Bilingual 24" Wet Floor Signs (3-Pack) Review
Affiliate disclosure: WC Safety earns a commission on qualifying Amazon purchases at no extra cost to you.
The visibility class: 24-inch bilingual A-frames that stay readable over foot traffic in lobbies and wide corridors where compact signs vanish into the floor plane. Three for thirty dollars covers a main-entrance program with a spare on the cart.
Editorial rating: 4.4/5. The tall half of a two-height sign program; entrances get these, carts get the compacts.
Bilingual 24" Wet Floor Signs (3-Pack) β current price and availability on Amazon:
Check Price on Amazon βKey specs
| Height | 24" |
| Format | Double-sided A-frame |
| Count | 3 signs |
| Text | English + Spanish |
| Color | Yellow |
Listed at $29.99 on Amazon when we captured pricing (2026-07-16) β the button shows the live price.
Who it's for
Lobbies, atriums, wide corridors, and weather entrances β the long-sightline zones where sign height is the difference between warned and surprised.
Skip it if
Tight aisles and small rooms where full-height signs become their own trip obstacle; the 17.5" pack works those.
How it fits the facility safety program
Wet floor signage is the recognized control under OSHA 1910.22 walking-working surfaces β and the first exhibit in every slip-and-fall claim. Enough signs, posted at approaches, pulled when verifiably dry: that's the whole discipline. New to the department? Start at the janitorial & facility safety collection overview.
How it compares
vs bilingual 17.5" 4-pack: the compact half of the program. (Our take: full bilingual 17.5" 4-pack review.)
vs Rubbermaid 6-pack: brand-name fleet coverage. (Our take: full Rubbermaid 6-pack review.)
Pros and cons
Pros
- Full height for long-sightline spaces
- Bilingual both sides
- $10/sign for the visibility class
Cons
- Three signs, not four, per case
- Same import-build caveat
- Bulkier on the cart
Build out the facility program
One product is a purchase; the program is what protects people. Map every dispenser-to-refill pairing in the dispenser compatibility guide, size every can with the trash liner calculator and the mil & micron decode, and rank the categories in our best-of guides for commercial paper towels, can liners, and wet floor signs. The safety context lives in the custodial worker safety hub with its floor stripping and cleaning chemical safety guides. Crews need nitrile gloves, chemical-resistant gloves, splash goggles, and slip-resistant footwear; liquid failures belong to spill control. Browse the department: janitorial & facility safety, paper towels & dispensers, trash can liners, wet floor signs β case-lot orders via bulk & business orders.
Bottom line: if the Bilingual 24" Wet Floor Signs (3-Pack) fits your facility program, check the live listing:
Check Price on Amazon βRelated janitorial reviews
- Rubbermaid Commercial 26" Caution Wet Floor Sign review
- Rubbermaid Commercial 26" Wet Floor Signs (6-Pack) review
- Bilingual 17.5" Wet Floor Signs (4-Pack) review
- Georgia-Pacific enMotion 59460A 10" Touchless Dispenser review
- GP enMotion Impulse 8" 59437A Touchless Dispenser review
- GP Pacific Blue Ultra 59590 8" Automated Dispenser review
- Tork Matic 5510282 H1 Roll Dispenser review
Janitorial & facility supply FAQ
Are these prices current?
Every price in this review was captured from the live Amazon listing on 2026-07-16 and is shown for comparison β commercial paper, liners, and equipment reprice constantly, so the yellow buttons pull the live listing where current price and stock are shown.
Does WC Safety actually stock janitorial supplies?
We're a workplace-safety retailer and Amazon Associate: we curate, spec-check, and cross-link the products, and purchases happen on Amazon through our links. That model is why every claim here traces to the listing or the maker's published data rather than a warehouse pitch.
Why does a safety site review janitorial products?
Because custodial work is safety work: floors, chemicals, waste handling, and hand hygiene each map to an OSHA standard (walking-working surfaces, HazCom, bloodborne pathogens, sanitation). The custodial worker safety hub lays out the whole hazard-to-product map.
How do I know what fits my dispensers and cans?
Two free tools: the paper towel dispenser compatibility guide maps every dispenser-to-refill pairing (enMotion, Tork H1, purple core, SofPull, folded cabinets), and the trash liner size calculator turns can measurements into the liner size and gauge to order.
What's the honest way to compare paper towel cases?
Price per 1,000 feet (rolls) or per 1,000 towels (folded) β case prices hide yield. In our current lineup that metric runs from about $11.55 (compatible 10x800) to $19.11 (genuine flagship) per 1,000 feet.
What's the difference between HDPE and LLDPE liners?
High-density (micron-rated) film is cheap and strong on light dry waste but zippers open at punctures; low-density (mil-rated) film stretches around edges. Density-to-waste-stream match β not gauge β is what prevents blowouts; the mil & micron decode guide has the charts.
Do wet floor signs and mop buckets really matter to compliance?
Same-level falls are among the costliest workers' comp categories, and OSHA 1910.22 expects dry floors or controlled hazards. Posted signs during wet work are the accepted control, and splash-reducing buckets put less water down in the first place.
What PPE goes with janitorial supplies?
Disposable nitrile for routine cleaning, chemical-resistant gloves and splash goggles for concentrates and strippers, slip-resistant footwear on wet routes, and cut-resistant gloves on sharps-risk waste runs β the task-by-task table is in the custodial safety hub.
Can I order these at facility scale?
Yes β everything reviews at case quantities already, and multi-case or standing orders route through our bulk & business orders page alongside the PPE the same crews need.
How were these products chosen?
Wave 1 of our janitorial department covers the four highest-decision-complexity categories β dispenser systems and their refills, can liners by density, wet floor signs, and mop buckets β selected from live Amazon data for review strength, real case pricing, and category coverage rather than sponsorship.
How many signs does a facility need?
One per simultaneous wet zone: every mop bucket in service, every weather entrance, plus spill spares. Two signs in a six-zone building is how incident reports start.
Where do signs legally need to be placed?
OSHA doesn't dictate placement, but effective (and defensible) practice is every approach to the hazard, visible before the wet area β both ends of corridors, outside door swings.
When should signs come down?
When the floor verifies dry β a hand-drag test, not a glance. Permanently posted signs train permanent blindness, which auditors and plaintiff attorneys both know.
Are bilingual signs required?
Hazard communication must be understood to function; where your workforce or public reads Spanish first, bilingual signage closes a real gap at zero extra cost.
A-frame or cone signs?
A-frames fold flat on carts and rule indoor mopping; weighted cones survive wind at docks and entrances. Standard program: A-frames everywhere, cones at the doors.
How we review
WC Safety reviews are spec-honest: we work from the manufacturer's published data and the live Amazon listing, flag any claim that exists only in listing copy ("per the listing"), and never invent certifications or test results. Ratings are editorial judgments about fit-for-duty at the captured price β not aggregated user scores.
Sources
Manufacturer product pages and the Amazon listing linked above; OSHA 29 CFR 1910.22 (walking-working surfaces), 1910.141 (sanitation), 1910.1200 (hazard communication) as referenced; our own category testing of dispenser-refill pairings documented in the compatibility guide.
Reviewed by Steven Eaton, WC Safety β workplace PPE retailer and Amazon Associate. Pricing captured 2026-07-16; click through for current pricing.
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