270 products

Regulatory Traffic Signs — MUTCD Compliant, Made in the USA

Regulatory signs tell drivers and pedestrians exactly what they must do — stop, yield, observe a speed limit, or follow a posted restriction. When these signs fail, so does safety. That's why every regulatory sign we manufacture at Municipal Supply & Sign Co. is built to meet Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD) standards and produced on-site at our Southwest Florida facility, the same way we've done it since 1963.

Our regulatory signs are made on DOT Alodized Aluminum with 3M Scotchlite reflective sheeting, giving you signs that hold up in harsh UV environments, stay visible at night, and last 7–10 years in the field. Whether you need one stop sign or a thousand speed limit signs, we manufacture and ship directly — no middleman, no markup.

What We Carry

  • Speed limit signs — R2-1 series in all posted speeds, available in Engineer Grade, High Intensity Prismatic, and Diamond Grade reflective sheeting
  • Stop signs — R1-1 series in 24x24, 30x30, and 36x36, MUTCD compliant with 3M retroreflective sheeting
  • Yield signs — R1-2, available in standard and oversized configurations
  • Do Not Enter / Wrong Way signs — R5-1 and R5-1a, for divided highways and one-way roads
  • No parking and parking restriction signs — R7 and R8 serie
  • Turn restriction signs — No U-Turn, No Left Turn, No Right Turn
  • One Way signs — R6-1 and R6-2 series

Who Orders From Us

  • Municipal road departments and DOT contractors needing MUTCD-certified inventory
  • Property managers and HOAs replacing damaged or faded signs
  • Construction companies needing compliant temporary or permanent regulatory signage
  • Schools and institutions requiring posted speed or restriction signs on campus

Why Municipal Supply & Sign Co.

  • Manufactured in-house in Naples, Florida since 1963
  • 3M Scotchlite reflective sheeting — meets ASTM D4956 standards
  • Ships nationwide via UPS Ground through Next Day Air
  • MUTCD compliant — meets all DOT state and federal guidelines