How Much Does a Deck Cost? — Free 2026 Composite & Wood Deck Calculator

Estimate the cost to build or upgrade an elevated deck. Step through size, materials, railing options, and site conditions to get a clear low–high range. This elevated deck calculator uses typical market pricing patterns to give you a steady baseline for planning.

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Project Type:
Country: Usa  |  Region: Louisiana

Total Deck Area

Approximate size of the deck platform you want to build or replace.

Area (ft²)

Hardscape & Surfaces

Pick the surface and structural elements. Tap any card.

Special Features (optional)

Optional structures and upgrades that turn the space into a place to spend time.

Site Preparation

How much work does the area need before installation? Be honest — this is one of the biggest cost drivers.

Overall site condition

Extra prep conditions

Tick any that apply on top of the base condition above.

Budget Tier

Pick the finish level you want. This multiplies your estimate based on material grade and labor detail.

Review & Generate Estimate

You will receive a low–high estimate and an itemized breakdown on the next screen.

This calculator provides a planning estimate using typical market pricing for the selected country.

Complete guide

How much does a deck cost to build?

A new raised wood or composite deck typically runs $25–$60 per square foot in the U.S. — meaning a standard 16×20 (320 sq ft) deck lands between $8,000 and $19,200 depending on material and complexity. This guide covers the four main decking materials with honest tradeoffs on lifespan and maintenance, what's actually in a deck quote, and the structural details that separate a safe deck from a code violation.

Decking material options compared

  • Pressure-treated pine ($15–$25/sq ft installed). Cheapest. 15–25 year lifespan. Needs staining/sealing every 2–3 years. Splinters and warps over time.
  • Cedar or redwood ($22–$40/sq ft). Naturally rot-resistant, beautiful wood grain. 20–30 year lifespan. Needs annual finishing. Soft — dents and scratches easily.
  • Composite (Trex, TimberTech) ($30–$55/sq ft). Wood fiber + plastic. No staining ever, splinter-free, 25-yr+ warranties. Hot underfoot in direct sun. Can scratch.
  • PVC / cellular plastic ($35–$60/sq ft). All-synthetic. 30–50 year lifespan. Lowest maintenance. Highest cost. Can look "plastic" — choose grain-embossed boards.

Our deck material comparison page has full spec sheets including expansion behavior, heat retention, and fade resistance for each option.

What's in a deck installation quote?

  1. Permit and design — almost every deck over 30" off the ground needs a permit. Costs $100–$500 depending on jurisdiction.
  2. Footings — concrete piers below the frost line. 4–8 footings for a typical deck.
  3. Posts and beams — usually 6×6 posts; spans determined by code and load.
  4. Joists and ledger — 2×8 to 2×12 joists at 12" or 16" on center. The ledger board attaches the deck to the house — this is where most deck failures happen.
  5. Decking surface — the boards you walk on (pressure-treated, composite, etc.).
  6. Railings and stairs — required by code for any deck over 30" high. Add $30–$80 per linear foot of railing.
  7. Hardware — joist hangers, lag bolts, structural fasteners. The unglamorous stuff that holds everything up.
  8. Inspection — final inspection before use. Required by permit.

The deck construction process

A typical 320 sq ft deck takes 4–8 days:

  1. Day 1 — Permits, layout, and dig. Footing holes marked and dug below frost line.
  2. Day 2 — Footings pour. Concrete poured into footing holes, post bases set. 24-hour cure.
  3. Day 3 — Frame. Posts cut, beams installed, joists hung, ledger lag-bolted to house.
  4. Days 4–5 — Decking. Boards laid, cut, and fastened. Hidden fasteners for premium composite; visible screws for pressure-treated.
  5. Day 6 — Railings and stairs.
  6. Day 7 — Inspection and finish. Sand any rough spots, apply finish if wood, final cleanup.

What changes deck cost the most?

  • Height off the ground. A 6" deck is essentially a patio with boards on top. A 12-foot-high deck needs taller posts, lateral bracing, stronger footings, and a stair system. Each foot of height adds cost.
  • Shape. Rectangular decks are cheapest. Octagons, multi-level decks, and curved edges add 15–30% in labor.
  • Railing material. Pressure-treated wood balusters are the cheapest ($30/linear ft). Aluminum or composite balusters are $50–$80. Glass or cable rail is $80–$150+.
  • Stairs. A single set of stairs adds $800–$2,500 depending on height and width.
  • Hidden fasteners. Composite decks usually use hidden fasteners ($1.50–$3 per sq ft extra) for the clean no-screw look.
  • Skirting. Lattice or solid skirting around the base is optional but tidy. $10–$25 per linear ft.

Deck mistakes that cause real problems

  1. Ledger board attachment failure. The ledger connects the deck to the house. If it's nailed instead of bolted, or not flashed against water, it'll fail. This is the #1 cause of deck collapse.
  2. Skipping the permit. Even if the city doesn't catch you, an unpermitted deck creates issues when you sell the house, and your homeowner's insurance may not cover it.
  3. Wrong joist spacing for the material. Composite decks usually need 12" joist spacing (vs. 16" for wood). Cheap quotes that use 16" spacing for composite will cause sagging boards.
  4. Picture-frame edging on pressure-treated. Looks nice but traps moisture. Better on composite where it's just aesthetic.
  5. No ventilation under the deck. Decks need airflow under them or the joists rot. Skirting must include vents.

Deck cost FAQs

How much does a wood deck cost per square foot?

Pressure-treated pine runs $15–$25 per sq ft installed. Cedar or redwood runs $22–$40. Both include framing, surface boards, basic railings, and a single set of stairs.

Is composite decking worth the extra cost?

For most homeowners staying 10+ years, yes — composite costs 30–60% more upfront but eliminates staining and resealing. Total cost of ownership over 25 years is usually lower than pressure-treated wood.

How long does a deck last?

Pressure-treated wood 15–25 years (with regular sealing). Cedar/redwood 20–30. Composite 25–30. PVC 30–50. Lifespan depends heavily on whether you keep up with finishing (for wood) and avoid water entrapment (for all materials).

Do I need a permit for a deck?

Almost always, yes — especially for decks attached to the house or over 30" high. Free-standing low decks under a certain size (often 200 sq ft, 30" high) sometimes don't, but check locally before starting.

Can I DIY a deck?

Smaller (under 200 sq ft), ground-level decks are reasonable DIY projects for skilled homeowners. Anything attached to the house, over 30" high, or with stairs really benefits from professionals — the ledger attachment alone is structurally critical.

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