How Much Does a Deck Cost in 2026?
A deck is one of the highest-ROI outdoor improvements you can make. The national average deck project in 2026 costs between $7,000 and $15,000 for a standard 12×16-foot deck, but the final number depends heavily on material choice, height, complexity, and whether you hire a contractor or do it yourself.
Deck Cost by Material
Pressure-Treated Wood
The most common and affordable decking material in the US.
- Material cost: $2-4 per square foot for decking boards
- Substructure (joists, beams, posts): $1.50-3 per square foot
- Total installed cost: $15-25 per square foot
- 12×16-foot deck estimate: $2,900-4,800
Pros: Lowest upfront cost, widely available, easy to work with for DIY. Cons: Requires annual staining/sealing, splinters, warps over time, 10-15 year lifespan before replacement.
Cedar or Redwood
A step up in appearance and natural rot resistance.
- Material cost: $5-8 per square foot
- Total installed cost: $25-38 per square foot
- 12×16-foot deck estimate: $4,800-7,300
Pros: Naturally rot-resistant, beautiful grain, no chemical treatment needed. Cons: Still requires periodic sealing, softwood that dents and scratches, higher cost. Cedar has become significantly more expensive since 2020 due to supply constraints.
Composite (Trex, TimberTech, Fiberon)
Engineered wood-plastic material that dominates the mid-to-high-end market.
- Material cost: $8-14 per square foot
- Total installed cost: $30-50 per square foot
- 12×16-foot deck estimate: $5,800-9,600
Pros: No staining, no sealing, no splinters. 25-50 year warranty. Consistent color. Fade-resistant with capped composite. Cons: Higher upfront cost, can get hot in direct sun (especially dark colors), cannot be sanded or refinished.
PVC / Cellular PVC (Azek, TimberTech Advanced PVC)
Premium synthetic decking with no wood content.
- Material cost: $10-18 per square foot
- Total installed cost: $35-60 per square foot
- 12×16-foot deck estimate: $6,700-11,500
Pros: Completely waterproof, lightest weight, coolest surface temperature, mold/mildew proof, longest lifespan. Cons: Most expensive option, can feel less natural underfoot, limited color options compared to composite.
Hardwood (Ipe, Cumaru, Tigerwood)
Exotic tropical hardwoods for the highest-end decks.
- Material cost: $12-25 per square foot
- Total installed cost: $40-75 per square foot
- 12×16-foot deck estimate: $7,700-14,400
Pros: Extraordinary durability (40+ years), stunning appearance, hardest surface. Cons: Extremely heavy, requires specialized tools and pre-drilling, very expensive, sourcing can be environmentally problematic.
Labor Costs
Labor typically accounts for 50-60% of total deck cost if you hire a professional.
- Basic deck construction: $15-25 per square foot for labor
- Elevated deck (4+ feet high): $20-35 per square foot (requires more structural work and often engineering)
- Multi-level or complex design: $25-45 per square foot
- Demolition and removal of old deck: $3-8 per square foot additional
Average contractor rates by region (2026):
- Southeast US: $30-45 per square foot all-in
- Midwest: $35-50 per square foot
- Northeast: $40-60 per square foot
- West Coast: $45-70 per square foot
Common Add-On Costs
These features are frequently added but rarely included in base quotes:
- Railing: $20-50 per linear foot (cable rail at the high end, wood picket at the low end)
- Stairs: $50-150 per step, more for wide or curved stairs
- Built-in bench seating: $200-600 per bench
- Pergola or shade structure: $1,500-5,000 (see our dedicated pergola cost guide)
- Integrated lighting: $500-2,500 for a basic LED package
- Permit and inspection: $200-500 in most municipalities (required for any attached deck)
DIY vs Professional: Real Cost Comparison
DIY 12×16-foot composite deck:
- Materials: $2,500-4,500
- Tool rental (if needed): $200-400
- Permit: $200-400
- Total: $2,900-5,300
- Time: 3-5 weekends
Professional 12×16-foot composite deck:
- Total: $5,800-9,600
- Time: 3-7 business days
DIY saves roughly 40-50%, but only if you have basic carpentry skills. Common DIY mistakes — improper joist spacing, inadequate footings, wrong fastener type — can create safety hazards or require professional correction.
Budget Tips
Time your project. Late fall and winter are the contractor off-season in most regions. You can negotiate 10-20% lower rates for winter builds.
Keep it simple. Every angle, curve, and level change adds cost. A rectangular deck at a single level is the most cost-effective design.
Phase the add-ons. Build the deck platform now, add the pergola and lighting next year. The structural work is the expensive part; accessories can wait.
Use composite for the deck surface, pressure-treated for the hidden substructure. This hybrid approach saves 15-20% versus all-composite while delivering the same visible result.
Visualizing Your Deck
Before committing to materials and sizing, preview how a deck will look in context with your home and yard. Arden lets you visualize different outdoor living configurations — including decks, patios, and pergolas — against your actual space to make confident decisions before the first board is cut.
Try Arden free
Upload a photo of your yard and see it transformed with AI. 20+ garden styles, instant previews, no design skill required.