Boston Deck Specialists 24
4475 Main Street, Boston, MA
Professional deck construction from design to completion. We handle all structural work, finishing, and safety compliance.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
Get deck installation before winter done before winter in Boston — protect your home from cold-weather damage and avoid the last-minute rush. Book now with 834 licensed contractors before weather delays set in.
Typical cost in Boston
$25–$80 / sq ft
834 contractors in Boston
4475 Main Street, Boston, MA
Professional deck construction from design to completion. We handle all structural work, finishing, and safety compliance.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
6785 Main Street, Boston, MA
Custom deck building specialists. We design and construct decks with quality materials, proper drainage, and attractive finishes that last.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
9490 Main Street, Boston, MA
Expert deck builders creating outdoor living spaces. Custom designs, quality construction, and maintenance services available.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
4758 Main Street, Boston, MA
Custom deck building specialists. We design and construct decks with quality materials, proper drainage, and attractive finishes that last.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
4475 Main Street, Boston, MA
Professional deck construction from design to completion. We handle all structural work, finishing, and safety compliance.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
4758 Main Street, Boston, MA
Custom deck building specialists. We design and construct decks with quality materials, proper drainage, and attractive finishes that last.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
8043 Main Street, Boston, MA
Custom deck building specialists. We design and construct decks with quality materials, proper drainage, and attractive finishes that last.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
4432 Main Street, Boston, MA
Expert deck builders creating outdoor living spaces. Custom designs, quality construction, and maintenance services available.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
7211 Main Street, Boston, MA
Professional deck construction from design to completion. We handle all structural work, finishing, and safety compliance.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
3926 Main Street, Boston, MA
Residential deck specialists offering design consultation, structural installation, and finishing work to transform your outdoor space.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
8340 Main Street, Boston, MA
Residential deck specialists offering design consultation, structural installation, and finishing work to transform your outdoor space.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
1967 Main Street, Boston, MA
Custom deck building specialists. We design and construct decks with quality materials, proper drainage, and attractive finishes that last.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
Deck installation in Boston costs between $40 and $85 per square foot for a professionally built deck — one of the highest ranges in the country. A standard 300 sq ft deck in the Boston metro runs $15,000–$28,000 for pressure-treated wood construction, and $22,000–$45,000 for composite decking (Trex, Fiberon, or TimberTech). Boston's construction labor costs, strict building codes (including a 48-inch frost depth requirement for footings), and the predominantly three-decker/triple-decker housing stock with complex deck-attachment requirements drive these elevated costs.
| Deck Type | Size | Low | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pressure-treated wood deck | 200 sq ft | $10,000 | $20,000 |
| Pressure-treated wood deck | 400 sq ft | $18,000 | $36,000 |
| Composite deck (Trex, Fiberon) | 200 sq ft | $16,000 | $30,000 |
| Composite deck | 400 sq ft | $28,000 | $55,000 |
| Rooftop deck (urban Boston) | Per sq ft | $85 | $150 |
| Three-decker back porch (two levels) | Per project | $25,000 | $55,000 |
| Deck replacement (same footprint) | 200 sq ft | $8,000 | $20,000 |
| Component | Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Concrete footings (per footing, 48" depth) | $350–$700 | Deep frost depth = significant excavation |
| Ledger attachment (per lineal foot) | $25–$50 | Boston Inspectional Services inspects ledger connections |
| Decking material (PT wood, per sq ft) | $4–$8 | Material only; ground contact rated required |
| Decking material (composite, per sq ft) | $8–$20 | Trex Select to TimberTech AZEK range |
| Railings (composite or metal, per lineal ft) | $75–$180 | Aluminum balusters popular in Boston urban market |
| Stairs (per step) | $200–$400 |
Frost depth: Massachusetts building code requires deck footings to be set a minimum of 48 inches deep in eastern Massachusetts — deeper than anywhere in the continental US outside Minnesota. This means more excavation labor, more concrete per footing, and higher equipment costs versus a shallow-footing deck in the Southeast or Southwest. Each footing in hard Boston soil can run $350–$700.
Three-decker ledger attachment: Boston's iconic three-deckers and their back-porch decking represent a specific engineering challenge — attaching multiple levels of deck to a wood-frame building requires structural calculations, lag bolt patterns, and flashing details reviewed by a structural engineer and inspected by Boston ISD. A two-level back porch on a Boston three-decker is a complex structural project, not a standard deck job.
Urban permitting: Boston requires building permits for all decks. Boston ISD actively inspects deck footings (before concrete pour) and ledger connections. The permitting process including application, plan review, and inspections adds 3–6 weeks to project timelines.
Materials for Boston climate: Boston's 43" annual precipitation, hot summers, and severe winter freeze-thaw cycles require careful material selection. Pressure-Treated (PT) wood must be Ground Contact rated (UC4B or UC4C minimum) for posts embedded in or near soil. Composite decking with PVC cap layer (Trex Transcend, TimberTech AZEK) performs better in Boston's climate than uncapped composite, which can absorb moisture and stain over time.
Sources: Boston Inspectional Services — Permits | Massachusetts Building Code 780 CMR | American Wood Protection Association UC ratings
A Boston deck that fails — because of inadequate footings, improper ledger attachment, or substandard structural connections — can result in catastrophic collapse. The August 2003 Soldiers Field Road apartment deck collapse in Allston, which injured multiple people, is a local reminder of what happens when deck construction corners are cut. Massachusetts has strengthened deck structural requirements significantly since then.
Any deck contractor building for compensation in Massachusetts must hold:
Decks are structural — any contractor without a CSL is legally prohibited from overseeing deck construction on a client's home. The CSL requires a written examination and demonstrated experience.
All decks in Boston require a building permit from the Boston Inspectional Services Department (ISD). Required documents typically include:
Boston ISD inspects: before concrete pour (footing dimensions and depth confirmation), structural framing (before decking installed), and final (railings, stairs, overall structure). Missing an inspection results in a stop-work order and potential requirement to expose hidden structural elements for retroactive inspection.
The ledger board — the structural member that attaches the deck to the house — is the most critical structural connection in deck construction and the most common failure point. Boston ISD inspectors specifically verify:
Verify that any Boston deck contractor can specify their ledger attachment method and flashing detail BEFORE signing a contract.
Boston homeowners choosing between pressure-treated wood and composite decking face a climate-specific decision. Boston's combination of 43 inches of annual precipitation, extended freeze-thaw cycles, hot-humid summers, and substantial UV exposure creates demanding performance requirements for outdoor materials.
| Factor | Pressure-Treated Wood | Composite (capped PVC, e.g., Trex Transcend, AZEK) | Boston Recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Upfront cost (installed) | $40–$60/sq ft | $65–$95/sq ft | PT wood if budget is primary constraint |
| 25-year total cost (including maintenance) | Higher (staining, sealing every 2–3 years, replacement) | Lower (no stain/seal; warranty covers most defects) | Composite often lower TCO |
| Performance in freeze-thaw | Prone to cracking, splitting, checking over time | Dimensionally stable — expand/contract predictably | Composite advantage significant in Boston |
| Moisture absorption | Absorbs moisture, prone to warping if not kiln-dried | Capped composite: minimal moisture absorption | Composite advantage |
| Mold/mildew | Requires treatment in Boston's humid summers | PVC cap resists biological growth | Composite advantage |
| Splinter risk | Yes (barefoot use requires regular sanding) | None | Composite advantage for family use |
| Appearance over time | Grays naturally; can restore with refinishing | Stable color; fading covered by warranty | Subjective preference |
| Environmental | Treated with copper-based preservatives (ACQ/CA) | Manufacturing uses more energy; some products recycled content | Both have trade-offs |
| Warranty | Generally none on material performance | 25–30 year limited warranty (Trex, TimberTech AZEK) | Composite advantage |
Standard pressure-treated pine decking in Boston's climate requires:
Total 25-year maintenance and partial replacement cost for PT wood: $4,000–$8,000 on a 300 sq ft deck in Boston weather. Factor this into the initial cost comparison with composite.
Not all composite decking performs equally in Boston's climate. Specify:
| Task | DIY | Pro |
|---|---|---|
| Footing excavation and pouring | Legally possible (homeowner permit) | Pro strongly recommended — 48" Boston frost depth |
| Structural framing | Legally possible with homeowner permit | Pro for multi-level or attached-ledger decks |
| Decking board installation | Good DIY task | DIY saves $3–$5/sq ft on large decks |
| Railing installation | Moderate DIY | Pro for compliance with Boston railing height/baluster spacing code |
| Permit process | Homeowner can apply | Contractor typically handles for large projects |
Note: Even if DIY-building the structural elements, the Boston ISD permit process requires plan review. Having even basic structural drawings (footing size, beam spans) is required — most DIYers engage an engineer or designer ($500–$1,500) for plan preparation.
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