Contractors moving equipment along the shared stretch of highway between Joplin and Springfield need a work permit before the first cone goes down, and the fee schedule varies depending on which city line the crew is working on. Big John's sees that inconsistency firsthand: headquartered in Joplin, the company prices traffic control jobs across both markets every week and watches contractors get surprised that the permit fee and the actual cost of running the work zone are two separate line items.
Do You Need a Work Permit?
Almost any project that closes a lane, blocks a sidewalk, or excavates in the public right-of-way requires a permit in Springfield and Joplin alike. That covers:
- Utility installation or repair in the public right-of-way
- Lane closures or reduced-width traffic on a collector street or above
- Sidewalk closures tied to construction or demolition
- Any excavation performed by a licensed contractor rather than a city crew
- Special events that block or reroute traffic on a public street
How to Get a Work Permit: Springfield vs. Joplin
Springfield issues permits through its automated eCity application system, while Joplin requires the same excavation permit process but routes it through the Engineering Division, where only a licensed contractor can pull the permit; property owners can't self-perform. Either way, projects crossing both city limits or touching a state route may also need a separate access permit from the Missouri Department of Transportation before either city will sign off.
Work Permit Fees: What to Budget
Budgets can vary from one Missouri town to the next. Springfield, for example, charges $253 for permits on commercial driveway installations that inhibit the flow of traffic, or any portion of it, during which a large project reduces traffic lanes or closes a sidewalk, with a large project defined as work on a collector street or above, or as multi-week residential projects spanning several blocks. Joplin takes a different approach: Its excavation permit fee is set by the engineering division rather than published online, so contractors should confirm current pricing before bidding on a job that involves the Joplin right-of-way.
What's Not Included: Traffic Control Costs
Neither city's permit fee covers the actual traffic control equipment or labor, so budget separately for:
- Cones, barrels, and channelizing devices sized to the posted speed
- Message boards and advance warning signage
- Certified flaggers for active lane closures
- Nighttime lighting if the project runs after dusk
Those costs scale with project length and road classification, not just square footage, so a two-week collector-street closure incurs very different control costs than a one-day residential dig.
Timelines, Inspections, and Compliance
That variability carries into compliance, too. Federal Highway Administration rules updated in June 2026 require a documented traffic control plan, sometimes called a transportation management plan, for federal-aid projects, and require that anyone involved in the permit inspection and enforcement of a work zone be trained for that role. Springfield and Joplin both reserve the right to inspect an active site against the approved plan, and a failed inspection can pause work until traffic control is corrected. That's why including the inspection timeline in the bid, not just the permit fee, keeps projects moving on schedule, whether in Joplin, Springfield, or somewhere in between.
Therefore, whether you’re part of a city infrastructure team or an outsourced construction contractor working for the city of Joplin or Springfield, Missouri, you need the traffic control expertise that only Big John’s can offer. Contact us to obtain a quote or schedule service at 417-540-0663, Monday through Friday, 7:00 am to 3:30 pm.