Jacksonville Deck Builders 4
110 Main Street, Jacksonville, FL
Custom deck building specialists. We design and construct decks with quality materials, proper drainage, and attractive finishes that last.
Serves: 32099, 32201, 32202, 32204 +28 more
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Typical cost in Jacksonville
$25–$80 / sq ft
142 contractors in Jacksonville
110 Main Street, Jacksonville, FL
Custom deck building specialists. We design and construct decks with quality materials, proper drainage, and attractive finishes that last.
Serves: 32099, 32201, 32202, 32204 +28 more
1818 Main Street, Jacksonville, FL
Custom deck building specialists. We design and construct decks with quality materials, proper drainage, and attractive finishes that last.
Serves: 32099, 32201, 32202, 32204 +28 more
7432 Main Street, Jacksonville, FL
Expert deck builders creating outdoor living spaces. Custom designs, quality construction, and maintenance services available.
Serves: 32099, 32201, 32202, 32204 +28 more
5973 Main Street, Jacksonville, FL
Custom deck building specialists. We design and construct decks with quality materials, proper drainage, and attractive finishes that last.
Serves: 32099, 32201, 32202, 32204 +28 more
2748 Main Street, Jacksonville, FL
Expert deck builders creating outdoor living spaces. Custom designs, quality construction, and maintenance services available.
Serves: 32099, 32201, 32202, 32204 +28 more
7158 Main Street, Jacksonville, FL
Deck installation, repair, and restoration services. Pressure-treated, composite, and exotic wood options available.
Serves: 32099, 32201, 32202, 32204 +28 more
4248 Main Street, Jacksonville, FL
Residential deck specialists offering design consultation, structural installation, and finishing work to transform your outdoor space.
Serves: 32099, 32201, 32202, 32204 +28 more
9568 Main Street, Jacksonville, FL
Residential deck specialists offering design consultation, structural installation, and finishing work to transform your outdoor space.
Serves: 32099, 32201, 32202, 32204 +28 more
6742 Main Street, Jacksonville, FL
Professional deck construction from design to completion. We handle all structural work, finishing, and safety compliance.
Serves: 32099, 32201, 32202, 32204 +28 more
8804 Main Street, Jacksonville, FL
Residential deck specialists offering design consultation, structural installation, and finishing work to transform your outdoor space.
Serves: 32099, 32201, 32202, 32204 +28 more
8098 Main Street, Jacksonville, FL
Expert deck builders creating outdoor living spaces. Custom designs, quality construction, and maintenance services available.
Serves: 32099, 32201, 32202, 32204 +28 more
5406 Main Street, Jacksonville, FL
Residential deck specialists offering design consultation, structural installation, and finishing work to transform your outdoor space.
Serves: 32099, 32201, 32202, 32204 +28 more
For: 300 sq ft pressure-treated deck in Jacksonville, FL
Jacksonville's outdoor living season runs nearly year-round — which means a well-built deck pays dividends month after month. But building one here requires navigating Florida's wind load requirements, termite pressure, salt-air corrosion along the Beaches, and the Duval County permitting process. Material selection and contractor quality have outsized consequences in Jacksonville's subtropical climate.
| Job Type | Typical Scope | Price Range |
|---|---|---|
| Pressure-treated pine deck | 200 sq ft, ground-level | $5,500–$10,000 |
| Pressure-treated pine deck | 400 sq ft, mid-size | $10,000–$18,000 |
| Composite deck (Trex, TimberTech) | 200 sq ft, ground-level | $9,500–$17,000 |
| Composite deck (Trex, TimberTech) | 400 sq ft, elevated | $18,000–$32,000 |
| PVC decking (Azek) | 300 sq ft, coastal/beach-adjacent | $15,000–$26,000 |
| Screened enclosure addition | Per existing deck, screen + aluminum frame | $4,500–$12,000 |
| Hurricane tie-down retrofit | Per existing deck, code upgrade | $800–$2,500 |
| Permit + structural engineering | Duval County, per project | $500–$1,800 |
Prices include materials, labor, permit, and standard footings. Elevated decks requiring deep footings cost 15–25% more.
Labor: BLS Jacksonville MSA data (SOC 47-2031, carpenters) shows median wages of $20–$32/hr in the Jacksonville metro. Residential deck contractor billing rates run $65–$110/hr, with experienced marine/coastal contractors commanding the upper end.
Florida Building Code wind load requirements: Jacksonville falls in FBC 8th Edition wind speed zones of 120–130 mph design wind speed depending on location. Decks require hurricane straps, proper post base connectors (Simpson Strong-Tie or equivalent), and structural review for any elevated deck. Coastal properties east of the Intracoastal Waterway (Jacksonville Beach, Atlantic Beach, Neptune Beach, Ponte Vedra) are in higher-velocity wind exposure zones and require additional structural documentation.
Formosan termite pressure: Duval County lies squarely in the range of both Eastern Subterranean and Formosan termites — two of the most destructive wood-destroying organisms in North America. AWPA UC4B pressure-treated lumber is the minimum specification for ground-contact posts and joists in Jacksonville. Using UC3B (above-ground only) for ground-contact applications is a common error that leads to premature structural failure within 5–8 years in Jacksonville's termite environment.
Salt-air corrosion (Beaches communities): Homes within ~2 miles of the Atlantic in Jacksonville Beach, Neptune Beach, Atlantic Beach, and Ponte Vedra require 316 stainless steel or hot-dip galvanized hardware for all deck fasteners, joist hangers, post bases, and connectors. Standard zinc-plated hardware corrodes within 2–5 years in salt-air exposure, compromising structural integrity quietly. This hardware upgrade adds $500–$1,500 to material costs but is non-negotiable for coastal builds.
Screened enclosures: Jacksonville's mosquito season (April–October) makes screened enclosures nearly universal for outdoor living. Adding a screen room to a new or existing deck runs $4,500–$12,000 depending on size and frame material, and requires its own Duval County permit.
A 400 sq ft pressure-treated deck in Jacksonville runs $10,000–$18,000 installed. Composite material upgrades run $18,000–$32,000 for the same size. Budget an additional $500–$1,500 for coastal-grade hardware if within 2 miles of the ocean, and $4,500–$12,000 for a screened enclosure. Always confirm the contractor will pull a Duval County permit — unpermitted decks must be disclosed at sale and may require demolition to bring to code.
Florida's contractor licensing system is one of the most robust in the country. For Jacksonville deck projects — where wind loads, termite specifications, and flood zone requirements all converge — working with a properly licensed contractor isn't just good practice, it's the difference between a structure that lasts and one that fails a hurricane inspection.
Deck installation in Florida falls under general or residential contractor licensing through the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR):
A contractor who installs a deck without a CBC/CGC/RB license in Florida is in violation of Florida Statute §489.127 — a first-degree misdemeanor. Fines start at $10,000 per offense. Verify any deck contractor's license at myfloridalicense.com before signing a contract.
Hurricane strapping failures: Jacksonville decks must be built to FBC 8th Edition wind load specifications — 120–130 mph design wind speed, increasing near the coast. Unlicensed contractors routinely skip hurricane tie-downs, proper post base connectors, and beam-to-post hardware, leaving a structure that looks fine but will fail catastrophically in a tropical storm. A city inspector who signs off on a permitted deck has confirmed these connections are present and properly installed.
Termite specification errors: Unlicensed contractors unfamiliar with Florida's termite pressure frequently use UC3B above-ground lumber for ground-contact posts and joists. UC3B fails in 5–8 years under Jacksonville's Formosan and Eastern Subterranean termite pressure — leaving structural posts that appear solid but are hollow with insect activity. UC4B is the correct specification; a licensed contractor who pulls a permit and passes inspection will use it because the inspector will check.
Flood zone and HOA complications: Parts of Arlington, Ortega, Riverside, and the barrier island communities are in FEMA flood zones. Decks in flood zones require elevation certificates and may need to be built above the Base Flood Elevation (BFE). An unpermitted deck in a flood zone creates NFIP claim complications and must be disclosed under Florida real estate law. HOA approval is required in communities like Nocatee, Bartram Park, and Fleming Island — licensed contractors are familiar with this process; unlicensed operators often are not.
Post-hurricane contractor surge: After every named storm, unlicensed deck and screened enclosure contractors flood the Jacksonville market. Florida's DBPR publishes an unlicensed activity alert list in the weeks following major storms. Always verify the license before signing any post-storm repair contract.
Jacksonville deck projects combine Florida's clear licensing framework with wind, termite, and flood zone requirements that make inspector oversight genuinely valuable. A licensed CBC/CGC or Duval RB contractor who pulls the permit is your best protection against a structure that fails when it matters most.
Florida's contractor licensing law draws a clear line: homeowners may build their own deck on their own primary residence without a contractor license, but they must still pull the Duval County permit themselves and pass all inspections. The question isn't whether DIY is legal — it's whether it's wise given Jacksonville's specific building environment.
| Factor | DIY | Licensed CBC/CGC Contractor |
|---|---|---|
| Legal to build? | ✅ Homeowner exemption (primary residence only) | ✅ Licensed and insured |
| Permit required? | ✅ Yes — homeowner must pull Duval County permit | ✅ Contractor pulls permit |
| FBC wind load compliance | ⚠️ Must self-study FBC 8th Ed. requirements; errors found at inspection | ✅ Contractor knows code; fewer failed inspections |
| Hurricane strap/connector installation | ⚠️ Critical detail; inspectors fail decks for missing or wrong connectors | ✅ Standard practice; inspected |
| UC4B termite-rated lumber (ground contact) | ⚠️ Must specify correctly; lumber yards don't always flag mistakes | ✅ Experienced contractors specify correctly |
| Coastal hardware (316 SS or HDG) | ⚠️ Easy to miss if unfamiliar with salt-air requirements | ✅ Standard practice for Beaches-area builds |
| Structural engineering (elevated decks >24") | ❌ Engineer's stamped plans required by Duval County | ✅ Contractor coordinates engineering |
| HOA approval process | ⚠️ Homeowner must still coordinate; contractor familiar with local HOA timelines | ✅ Experienced contractors know Nocatee/Bartram/Fleming Island requirements |
| Flood zone compliance | ⚠️ Homeowner must verify BFE and obtain elevation certificate if required | ✅ Contractor familiar with FEMA mapping |
| Homeowner insurance coverage during build | ⚠️ Confirm with insurer — some policies exclude owner-built structures mid-construction | ✅ Contractor's GL covers project |
| Warranty | ❌ No workmanship warranty | ✅ 1–5 year workmanship warranty standard |
Deck maintenance and repair: Cleaning, staining, sealing an existing deck is firmly DIY territory. Jacksonville's heat and humidity accelerate finish degradation — annual cleaning and every-2-years sealing is the maintenance minimum for PT pine decks. Olympic Maximum, Defy Extreme, or TWP 1500 series penetrating stains perform well in Florida's UV environment.
Small ground-level platform (experienced builder): A simple, ground-level, freestanding platform under 200 sq ft attached to no structure — built by someone with genuine framing experience — can be a reasonable DIY project with a Duval County permit pulled by the homeowner. The FBC requirements are learnable; the inspections are manageable.
Screened door replacement: Replacing a damaged screen panel or screened door on an existing screened enclosure is DIY-accessible and requires no permit.
Any elevated deck: Duval County requires structural engineering documentation for elevated decks. A licensed contractor coordinates with a structural engineer as part of their process. A DIY homeowner must hire an engineer independently, navigate the plan review process, and ensure the framing passes inspection — a process that experienced contractors complete routinely but first-timers frequently extend by months.
Barrier island builds (Jacksonville Beach, Atlantic Beach, Neptune Beach): Coastal wind exposure categories, salt-air hardware requirements, and sometimes CCCL (Coastal Construction Control Line) setback requirements make Beaches-area deck projects substantially more complex than inland builds. Licensed contractors who work the Beaches regularly know which specific hardware specs pass inspection and which don't.
Post-storm replacement: After a named storm damages a Jacksonville deck, a licensed contractor's insurance-compatible scope of work, permit documentation, and material photos are essential for an insurance claim. DIY replacement without a permit can result in insurance denial.
Jacksonville DIY deck building is legally permitted for primary-residence homeowners who pull their own permit and pass all inspections. But Florida's FBC wind load requirements, UC4B termite specs, coastal hardware requirements, and elevation/flood zone rules create a thick checklist that experienced licensed contractors navigate routinely. The risk of a failed inspection or structural error is significantly lower with a licensed CBC/CGC contractor who has built dozens of decks in Duval County.
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