Compare every major Omaha OOH operator, Lamar Advertising of Omaha, Victor Outdoor Advertising, Legacy Outdoor Advertising, Link Media Outdoor, and dozens of regional Nebraska and Iowa operators, on one out-of-home advertising platform. Plan, price, and book Omaha campaigns across the bi-state Omaha–Council Bluffs metro without filing proposals with five different vendors.
Static and digital billboards, junior posters, wallscapes, Eppley Airfield (OMA) displays, ORBT and Metro Transit, College World Series approach inventory, and place-based screens across the Omaha–Council Bluffs DMA: 980K+ residents across Nebraska and Iowa.
Omaha offers one of the deepest OOH format mixes in the central plains. Here's what's available and what each format is best used for, with typical Omaha price ranges so you can budget before you browse.
The workhorse of Omaha OOH. The strongest inventory clusters along I-80, I-680, I-29 (Council Bluffs), US-75 (Kennedy Freeway), West Dodge Road (US-6), Maple Street, L Street, 84th Street, 72nd Street, Pacific Street, and Center Street. Static (vinyl) bulletins at 14' x 48' standard drive 4-week to 12-week brand and awareness campaigns. Digital billboards (DOOH) run 8-second rotations on premium freeway and arterial inventory, perfect for dayparting, dynamic creative, and short-burst promotions. Junior posters at 12' x 25' work street-level on secondary roads through Omaha and Council Bluffs neighborhoods. Wallscapes and spectaculars sit in the Old Market, downtown, and along Dodge / Farnam in Midtown. Typical Omaha pricing: $1,400–$4,500 per 4-week flight for static bulletins; $2,000–$7,000+ for premium digital on I-80 / I-680; $700–$2,200 for junior posters; $4,000–$14,000+ for downtown wallscapes.
A defining feature of the Omaha market, and a structural advantage for OOH planning, is that the metro spans the Nebraska / Iowa state line across the Missouri River. AdQuick handles inventory on both sides as a single plan: Omaha, NE (downtown, the Old Market, Midtown, Aksarben Village, West Omaha, North Omaha, South Omaha, Millard); Council Bluffs, IA (Bayliss Park, the I-29 corridor, the Iowa West Foundation area); Sarpy County, NE (Bellevue / Offutt Air Force Base / U.S. Strategic Command, Papillion, La Vista, Gretna); and the broader bi-state metro including Pottawattamie County, IA and Douglas / Sarpy / Washington counties in Nebraska. This bi-state geography lets brands reach Nebraska and Iowa consumers, and two different state advertising markets, through a single integrated campaign, with the I-80 / I-680 / I-29 freeway loop carrying the highest cross-state traffic volume.
Eppley Airfield (OMA) serves over 5 million passengers a year and is the dominant airport for the Omaha metro and a wide swath of Nebraska, Iowa, and South Dakota. AdQuick offers OMA airport advertising inventory including baggage claim displays, gate-area panels, jet bridge wraps, and digital screens, a captive audience of business travelers, Berkshire and ConAgra executives, College World Series attendees, and visiting Strategic Command and Offutt AFB personnel. Bus exteriors, bus shelters, and rideshare-vehicle wraps run on Metro Transit (Omaha Metro Area Transit / "ORBT" bus rapid transit on Dodge Street) routes, strong for downtown reach, Creighton and UNO student audiences, the medical district, and high-density retail corridors. Typical Omaha pricing: $2,200–$8,500+ for OMA displays; $1,100–$3,200 for ORBT / Metro bus exterior wraps; $500–$1,700 for bus shelters and benches.
Omaha's event calendar drives concentrated, time-sensitive OOH demand. Charles Schwab Field Omaha hosts the NCAA Men's College World Series every June; approach corridors along 13th Street, I-480, and downtown deliver massive concentrated CWS reach. CHI Health Center Omaha hosts the Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting, Big East and CWS-adjacent events, and U.S. Olympic Swim Trials, making it one of the strongest stadium advertising venues in the central plains. Henry Doorly Zoo approach corridors handle year-round visitor inflow. Place-based digital screens run in the Old Market, Aksarben Village, Midtown Crossing, and Village Pointe. Mobile billboards, rideshare wraps, wildposting, and event activations break through during the College World Series (June), Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting (early May), Creighton Bluejays and Nebraska Cornhuskers / UNO Mavericks sports, the Omaha Marathon, and Q4 retail. Typical Omaha pricing: $3,500–$12,000+ for CWS approach inventory in June; $2,800–$6,500 per 50-unit wildposting run.
Omaha OOH pricing depends on format, location, duration, and whether the unit is digital or static. Here are typical 4-week price ranges based on AdQuick marketplace data.
| Format | Typical 4-Week Range | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Static billboard (bulletin, 14' x 48') | $1,400 – $4,500 | Awareness, long-flight brand campaigns |
| Digital billboard (premium I-80 / I-680) | $2,000 – $7,000+ | Dynamic creative, promotions, dayparting |
| Junior poster (12' x 25') | $700 – $2,200 | Neighborhood targeting, secondary roads |
| Wallscape / Old Market / downtown spectacular | $4,000 – $14,000+ | Premium brand statement, downtown impact |
| Eppley Airfield (OMA) display | $2,200 – $8,500+ | Business travelers, Berkshire / CWS visitors |
| ORBT / Metro bus exterior wrap | $1,100 – $3,200 | Bi-state circulation, broad awareness |
| Bus shelter / bench | $500 – $1,700 | Pedestrian targeting, retail density |
| CWS / Charles Schwab Field approach inventory (June) | $3,500 – $12,000+ | College World Series event reach |
| Self-serve digital (marketplace, "as little as $10/day") | From ~$300 | Small-budget tests, hyper-targeted bursts |
| Wildposting (per 50-unit run) | $2,800 – $6,500 | Launches, Old Market and college reach |
Note: Ranges reflect Omaha market data and vary based on location quality, traffic counts, availability, and creative production. Digital units bill in 8-second rotations and are typically more cost-efficient per impression than static. The College World Series (early-to-mid June) and Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting weekend (early May) carry significant demand-based premiums on downtown wallscapes, OMA airport inventory, and CWS approach corridors, premium inventory in these windows often books 6+ months in advance. "As little as $10/day" claims on self-serve platforms translate to roughly $300 / 4-week flights on lower-tier screens, AdQuick can convert any quote into apples-to-apples impressions.
Omaha's OOH market is served by national operators, regional independents, transit operators, and place-based networks. AdQuick partners with all of them, so you can compare and combine inventory in a single plan instead of chasing proposals from each.
The dominant national operator in Omaha. Lamar runs the largest share of digital billboards along I-80 and I-680, plus a deep static bulletin and transit network across Douglas and Sarpy Counties. Often the first call for advertisers planning at scale or running multi-market campaigns.
Long-standing Nebraska-based OOH operator with deep Omaha and broader Nebraska coverage. Strong on static bulletins and posters, with deep market knowledge of the Omaha and outstate Nebraska markets.
Regional Omaha operator with focused metro-area inventory. Often has unit availability and pricing flexibility that national operators don't.
Regional operator covering Nebraska, Iowa, and parts of the broader central US market. Strong for Iowa-side (Council Bluffs) inventory and outlying metro placements.
AdQuick also aggregates inventory from local digital networks, Metro Transit (including ORBT bus rapid transit) and Council Bluffs transit advertising, street furniture operators, college media (Creighton, UNO, Bellevue), and place-based media operators serving Omaha, many of which don't have a public website but offer high-quality inventory at competitive rates.
Scattered across the Omaha–Council Bluffs metro, Douglas, Sarpy, and Washington counties in Nebraska, plus Pottawattamie County in Iowa. Hyper-local placements, often the best CPMs in the market. Watch-out: hard to find and book without a marketplace.
On AdQuick, you can filter by vendor, by format, or (usually smarter) by audience and corridor, and let the platform surface the best units across all of them, across both Nebraska and Iowa as a single integrated plan.
AdQuick is the out-of-home advertising platform that lets you compare, plan, and buy across every Omaha media owner, Lamar Advertising of Omaha, Victor Outdoor Advertising, Legacy Outdoor Advertising, Link Media Outdoor, and dozens of regional Nebraska and Iowa independents, plus every programmatic DSP buying Omaha digital faces. Static bulletins, posters, digital boards, transit, street furniture, wallscapes, Eppley Airfield (OMA) displays, and programmatic DOOH in a single workflow, with one contract spanning both states.
Omaha's reach is concentrated along the bi-state freeway loop and a handful of high-traffic arterials. The strongest OOH inventory sits along these corridors:
Modern outdoor advertising is fully measurable. Every AdQuick Omaha campaign includes verified impression data, mobile attribution, and bi-state reporting across Nebraska and Iowa.
This level of measurement is rarely available when buying directly from a single vendor, and is one of the main reasons brands consolidate Omaha and bi-state OOH planning on AdQuick.
Omaha is an unusually high-leverage OOH market because of four structural factors:
OOH in Omaha delivers some of the lowest CPMs of any premium medium in the central plains, and mobile attribution now makes that performance directly measurable.
Outdoor advertising in Omaha is regulated separately on the Nebraska and Iowa sides of the metro. For most advertisers, this is a non-issue: established Omaha OOH operators own permitted inventory on both sides of the state line.
Sign regulations under the Omaha Municipal Code zoning ordinance.
Cities of Bellevue, Papillion, La Vista, and Gretna, each maintains its own sign ordinance.
Sign regulations under the Council Bluffs municipal code.
The Nebraska Department of Transportation and Iowa DOT regulate signage along interstates and primary highways under the federal Highway Beautification Act in their respective states.
Creative review is handled through standard vendor workflows. AdQuick's team handles permit verification, creative spec compliance, and posting logistics on your behalf, including any digital content restrictions (no flashing, no animations, minimum 8-second hold times on DOOH).
Most Omaha campaigns go from first search to confirmed booking in under a week. Digital billboards can launch in as little as 48–72 hours once creative is approved.
Filter by format, neighborhood, vendor, budget, or audience across all operators, Lamar Advertising of Omaha, Victor Outdoor, Legacy Outdoor, Link Media Outdoor, and regional Nebraska / Iowa independents, in a single bi-state search spanning Omaha, Council Bluffs, Sarpy County, and the broader Omaha–Council Bluffs metro.
Add units to a cart; see projected impressions, reach, frequency, and CPM in real time. Mix static and digital, freeway and arterial, downtown and suburb, Nebraska and Iowa, and let the platform surface the best units for your audience, budget, and event window.
One contract, one invoice, covering both Nebraska and Iowa sides of the metro. Upload creative once; AdQuick handles spec validation, vendor handoff, and proof-of-posting. Track your campaign with live install photos, impression reports, and performance dashboards in one place.
The questions Omaha advertisers ask most, pricing, vendors, formats, bi-state coverage, event-window campaigns, and measurement, answered straight.
Omaha is one of the most strategically valuable mid-major OOH markets in the country, with the rare combination of bi-state geography, dense Fortune 500 corporate HQ density, three universities plus Offutt AFB, and outsized event amplification through the College World Series and Berkshire Hathaway weekend. The best inventory books out months in advance, especially I-80 and I-680 digital units, Old Market and downtown wallscapes, CWS approach corridors for June flights, and OMA airport inventory. AdQuick gives you the only complete view of Omaha outdoor advertising inventory, across both Nebraska and Iowa, with transparent pricing, real impressions data, and free planning support from OOH experts who know the bi-state Omaha–Council Bluffs market.
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