yes. Our hi-vis line runs from small through 5XL with regular and tall variants in mid sizes. We can size up further on request for very large or very tall workers, with a small upcharge for sizes above 4XL.
Can the back panel include a project name or state DOT designation?
Yes. Back-panel project naming (e.g., “I-95 Resurfacing”) is common for major projects. We can produce project-specific variants in the same batch as the standard company-logo jackets as long as the layout doesn’t conflict with the ANSI retroreflective requirements.
Ready to spec your crew order?
Custom hi-vis work jackets for road and DOT crews — ANSI 107 compliant, branded for the company, ready for the right-of-way.
Pricing and lead times are approximate and depend on class rating, lining, branding complexity, quantity, and current production capacity. ANSI/ISEA 107 compliance documentation is provided on request. Specific federal-aid and state DOT contract requirements may add documentation steps — confirm with your safety officer before ordering.