Wet Floor Safety Cones 26" 4-Sided (4-Pack) Review
Affiliate disclosure: WC Safety earns a commission on qualifying Amazon purchases at no extra cost to you.
Fleet cones at full height: four 26-inch, 4-sided units for the multi-entrance building — every weather door posted with all-angle visibility for $16 a cone. The two-format program (cones stationed, A-frames roving) completed in one order.
Editorial rating: 4.4/5. The cone fleet at the right unit price; station them and stop re-standing blown A-frames every windy day.
Wet Floor Safety Cones 26" 4-Sided (4-Pack) — current price and availability on Amazon:
Check Price on Amazon →Key specs
| Height | 26 inch |
| Format | 4-sided cone |
| Count | 4 |
| Color | High-visibility yellow |
Listed at $64.99 on Amazon when we captured pricing (2026-07-17) — the button shows the live price.
Who it's for
Multi-entrance facilities, campuses, and venues where door-count times weather equals a cone requirement the 2-pack can't cover.
Skip it if
Single-door operations — the 2-pack covers them with a spare.
How it fits the facility safety program
Wet floor signage is the recognized control under OSHA 1910.22 and the first exhibit after any fall. Enough signs, both formats, posted at approaches, pulled when verifiably dry. New to the department? Start at the janitorial & facility safety collection overview.
How it compares
vs cone 2-pack: the starter quantity. (Our take: full cone 2-pack review.)
vs Rubbermaid 6-pack: the A-frame fleet for carts. (Our take: full Rubbermaid 6-pack review.)
Pros and cons
Pros
- $16.25/cone at 4-pack rate
- 26" reads over foot traffic
- All-angle warning at every door
Cons
- Four cones need a storage corner
- Same import-build class
- Cones walk off — mark them
Build out the facility program
One product is a purchase; the program is what protects people. Decision tools: the dispenser compatibility guide, the trash liner size calculator, and the mil & micron decode. Ranked picks: paper towels, liners, wet floor signs, vacuums, carts, entrance mats, and eyewash stations. The safety context is the custodial worker safety hub with the chemical safety and floor stripping guides; crews run nitrile gloves, splash goggles, and slip-resistant footwear. Shop the department: janitorial & facility safety and its collections — equipment, liners, restroom, matting, eyewash — with case orders via bulk & business orders.
Bottom line: if the Wet Floor Safety Cones 26" 4-Sided (4-Pack) fits your facility program, check the live listing:
Check Price on Amazon →Related janitorial reviews
- Wet Floor Safety Cones 4-Sided (2-Pack) review
- Tork Xpress 553028 H2 Multifold Dispenser review
- Tork MB540A H2 Multifold Towels (4,000/Case) review
- 33 Gallon Trash Bags 1.6-Mil (150ct) review
- 55-60 Gallon Trash Bags 2.1-Mil (100ct) review
- METRONIC 30-33 Gal Liners 0.6-Mil (250ct) review
- Amazon Basics 23 Gal Slim Jim Liners 1.1-Mil (150ct) review
Janitorial & facility supply FAQ
Are these prices current?
Every price in this review was captured from the live Amazon listing on 2026-07-17 and is shown for comparison — commercial supplies 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 traces to the listing or the maker's published data.
Why does a safety site review janitorial products?
Because custodial work is safety work: floors, chemicals, waste handling, and hygiene each map to an OSHA standard, and the custodial worker safety hub carries the whole hazard-to-product map.
How are product claims handled?
Per the listing, strictly: disinfectant, antimicrobial, and compliance language is reported as the maker publishes it, with the regulatory context (EPA labels, ANSI classifications) you need to verify fit. We add nothing.
What decision tools back these reviews?
The dispenser compatibility guide maps every towel and tissue pairing; the trash liner size calculator turns can measurements into liner specs; the mil & micron decode explains the gauge system these reviews reference.
How does this Wave-4 gear fit the existing department?
It's the gap fill: mops for the buckets we already sold, receptacles for the liner program, JRT hardware for the tissue cases, cone signs for the doors A-frames can't hold, and the liner sizes the decode chart listed but the store didn't stock.
What's the maintenance discipline on consumable gear?
Calendars: mop heads laundered weekly and replaced monthly, seat covers and screens restocked on rounds, eyewash solution rotated at expiry, mats vacuumed daily in season. Consumables fail silently; schedules are the program.
How were these products chosen?
Selected from live Amazon data to fill named catalog gaps — receptacle-liner pairings, system-matched dispensers, missing sizes and gauges — for review strength and real pricing rather than sponsorship.
Can I order at facility scale?
Yes — case and multi-unit orders route through our bulk & business orders page alongside the PPE the same crews need.
Where's the rest of the department?
Eleven collections under janitorial & facility safety: paper systems, liners, signs, chemicals, equipment, restroom, wipers, matting, eyewash, plus the spill-control and ergonomics verticals they cross-link.
Cone or A-frame wet floor signs?
Both, by station: A-frames fold flat and ride carts for route work; weighted cones hold at doors, docks, and drafty corridors where folding signs blow flat. The two-format program covers what either alone can't.
Why 4-sided cones?
A-frames read edge-on as a yellow line — invisible from half the approach angles. Four-sided cones warn from every direction, which matters exactly at entrances where traffic comes from everywhere.
How many wet floor signs does a facility need?
One per simultaneous wet zone plus door cones: each mop bucket in service, each weather entrance, spares for spills. Sign scarcity is the failure mode that ends up in depositions.
When do signs come down?
When floors verify dry — a hand-drag test, not a glance. Permanent signage trains permanent blindness, which auditors and plaintiff attorneys both understand.
Do cones need maintenance?
Wipe them (grimy warnings read as neglect), check the weighted bases, and count them — cones walk off in ways A-frames don't. Marking them with the facility name helps them walk back.
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 — not aggregated user scores.
Sources
Manufacturer product pages and the Amazon listing linked above; OSHA 29 CFR 1910.22, 1910.141, 1910.151, and 1910.1200 as referenced; ANSI/ISEA Z358.1 referenced for eyewash classification context, not reproduced.
Reviewed by Steven Eaton, WC Safety — workplace PPE retailer and Amazon Associate. Pricing captured 2026-07-17; click through for current pricing.
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