830K
People in the Charleston metro
7M+
Annual visitors to Charleston
40–60%
CPM savings vs. Atlanta or Charlotte
#88
Charleston–North Charleston DMA rank
Access every OOH format
Bulletins & Billboards
Transit
Street Furniture
Posters & Wallscapes
Overview

Why Advertise Outdoors in Charleston, SC

Charleston is South Carolina's largest city (population ~155,000 city, ~830,000 metro) and one of the most-visited destinations on the East Coast, with 7+ million annual visitors, a Boeing manufacturing hub, the second-busiest container port on the East Coast, and a booming tech and aerospace economy. Charleston is part of the Charleston–North Charleston DMA (the #88 TV market in the U.S.), but it punches significantly above that ranking thanks to a distinctive mix of tourism, aerospace, port, and university audiences. AdQuick is the out-of-home advertising platform that gives you Charleston-specific inventory and the option to extend across the Lowcountry (Mt. Pleasant, North Charleston, Summerville, Hilton Head, Beaufort, Savannah) in a single buy.
FORMATS

Charleston Outdoor Advertising Formats

Charleston supports every major OOH format, with one big caveat: the downtown historic district essentially prohibits new outdoor advertising. Most billboard and wallscape inventory lives in the surrounding metro: Mt. Pleasant, North Charleston, West Ashley, and along the major corridors.

Billboards (Static)

The Charleston core inventory. Concentrated along I-26, I-526 (Mark Clark Expressway), US-17 (Coleman Boulevard / Savannah Highway), US-78, Highway 61 (Ashley River Road), Rivers Avenue, and Sam Rittenberg Boulevard. Standard sizes include 14' × 48' bulletins on primary I-26 and I-526 inventory and 11' × 23' posters (30-sheet) on secondary roads and neighborhood corridors. Typical Charleston pricing: $400–$1,300 per month for 30-sheet posters; $2,000–$6,500 for highway bulletins; $4,500–$11,000 for premium I-26 / I-526 units between downtown and the airport.

Digital Billboards

Charleston's digital inventory is concentrated along I-26, I-526, and US-17, rotating every 6–8 seconds with dayparting, weather-triggered, and geo-targeted creative. Digital units have lower minimum spend, faster creative turnaround (no vinyl printing), and the ability to swap creative mid-flight. Typical Charleston pricing: $3,000–$12,000 per month for share of voice on premium I-26 / I-526 corridors; $2,000–$7,000 on US-17, Rivers Avenue, and other arterials.

CHS Airport Advertising

Charleston International Airport (CHS) is one of the fastest-growing airports in the U.S., serving roughly 6M annual passengers with strong tourism, business, and military traffic (CHS shares the runway with Joint Base Charleston). Available formats include dioramas, baggage claim, jet bridges, and digital networks: the most efficient way to reach arriving tourists, business travelers, and military personnel. Typical Charleston pricing: $3,500–$25,000+ per CHS airport unit.

Transit, Furniture & Place-Based

CARTA (Charleston Area Regional Transportation Authority) city buses, the DASH downtown shuttle, and Charleston-area transit hubs, including bus kings, queens, tails, interior cards, and transit hub media. Bus shelters, benches, and kiosks throughout downtown Charleston (within preservation guidelines), Mt. Pleasant, North Charleston, West Ashley, and Summerville. Place-based at Joe Riley Stadium, North Charleston Coliseum, Charleston Music Hall, Gaillard Center, gas station toppers, restaurant and bar networks, mall media (Towne Centre, Tanger Outlets, Citadel Mall, Northwoods Mall), and college venues at College of Charleston, The Citadel, MUSC, and Trident Tech. Plus mobile billboards for event activations (Charleston Wine + Food, Spoleto Festival USA, Cooper River Bridge Run, Charleston Fashion Week, Volvo Car Open at Daniel Island). Typical Charleston pricing: $500–$1,200 per CARTA bus king; $700–$1,800 per bus shelter; $1,200–$5,000 per place-based unit; $4,000–$15,000 per mobile billboard flight.

Charleston OOH delivers distinctive reach across one of the Southeast's highest-ROI Tier-3 markets.
Real numbers from Geopath, OAAA research, and AdQuick campaign data, not marketing copy.
6M
Annual passengers through CHS airport
2–4×
Recall lift vs. display-only audiences
7 days
Programmatic DOOH launch time
40–60%
CPM savings vs. Tier-1 Southeast metros
PRICING DATA

How Much Does Outdoor Advertising Cost in Charleston, SC?

You'll see "from $10/day" promos on aggregator sites. In Charleston, that figure is real for entry-level poster panels far from the main corridors, but Charleston has unusual market dynamics. Downtown's preservation laws restrict inventory, tourism season inflates demand, and I-26 / I-526 premium boards command real Tier-2 pricing. Here's what real Charleston campaigns actually cost.

Charleston Billboard Cost Ranges (Per Month, Per Unit)

Format Typical Monthly Cost (per unit)
30-sheet poster (11' × 23', secondary roads) $400 – $1,300
Static bulletin (14' × 48', highway) $2,000 – $6,500
Static bulletin (I-26 / I-526, premium) $4,500 – $11,000
Digital billboard (share of voice, I-26 / I-526) $3,000 – $12,000
Digital billboard (US-17 / Rivers / arterials) $2,000 – $7,000
CARTA / DASH bus king $500 – $1,200
Bus shelter (downtown / corridor) $700 – $1,800
Wallscape (limited, suburb approach corridors) $3,500 – $12,000
Place-based (Towne Centre, Tanger, malls) $1,200 – $5,000
CHS Airport unit $3,500 – $25,000+
Mobile billboard (per flight) $4,000 – $15,000
Lowcountry-wide campaign (10+ units) $20,000 – $130,000 / mo

What Drives Charleston OOH Pricing

Preservation district scarcity. Because downtown Charleston restricts new outdoor advertising, suburban premium corridors (I-26 between downtown and the airport, I-526 around Mt. Pleasant) command higher pricing than equivalent corridors in larger Southeast metros.
Format. Digital runs 30–80% above static in the same location; CHS airport carries the highest premiums.
Flight length. Standard flights are 4 weeks; 12-week and 26-week flights typically earn 10–25% volume discounts.
Season. Spring tourism (March–May, especially Spoleto and Wine+Food), peak summer (June–August), fall tourism (September–November), holiday season, and wedding-season weekends book first and price highest. Charleston's tourism calendar is unusually packed.
Event proximity. Inventory around the Cooper River Bridge, Daniel Island during Volvo Car Open, and the historic district during major festivals prices at event-window premiums.
Production. Vinyl printing and installation typically add $400–$1,500 per static unit; digital creative swaps are free.
COMPLIANCE

Charleston, SC Outdoor Advertising Regulations: What You Need to Know

Outdoor advertising in Charleston is governed by three overlapping authorities, and the historic district makes Charleston one of the most preservation-focused OOH markets in the U.S. South.

City of Charleston Sign Ordinance and the Historic District

The City of Charleston Zoning Ordinance (Chapter 54, Article 5: Signs), working in concert with the Board of Architectural Review (BAR), regulates signs inside Charleston city limits, with significantly stricter rules within the historic district (which covers most of the peninsula).

New off-premise billboards are effectively prohibited within the City of Charleston historic district.
All signage on historic-district properties must be reviewed by the Board of Architectural Review; many forms of large-format outdoor advertising are simply not permitted.
Digital billboards are permitted in select commercial zones outside the historic district, with brightness (nits) and dwell-time limits; typically an 8-second minimum hold and no animation or video.
Sign permits are issued by the City of Charleston Department of Planning, Preservation and Sustainability.

Surrounding Charleston-Area Jurisdictions

Mt. Pleasant, North Charleston, West Ashley (unincorporated), James Island, Folly Beach, Sullivan's Island, Isle of Palms, Daniel Island, Summerville, and Goose Creek each have their own sign codes. Some (notably Sullivan's Island, Isle of Palms, and Folly Beach) are highly restrictive due to beach/coastal preservation. Charleston County, Berkeley County, and Dorchester County handle unincorporated areas. AdQuick's media-owner partners hold appropriate permits in every jurisdiction.

SCDOT and the South Carolina Highway Beautification Act

The South Carolina Department of Transportation (SCDOT) regulates billboards along interstate and federal-aid primary highways (I-26, I-526, US-17, US-78, US-52) under the South Carolina Highway Beautification Act (S.C. Code §57-25-110 et seq.). Highway-facing units require both state and city/county permits. The Outdoor Advertising Association of South Carolina (OAASC) is the state industry body, and operators in good standing follow OAASC practice and ethics standards.

Content Rules

Alcohol. South Carolina ABC rules; restrictions near schools, churches, and youth-serving facilities.
Cannabis. South Carolina does not permit recreational or medical cannabis advertising at scale; recreational and most medical cannabis remain illegal in SC. Only hemp-derived CBD products with compliance disclosures are permitted.
Gambling. SC has no commercial casinos; limited content rules apply.
Tobacco / vape. Restricted near schools and youth-serving facilities under federal and state rules.

AdQuick reviews creative against each market's standards before posting.

What this means for your campaign: Because downtown Charleston's preservation rules restrict outdoor advertising and surrounding suburbs are growing rapidly, premium I-26, I-526, and US-17 inventory is genuinely finite. Lock in spring tourism, summer, fall, and Q4 flights 60–90 days ahead. Standard flights on secondary corridors can launch in 21–45 days; programmatic DOOH in as little as 7.

VENDOR LANDSCAPE

Major Outdoor Advertising Companies in Charleston, SC

AdQuick is media-owner-agnostic, aggregating inventory from every major operator covering Charleston and the Lowcountry so you can compare on one map. Adams Outdoor is the dominant single operator in Charleston, but Adams inventory is roughly 40–50% of the Charleston metro market, not the whole market.

Adams Outdoor Advertising

Largest Charleston footprint; SC market leader and the dominant single operator in the Lowcountry, holding roughly 40–50% of metro inventory. Strong on bulletins and digital across I-26, I-526, and major arterials.

Regional Leader · Bulletins · Digital

Lamar Advertising

SC statewide coverage with bulletins, posters, and digital inventory. Strong for advertisers extending Charleston buys into Columbia, Greenville, or beyond. Watch-out: not the dominant operator in Charleston proper.

National · Statewide · Multi-Format

OUTFRONT Media

Transit and roadside specialist in Charleston. Strong on transit and bulletin inventory; good fit for downtown commuter and tourist-corridor reach. Watch-out: lighter coverage than Adams on highway bulletins.

Transit · Bulletins · Downtown

JCDecaux

Operates street furniture across Charleston and is the airport-advertising concessionaire at CHS, the only path to airport dioramas, baggage claim, jet bridges, and CHS digital networks. Strong for tourism, business, and military traveler reach.

Street Furniture · CHS Airport

Grace Outdoor

SC / NC regional specialist with bulletin and digital inventory complementing the national operators. Good fit for advertisers who want regional reach outside of the Adams footprint.

Regional · Bulletins · Digital

CARTA (via concessionaire)

Charleston Area Regional Transportation Authority transit advertising: buses, the DASH downtown shuttle, and Charleston-area transit hubs. Best for downtown workers, MUSC and CofC students, and tourists using DASH between historic-district destinations.

Transit · DASH · Bus Media

OAASC

The Outdoor Advertising Association of South Carolina is the state industry body, setting practice and ethics standards. Not a media owner, but a useful reference for verifying operator standing.

Industry Body · SC Standards

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. If you book direct with Adams, you're choosing from one operator's inventory at one operator's pricing. AdQuick gives you Adams inventory plus Lamar, OUTFRONT, Grace Outdoor, JCDecaux (street furniture + CHS airport), and CARTA transit on a single map, with standardized pricing and impression data. For brands with an existing Adams relationship they want to keep, AdQuick can still help with overflow, multi-operator extensions, or airport/transit additions Adams doesn't sell.

AdQuick: One Marketplace, Every Charleston Format

AdQuick is the out-of-home advertising platform that lets you compare, plan, and buy across every Charleston media owner (Adams Outdoor, Lamar, OUTFRONT, JCDecaux, Grace Outdoor, and CARTA transit) plus every programmatic DSP buying Charleston digital faces. Static bulletins, posters, digital boards, transit, street furniture, CHS airport media, place-based, and programmatic DOOH in a single workflow.

MARKETS & CORRIDORS

Charleston, SC Corridors and Neighborhoods We Cover

AdQuick has live inventory across Charleston and the broader Lowcountry: from I-26 freeway bulletins to historic-district transit to Mt. Pleasant place-based to CHS airport. Running a Lowcountry campaign that extends into Hilton Head, Beaufort, Myrtle Beach, Columbia, or Savannah, GA? AdQuick lets you build that as one PO with consolidated measurement.

Highway and Freeway Corridors

I-26 (Charleston ↔ Columbia): through-traffic, commuters, and tourists. Bulletins and digital billboards. The primary corridor connecting Charleston, North Charleston, Summerville, and on toward Columbia.
I-526 (Mark Clark Expressway): Charleston metro beltway connecting Mt. Pleasant, North Charleston, and West Ashley. Suburb commuters. Bulletins and digital billboards.
US-17 (Coleman Blvd / Savannah Hwy): Mt. Pleasant ↔ Charleston ↔ West Ashley. Digital, bulletins, and place-based.
US-78 / Rivers Avenue: North Charleston commuter corridor. Digital and bulletins.
Highway 61 / Ashley River Road: West Ashley commuters and tourism to the plantations. Bulletins.
Sam Rittenberg Boulevard: West Ashley retail and families. Digital, bulletins, and place-based.

Downtown Charleston (Historic District)

Tourists, residents, MUSC, CofC, Citadel: transit, street furniture (historic-district compliant), and limited wallscape inventory. New off-premise billboards are effectively prohibited inside the historic district, and most large-format inventory lives in the surrounding metro.

Mt. Pleasant

Coleman / Towne Centre: affluent suburbs, retail, and dining. Bulletins, digital, place-based, and street furniture.
Mount Pleasant Towne Centre / Belle Hall: affluent retail and weekend traffic. Place-based and street furniture.

Daniel Island

Tech, finance, Volvo Car Open, high-HHI: bulletins and place-based reaching one of the fastest-growing affluent submarkets in the Southeast.

North Charleston

Industrial, Boeing, Tanger Outlets, retail: bulletins, digital, and place-based. Strongest stack for reaching Charleston's aerospace, defense, and manufacturing workforce.

West Ashley

Established residential, retail: bulletins, place-based, and transit reaching long-time Charleston residents and West Ashley commuters.

James Island / Folly Beach

Beach tourists, residents: bulletins, mobile, and place-based. Note that Folly Beach itself has highly restrictive sign codes; most inventory lives on approach corridors.

Summerville / Goose Creek

Fast-growing northwest suburbs: bulletins and digital reaching one of the Southeast's fastest-growing suburban belts.

Joint Base Charleston / Air Force Base

Military, defense: bulletins on approach corridors. Best for recruiting, defense contracting, and military-adjacent consumer campaigns.

Charleston International Airport (CHS)

Tourists, business, military: airport media including dioramas, baggage claim, jet bridges, and digital networks. ~6M annual passengers with strong tourism, business, and military traffic.

Kiawah / Seabrook Islands

Luxury tourism, resort traffic: US-17 approach inventory. The path to the resort islands prices at luxury-tourism premiums during peak season.
EFFECTIVENESS

Why Brands Buy Charleston, SC OOH on AdQuick

For brands targeting tourism, hospitality, aerospace, defense, retail, healthcare, and Southeastern coastal audiences, Charleston combines a distinctive market profile at CPMs well below Tier-1 Southeast metros.

Every major Charleston media owner in one platform. Adams Outdoor, Lamar, OUTFRONT, JCDecaux, Grace Outdoor, CARTA transit, CHS airport.
Charleston-only or Lowcountry-wide. Extend into Mt. Pleasant, North Charleston, Summerville, Hilton Head, Beaufort, Savannah on one PO with consolidated measurement.
Tourism + business + military expertise. Campaigns reaching Charleston's three distinct audience layers are an AdQuick specialty: 7M+ visitors, Boeing/aerospace, and Joint Base Charleston.
Historic district navigation. We know what's permitted, what requires BAR review, and where the practical premium inventory actually lives.
Attribution and measurement built in. Foot traffic, brand lift, and digital lift, with verified Geopath impressions on every campaign.
Permits and production handled. Vinyl, install, proof-of-posting all coordinated, including historic-district BAR coordination where relevant.
Real humans in Eastern Time. Actual Lowcountry media buyers, not chatbots.

Brands run outdoor advertising in Charleston to reach I-26 commuters (the primary corridor connecting Charleston, North Charleston, Summerville, and on toward Columbia), I-526 (Mark Clark Expressway) suburban commuters, tourists arriving via CHS or driving I-26, fast-growing suburbs (Mt. Pleasant, Daniel Island, Summerville, Goose Creek), and the Boeing / Joint Base Charleston / port audience. AdQuick measures every campaign with verified impression data from Geopath, plus optional add-ons for foot-traffic attribution, brand lift, and website-visit lift via mobile location data.

HOW TO BUY

How to Buy a Billboard in Charleston, SC on AdQuick

There are two ways to buy a billboard in Charleston, and the right answer depends on what you're trying to do. Direct from a media owner means 4–6 separate sales conversations for a meaningful Charleston metro buy. Through AdQuick, you see inventory from every owner on one map, with standardized pricing and impression data: one conversation, one PO, one measurement report. A standard campaign can be live in 21–45 days; programmatic DOOH in as little as 7 days.

01

Tell us your goal and budget

Reach tourists arriving at CHS? Saturate Mt. Pleasant during peak season? Time creative to Spoleto, Wine + Food, or the Cooper River Bridge Run? A Charleston media expert helps shape the plan across Adams Outdoor, Lamar, OUTFRONT, JCDecaux, Grace Outdoor, and CARTA transit in a single search.

02

Compare and pick inventory

See every available unit from every major Charleston operator on a single map, with weekly impressions and pricing transparent before you commit. Mix static and digital, freeway and surface street, downtown transit and Mt. Pleasant place-based, CHS airport and Lowcountry, and let the platform surface the best units for your audience and budget.

03

We handle the rest

One contract covers every unit across every vendor. Permits (including historic-district BAR coordination where relevant), vinyl production, install, proof-of-posting, and measurement, all coordinated by AdQuick. Track your campaign with live install photos, impression reports, and performance dashboards in one place.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions: Outdoor Advertising in Charleston, SC

The questions Charleston advertisers ask most: pricing, vendors, formats, regulations, lead times, and measurement, answered straight.

This page covers Charleston, South Carolina: the historic coastal city in the Lowcountry. For outdoor advertising in Charleston, West Virginia (the WV state capital), see our Charleston, WV outdoor advertising page.
A 14' × 48' static bulletin on I-26 or I-526 in Charleston typically costs $2,000–$6,500 per month, with premium I-26 units between downtown and the airport reaching $11,000. Digital billboards range from $3,000–$12,000 per month for share of voice on premium corridors. Smaller poster panels on secondary roads start around $400/month. A full Lowcountry regional campaign typically runs $20,000–$130,000/month depending on scale.
The largest Charleston billboard operators include Adams Outdoor Advertising (the regional market leader), Lamar Advertising, OUTFRONT Media, JCDecaux, and Grace Outdoor (SC/NC specialist). CARTA bus and DASH advertising is handled through a concessionaire. CHS airport advertising is operated by JCDecaux. AdQuick aggregates inventory from all major operators on a single map.
Generally no. The City of Charleston historic district essentially prohibits new outdoor advertising, and any signage on historic-district properties must go through the Board of Architectural Review (BAR). Most outdoor advertising inventory in the Charleston market lives in the surrounding metro (Mt. Pleasant, North Charleston, West Ashley, James Island, Daniel Island, and Summerville) and along the major highway corridors (I-26, I-526, US-17). Street furniture and small-format media may be available downtown within preservation guidelines.
A combination of CHS airport media (capturing arriving tourists), digital billboards on I-26 between the airport and downtown, bulletins on US-17 through Mt. Pleasant and toward the historic district, plus mobile billboards routing the tourism corridors during peak weekends. Layer with place-based at Towne Centre and Tanger Outlets for shopping-tourist reach. For weddings, layer mobile and place-based in Mt. Pleasant and Daniel Island.
Three steps: (1) Tell AdQuick your goal, audience, and budget. (2) Compare available inventory from every major Charleston operator on a single map with transparent pricing. (3) AdQuick handles permits, vinyl production, installation, and proof-of-posting. A standard campaign can be live in 21–45 days; programmatic DOOH in as little as 7 days.
Digital billboards on I-26 and Rivers Avenue (US-78) approaching North Charleston, plus bulletins along the Boeing campus and Joint Base Charleston approaches, plus transit advertising on CARTA routes serving North Charleston. For recruiting and B2B campaigns targeting Charleston's aerospace economy, this stack is consistently the highest-ROI play.
For premium I-26 / I-526, CHS airport, peak tourism season (March–May, June–August, September–November), Spoleto, Wine + Food, Volvo Car Open, and Q4 retail flights, book 60–90 days ahead. For standard flights on secondary corridors, 21–45 days is usually enough. Programmatic DOOH can launch in as little as 7 days.
No. The media owner holds the structural permit issued by the City of Charleston Department of Planning, Preservation and Sustainability (and SCDOT for highway units). For signage on historic-district properties, the Board of Architectural Review (BAR) may also need to approve creative or installation. You only need to make sure your creative complies with content rules. AdQuick reviews creative against each market's standards before posting.
No. South Carolina does not permit recreational or medical cannabis advertising. Recreational and medical cannabis remain largely illegal in SC. Only hemp-derived CBD products with compliance disclosures are permitted. AdQuick's compliance team reviews all regulated-category creative before posting.
Yes. The Lowcountry / coastal Southeast is built for multi-market tourism and lifestyle campaigns. You can plan a single buy covering Charleston, Mt. Pleasant, Summerville, Hilton Head, Beaufort, and Savannah, GA on one PO with consolidated measurement, or split into separate flights with different creative.
For brands targeting tourism, hospitality, aerospace/defense, weddings/destinations, healthcare, and Southeastern coastal audiences, Charleston delivers distinctive reach at CPMs typically 40–60% below Atlanta or Charlotte and slightly above Savannah for comparable formats. The combination of 7M+ annual visitors, a growing Boeing/aerospace economy, and a uniquely engaged audience makes Charleston one of the highest-ROI Tier-3 markets in the Southeast, especially for hospitality, retail, and lifestyle brands.

Ready to Launch Your Charleston, SC Campaign?

Whether you need a single digital board on I-26, a CHS airport unit, or a 25-unit Lowcountry saturation plan across Charleston, Mt. Pleasant, North Charleston, and Summerville, AdQuick gets you live pricing, real inventory, and a campaign live in days.

Please enter a business email to continue.

Get Started ->

Launch hyper-targeted OOH campaigns in minutes