How Much Does It Really Cost to Build a Deck in 2026?

Patio Lunawood deck with chairs
Title

If you are trying to budget for a new deck in 2026, the first thing to understand is this:

- Deck board price is not deck price.

A lot of people look at the price of composite boards, multiply by square footage, and assume they are close. Usually, they are not. The real cost of a deck is made up of the surface boards, the frame and footings, fasteners and fascia, railing, stairs, labour, delivery, permit paperwork, and sometimes demolition and disposal too.

Quick answer

In Ontario, a professionally built deck in 2026 can still vary a lot, but a simple ground-level build is in a very different budget category than a raised composite deck with stairs and glass railing.


A better way to budget is to split the project into four buckets:

  1. Decking surface
  2. Structure and footings
  3. Railing and stairs
  4. Labour, permit, delivery, and extras


That gives you a much more honest number.

by Alex Krupin (LinkedIn profile)

Founder and Director of Composite Deck Shop

The biggest budgeting mistake

The biggest mistake is comparing a board price to a full quote.


For example, current live retail decking examples on our site range from entry-level composite collections up to premium composite and PVC lines. That is useful for comparing materials, but it is only one piece of the budget.


Even a reasonably priced decking board can turn into an expensive project once you add:

framing lumber or steel framing

concrete footings and hardware

hidden fasteners, screws, plugs, and fascia

railing

stairs

skirting, lighting, or privacy walls

contractor labour

delivery

permit drawings and inspections

demolition of an old deck

That is why two decks with the same square footage can land in very different price ranges.

What live 2026 board pricing looks like

Here is the part most homeowners look at first: the surface boards.

Dimensions

Square Footage

Entry-Level

Mid-Range

Premium

8′ x 10′

80sq/ft

$1215

$1581

$1997

10′ x 10′

100sq/ft    

$1518

$1976

$2496

10′ x 12′

120sq/ft

$1822

$2371

$2995

10′ x 16′

160sq/ft

$2429

$3162

$3994

10′ x 20′

200sq/ft

$3037

$3952

$4992

12′ x 12′

144sq/ft

$2186

$2845

$3594

12′ x 16′

192sq/ft

$2915

$3794

$4792

12′ x 20′

240sq/ft

$3644

$4742

$5990

16′ x 16′

256sq/ft

$3888

$5059

$6390

20′ x 20′

400sq/ft

$6074

$7904

$9984

Average pricing for different deck dimensions

What those board prices do not include

This is the part that matters.
Those board prices do not include:

the frame

footings

structural hardware

clips, screws, or plugs

fascia and risers

railing posts and panels

stairs

labour

delivery

permit fees

tax

So yes, board pricing matters. But it is not the whole job.

Average installation price (labour and material included) for commonly used deck materials in Ontario (as of April 2026)

Material

Average cost of installation per square foot

Pressure treated wood

$20-$30

Entry-level composite

$40-$45

Mid-level composite

$50-$55

High-level composite/PVC

$60-$70

IPE wood

$75+

Where deck budgets usually jump

1) Framing and footings

Even if the deck surface is composite or PVC, the deck still needs a structure underneath it.
That means:

  • footings
  • posts
  • beams
  • joists
  • hangers and hardware
  • flashing and connection details

Ground-level decks are usually more affordable than raised decks because the structure is simpler.
The moment the deck gets higher, the structural side becomes more important and more expensive.

2) Railing

Railing changes the price faster than most homeowners expect.
A deck that does not need railing is one budget.


A deck that needs railing on multiple sides is a different budget.


Current live railing pricing on the site gives a good reality check:

  • Fortress picket railing: about $65 per linear foot
  • Composite railing: about $80 per linear foot
  • Frameless glass: about $110 per linear foot
  • Glass railing: about $120 per linear foot


So if you have roughly 40 linear feet of railing on a typical attached deck, the retail railing materials alone can move from roughly:

  • $2,600 for picket
  • $3,200 for composite railing
  • $4,400 for frameless glass
  • $4,800 for glass railing


And that is before posts, stairs, extra hardware, and labour.

3) Stairs

Stairs rarely feel expensive on paper, but they add up quickly.


They need more framing, more cuts, more hardware, more labour, and often more railing.


A deck with one straight stair run is one thing.


A deck with multiple landings or long stair runs is another.

4) Height and site access

A low platform deck in an easy-access backyard is cheaper to build than a raised deck with tight access.


Why?


Because height affects:

  • structure
  • labour time
  • safety setup
  • stair needs
  • guard requirements


And site access affects how quickly a crew can move materials and work.

5) Shape and design complexity

Rectangles are cheaper.


Angles, picture framing, curves, multiple levels, diagonal layouts, and custom inlays usually push the price up.


Not because they look bad. Just because they add labour and waste.

6) Add-ons

Homeowners often forget to budget for the items that finish the deck:

  • skirtingprivacy 
  • screens
  • deck lighting
  • pergolas
  • under-deck drainage
  • benches or planter boxes
  • trim details


None of these are “wrong” choices. They just need to be budgeted from the start.

7) Permit and paperwork

This is another area people leave too late.


In many Ontario municipalities, permit questions start with things like:

  • Is the deck attached?
  • Is it over 10 square metres?
  • Is it more than 600 mm / 24 in. above grade?
  • Does it need guards?
  • Do you need product details for engineered railing or composite systems?


Before ordering materials, check with your local building department.
That step can save time, redesigns, and surprise costs.

So what does a full deck really cost?

The honest answer is still: it depends on what kind of deck you are building.
But for planning purposes, this is a more realistic way to think about it in 2026:

Simple ground-level deck

A straightforward ground-level deck with minimal extras usually sits at the lower end of the market.


This is the kind of project where keeping the shape simple and avoiding railing can make a big difference.

Straightforward composite deck

Once you move into a professionally built composite deck, most homeowners should expect a noticeably higher budget than basic wood.


That does not mean it is overpriced. It usually means the project includes better surface material and still has to carry the same structure, labour, and permit reality underneath it.

Raised deck, premium material, or glass-heavy design

This is where costs can accelerate quickly.


A raised deck with premium boards, multiple stairs, and glass railing is not just a “nicer deck board” project. It is a different build category.


That is why broad square-foot averages only help so much. The full scope matters more.

Our honest budgeting advice for 2026

If you want a realistic starting budget, do this:

Start with these questions

  • Is the deck ground-level or raised?
  • Does it need railing?
  • How many stairs?
  • Are you trying to keep costs down, or are you building once and planning to stay?
  • Do you want picket, composite railing, or glass?
  • Are you comparing board prices only, or the full project?

Then price the project in this order

  1. Surface material
  2. Structure
  3. Railing
  4. Stairs
  5. Labour
  6. Delivery, permit, demo, and tax


That sequence usually gives you a much more honest number than starting with square footage alone.

How to save money without regretting it later

There are smart ways to save money, and there are expensive mistakes that look like savings.
The safer ways to save are:

1. Keep the layout simple

A clean rectangle is usually the best value shape.

2. Choose railing early

Do not leave railing until the end. It can change the quote more than the board selection.

In this blog

FAQ

3. Avoid overbuilding the finish package

Lighting, skirting, privacy walls, and pergolas all add cost. Decide which ones matter now and which ones can wait.

4. Use a good entry or mid-range board if it suits the project

Not every deck needs the most premium line.

5. Get the permit questions answered before ordering

This avoids rework, delays, and the cost of changing materials or guard details after the fact.

6. Compare full-scope quotes, not headline numbers

A quote that looks cheaper may be missing delivery, stairs, demo, permit drawings, railing, or disposal.

Final takeaway

If you are budgeting from board price alone, you are probably underestimating the real project cost.
In 2026, the deck surface is only one line item.


On many jobs, the biggest cost swings come from railing, stairs, structure, and labour much more than from the difference between one good deck board and another.


That is why the smartest way to budget is not to ask, “What does composite decking cost?”


It is to ask, “What does my whole deck need?”


The pricing logic inside this refresh intentionally separates live board and railing prices from full installed project ranges, because homeowners often confuse those two numbers even though they measure different things.

Need help choosing the right material for your backyard?

We can help you compare these options based on your site conditions (shade, trees, moisture, salt exposure, traffic) and your desired look (natural patina vs “stay closer to original colour”).

 

Visit our showrooms in Vaughan, Peterborough, London, or Barrie or call (888) 788-6788.

Have questions?
We have answers!

Q1: How much does it really cost to build a deck in Ontario in 2026?

A: For a professionally built deck, the price can range widely depending on height, material, railing, stairs, and complexity. A simple ground-level build sits at the lower end of the market, while raised composite or glass-heavy projects land much higher.

Q2: Why is deck board price so much lower than a full quote?

A: Because deck boards are only one part of the job. A full quote may also include framing, footings, hardware, fasteners, railing, stairs, labour, delivery, permit work, demolition, and tax.

Q3: What do composite deck boards cost right now?

A: Current live retail examples on the site range from about $3.19 per linear foot for entry-level collections up to about $11.62 per linear foot for premium lines.

Q4: How much do railings add to the cost?

A: Usually more than people expect. Current live retail examples start around $65 per linear foot for picket railing, about $80 for composite railing, around $110 for frameless glass, and around $120 for glass railing before posts, stairs, and labour.

Q5: Does deck height change the price?

A: Yes. Raised decks usually cost more because they need more structure, more labour, and often railing and stairs.

Q6: Do I need a permit for a deck in Ontario?

A: Often yes, especially if the deck is attached, larger, or high enough to require guards. Always check with your local building department before ordering materials.

Q7: Is composite worth the extra upfront cost?

A: For many homeowners, yes. Composite usually costs more upfront than basic wood, but it often makes sense when lower maintenance and longer-term appearance matter.

Q8: What is the safest way to save money on a deck?

A: Keep the layout simple, choose railing early, avoid unnecessary extras, and compare full-scope quotes instead of just comparing deck board prices.

Q9: What should be included in a deck quote?

A: At minimum: footings, framing, deck surface, fascia, fasteners, railing, stairs, labour, delivery, permit-related work, demolition or disposal if needed, and tax.