Last Updated on July 2, 2026 by Sam Wood Worker

A wood deck usually costs between $15 and $45 per square foot, all in — that means wood, hardware, labor if you hire someone, and finishing. For a normal 300 square foot deck, most homeowners pay somewhere between $4,500 and $13,500. The biggest price swing comes from your wood choice: pressure-treated pine is cheapest, composite is in the middle, and exotic hardwoods like ipe sit at the top. Before you buy one single board, run the numbers with our free wood calculator — it will save you from guessing wrong and overspending.
Key Takeaways
- Average wood deck cost is $15–$45 per square foot, depending on wood type and labor.
- A 300 sq ft deck typically lands between $4,500 and $13,500 total.
- Pressure-treated wood is the budget king; hardwoods like ipe or cedar push the price way up.
- DIY can cut your cost by 40–60%, but tools and time are real costs too.
- Financing exists for bigger deck projects if you don’t want to pay all at once.
- Always add 10–15% extra to your material budget for waste and mistakes — I learned this one the hard way.
Why I’m Writing This
I have built a lot of decks. Small ones, big ones, one that I had to tear apart and redo because I did not calculate the boards right (more on that below). Every single time, the first question in my head — and the first question every homeowner asks me — is “how much is this actually going to cost?”
The problem is, most online calculators or contractor quotes give you one flat number. But your deck is not the same as your neighbor’s deck. Wood type, deck size, railing style, stairs, ground condition, and whether you swing a hammer yourself or hire it out — all of that moves the number up or down, sometimes by thousands of dollars.
So in this guide, I am going to walk you through exactly how deck cost is calculated, show you real numbers from real builds, and give you simple scenarios so you can see where your project might land. No confusing jargon. Just plain talk, like I am standing next to you at the lumber yard.
How Deck Cost Is Actually Calculated
Here is the simple formula that every contractor uses in their head, whether they tell you or not:
Deck Cost = (Square Footage × Cost Per Square Foot) + Railing + Stairs + Permits + Labor
Let’s break each part down.
1. Square Footage
This is just length times width. A 12 ft by 20 ft deck is 240 square feet. Easy part.
2. Cost Per Square Foot (Material)
This changes a lot based on what wood you pick. Here is a comparison table I put together from current lumber pricing and job estimates:
| Wood Type | Cost Per Sq Ft (Material Only) | Lifespan | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pressure-Treated Pine | $6 – $10 | 15–20 years | Budget builds, first-time deck owners |
| Cedar | $10 – $16 | 20–25 years | Natural look, better rot resistance |
| Redwood | $12 – $18 | 20–25 years | West Coast builds, rich color |
| Composite (Trex-type) | $14 – $22 | 25–30 years | Low maintenance, no staining |
| Ipe / Tigerwood (Hardwood) | $20 – $30 | 40+ years | Long-term investment, luxury look |
If you are still deciding between species, our guide on the 7 best woods for decks on every budget goes deeper into which one fits your climate and budget.
3. Labor Cost
If you hire a contractor, expect to pay $10 to $20 per square foot just for labor, on top of materials. That is usually the biggest chunk of your bill. Doing it yourself removes this cost completely, but you need the right tools. I always tell people to check our deck building tools guide before starting, because using the wrong tool is how projects turn into weekend disasters.
4. Railing, Stairs, and Extras
Railings usually add $20 to $50 per linear foot. Stairs can add $150 to $400 per step, depending on material. These small things add up fast — I have seen homeowners forget to budget for railing and get a shock when the final invoice arrives.
5. Permits
Most cities require a permit for any raised deck. Budget $100 to $500, depending on your area.
Deck Wood Calculator
plan your boards, joists & fastenersReal Example: My Neighbor’s 300 Sq Ft Deck
Let me give you a real scenario, not a made-up textbook one. My neighbor, a guy named Raymond, wanted a 300 square foot deck with basic railing and 4 stairs. He picked pressure-treated pine because he was working with a tight budget after some unexpected home repairs.
Here is how his numbers actually broke down:
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Decking boards (300 sq ft × $8) | $2,400 |
| Framing lumber & hardware | $900 |
| Railing (40 linear ft × $30) | $1,200 |
| Stairs (4 steps × $200) | $800 |
| Labor (hired one helper, part DIY) | $1,600 |
| Permit | $250 |
| Total | $7,150 |
That comes out to about $23.80 per square foot all-in, which is right in the middle of the normal range. If Raymond had picked composite decking instead of pine, this same project would have landed closer to $10,500–$11,000.
Also read:
Wood Deck Guide: Types, Costs & Best Wood
Practical Scenario: Budget vs Mid-Range vs Premium
Here is a side-by-side for a standard 250 square foot deck, so you can see where your own project might sit:
| Tier | Wood Choice | Estimated Total Cost | Who It’s For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Budget | Pressure-treated pine, DIY labor | $3,500 – $5,000 | First-time deck builders, tight budgets |
| Mid-Range | Cedar or composite, hired labor | $8,000 – $11,000 | Homeowners who want low maintenance |
| Premium | Ipe or exotic hardwood, professional build | $14,000 – $20,000+ | Long-term homeowners, luxury outdoor space |
A Mistake I Made (So You Don’t Have To)
On one of my early builds, I ordered decking boards based on square footage alone and forgot to add extra for cutting waste. I ran short by almost 30 boards halfway through the project, had to make an emergency lumber yard run, and paid a rush fee because I needed them fast. Since then, I always add 10–15% extra material to every estimate. It is a small cost upfront that saves a big headache later.
This is exactly why I built our wood calculator — punch in your dimensions, and it accounts for waste automatically so you are not guessing like I was.
What Affects Deck Cost the Most (Ranked)
- Wood species — biggest swing factor, can change total cost by 3x
- Labor — DIY vs hired, often 40–60% of total bill
- Deck size — obvious, but people underestimate how fast square footage adds cost
- Railing and stairs — easy to forget in early budgeting
- Ground prep — sloped or uneven yards cost more for footings and framing
- Finish and maintenance — staining, sealing, and long-term upkeep
If your deck will sit in a hot, sunny climate, color choice also affects comfort and finish lifespan — our guide on best deck colors for hot climates is worth a quick read before you finalize your wood.
Should You DIY or Hire a Pro?
I get asked this constantly. Here is my honest, simple answer:
- DIY makes sense if: you have basic tool experience, your deck is single-level, and you have weekends free to work in stages.
- Hire a pro if: your deck involves stairs on a slope, electrical work (lighting), or you simply do not have time to spend three weekends with a drill in your hand.
Either way, understand your lumber sizing before you start. Our dimensional lumber sizes guide explains actual vs nominal board sizes, which trips up a lot of first-timers when they are calculating material needs.
What If You Can’t Pay All At Once?
Decks are not cheap, and I know not everyone has $8,000 sitting in a savings account. The good news is you have options:
- Home improvement store financing (often 0% for 6–12 months on approved credit)
- Personal loans
- Home equity loans, if you have equity built up
If this route interests you, we cover the details in our guides on deck financing, financing options for large woodworking projects, and home equity loans for home renovation. Read the terms carefully — a 0% promo period sounds great until it expires and interest jumps.
Don’t Forget Ongoing Costs
A lot of people calculate the build cost and stop there. But wood decks need upkeep. Budget for:
- Staining or sealing every 1–3 years — see our best wood stains for outside guide
- Occasional board replacement from wear
- Checking for moisture damage — a moisture meter is a cheap tool that catches problems early, before they get expensive
If you are painting instead of staining, our how to paint a deck guide walks through the full process step by step.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is the cheapest wood for a deck? Pressure-treated pine is the cheapest option, usually $6–$10 per square foot for materials.
Q: How much does a 12×12 deck cost? A 12×12 deck is 144 square feet. At $15–$45 per square foot all-in, that is roughly $2,160–$6,480 depending on wood choice and labor.
Q: Is composite decking worth the extra cost over wood? If you want to skip yearly staining and sanding, yes. Composite costs more upfront but saves money and time on maintenance over 10+ years.
Q: Can I build a deck myself to save money? Yes. DIY typically cuts total cost by 40–60% since you are only paying for materials, not labor. Just budget extra time and double-check your tool list first.
Q: Does deck cost include the permit? Not usually. Permits are separate and typically run $100–$500 depending on your city, so add that on top of your material and labor estimate.
Final Recommendation
If you are still in the planning stage, don’t eyeball your budget — run your actual dimensions through our wood calculator first. It takes two minutes and gives you a realistic number instead of a rough guess. From there, pick your wood type based on your budget tier from the table above, and always add that 10–15% waste buffer. A little planning now saves a lot of stress — and money — once the boards are already on order.




