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Budget by line item: structure, surface, labor, railings, stairs, footings, site work, permits, delivery/equipment, lighting, trim/skirting, built-ins, and waste.
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Typical splits: Materials 35–55%, Labor 30–50%, Everything else 10–25% (rail, stairs, permits, etc.).
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Contingency: Plan 10–20% of the base total. Use 10% for simple ground-level rectangles; 15–20% for elevated decks, long stairs, complex patterns, or rebuilds with unknowns.
How to use this guide
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Skim the Master Budget Table (below) and copy the lines that apply to your deck.
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Follow the 7-step process to create your base total.
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Choose a contingency using the Risk Matrix and publish both numbers: Base and All-in.
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Use the Worked Example for a reality check.
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Drop the formulas into a spreadsheet for repeatable estimates.
Read more: How to Design a deck layout for a small backyard (4m×6m) with steps and seating.
Master Budget Table (put this at the top of your budget)
Treat this like a checklist. If a line isn’t priced, it’ll surprise you later.
Budget Line Item |
Typical % of Total |
Units You’ll Estimate |
What It Covers |
Estimating Tips (Keep You Honest) |
Framing & Structure (materials) |
15–25% |
joists, beams, posts, hangers, screws |
Lumber or steel framing, joist tape, structural fasteners |
Elevated decks, diagonals, and long spans push this up |
Decking Surface (boards/tiles) |
15–30% |
ft² (or m²) |
PT wood, composite, PVC, or porcelain/vitrified pavers |
Premium lines and hidden fasteners cost more; add 5–10% waste |
Labor (framing/decking) |
30–50% |
ft² + complexity |
Layout, framing, decking, trim |
Region, access, and patterns swing this line item most |
Railings |
5–20% |
linear feet |
Posts, rails, infill (wood/cable/aluminum/glass) |
Price per lf and list the exact infill type to avoid scope creep |
Stairs |
3–12% |
risers or total run |
Stringers, treads, risers, stair rails |
A long second-story stair can add thousands by itself |
Footings & Concrete |
2–8% |
qty of piers |
Sonotubes, rebar, concrete, excavation |
Frost depth/soil conditions = more piers and mix |
Site Prep & Demo |
0–10% |
hours or lump sum |
Grading, brush/tree work, old deck removal, haul-away |
Always call out demo separately; dump fees add up |
Permits & Inspections |
1–5% |
city fees |
Permit, plan checks, inspections |
Add buffer for revisions or re-inspections |
Delivery & Equipment |
1–3% |
drops/rentals |
Material delivery, dumpster, tool rentals |
Add a lift/boom line if access is tight |
Lighting & Electrical |
1–6% |
fixtures/sets |
Step lights, transformer, conduit, low-voltage runs |
Even if adding later, pull conduit while framing |
Skirting/Fascia/Trim |
1–5% |
lf/panels |
Picture-frame border, fascia, vented skirting |
Small cost, huge finish quality—don’t skip |
Built-ins |
0–10% |
each/lf |
Benches, planters, storage hatches |
Keep as alternates; easy to defer if over budget |
Waste & Overages |
5–10% (materials) |
% of select lines |
Cuts, pattern losses, color matching |
Use 5% straight-lay, 8–10% diagonals/inlays |
Contingency |
10–20% |
% of base total |
Unknowns, price moves, hidden rot |
Use the Risk Matrix to pick your % |
Step-by-step: build your deck budget like a pro
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Define the scope in one sentence. Example: “300 ft² ground-level composite deck, 30 lf aluminum rail, single 3-riser stair, picture-frame border, step lights.”
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Quantify the drivers. Area (ft²/m²), rail length (lf), number of stairs/risers, footing count, and any add-ons (border, lighting, skirting).
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Price materials by line. Get line-item quotes for framing lumber, surface, rail kits/infill, stair parts, trim, lighting, fasteners, footing materials.
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Estimate labor (or your time). Start from a simple baseline and adjust for height, access, complex patterns, and weather window.
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Add soft costs. Permits, delivery, dumpster, tool rentals, drafting if required.
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Calculate waste/overage. 5–10% of decking/trim; the upper end for diagonals/inlays or mixed materials.
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Add contingency (10–20%). Choose the percent from the matrix below and present both the base total and the all-in total.
Read more: What deck shape fits an L-shaped house?
Contingency Selection Matrix (pick your % in 10 seconds)
Risk Factor |
Low (add +0–5%) |
Medium (add +10–15%) |
High (add +15–20%) |
Height / Complexity |
Ground-level, no rail, 1 short step |
1–3 steps, partial rail |
Second story, full railing, long stair |
Scope Certainty |
New build, no demolition |
Minor unknowns |
Rebuild with possible hidden rot |
Design Details |
Straight-lay, no border |
Picture-frame border |
Diagonals, inlays, mixed materials |
Access & Logistics |
Wide access, short carry |
Tight gate/backyard |
Crane/boom or steep slope |
Market Volatility |
Stable pricing |
Seasonal swings |
Active price spikes/long lead times |
Rule of thumb: Start at 10%; add +5% for each “High” box you tick, to a typical cap of 20% for residential decks.
Read more: modern deck ideas with low maintenance.
Worked example (transparent, copy-ready)
Scenario: 300 ft² ground-level deck, mid-line composite boards, single 3-riser stair, 30 lf aluminum rail, picture-frame border, six step lights, typical access.
Materials
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Framing & hardware: $1,900
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Composite boards + hidden fasteners: $3,900
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Rail system (30 lf aluminum): $3,000
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Stair parts & treads: $700
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Trim/border/skirting: $800
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Lighting (transformer + 6 step lights + conduit): $650
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Footings & concrete: $450
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Delivery & dumpster: $350
Materials Subtotal: $11,750
Labor
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Framing/decking/skirting: $5,800
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Rail & stair install: $1,700
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Electrical (low-voltage run/transformer, no new outlet): $450
Labor Subtotal: $7,950
Soft Costs + Waste
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Permit & inspections: $250
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Waste/overage (7% on decking/trim components): $380
Base Project Total (before contingency): $20,330
Choose the contingency: The risks are moderate (border, rail, lighting; unknown soil), so select 12%.
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Contingency (12%): $2,440
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All-in Total: $22,770
Why publish both numbers? Because decisions become easier: if you choose to downgrade the rail or drop lighting, you can see the immediate effect on both the base and the all-in.
Read more: Deck: wood vs composite vs stone—pros, cons, cost, maintenance.
Spreadsheet layout & formulas (drop into Google Sheets/Excel)
Columns: Category | Qty | Unit | Unit Cost | Subtotal | Notes | Risk Flag (L/M/H)
Summary rows: Materials | Labor | Soft Costs | Waste | Base Total | Contingency % | Contingency $ | All-in Total
Helpful formulas:
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Waste (materials): =ROUND(SUM(Decking, Trim)*0.07, 0) (swap 0.07 for your waste %)
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Base Total: =SUM(Materials, Labor, Soft_Costs, Waste)
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Contingency % (data validation 0.10–0.20): =IF(Risk="Low",0.10,IF(Risk="Medium",0.15,0.20))
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Contingency $: =ROUND(Base_Total*Contingency_%,0)
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All-in Total: =Base_Total+Contingency_$
Pro tip: Add a small key next to the sheet: L=10%, M=15%, H=20%. If you’re a contractor, freeze the header row and protect the formulas; let clients edit only the quantities.
Read more: Which deck material stays coolest in summer?
Allowances & alternates (your budget shock absorbers)
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Rail allowance: “Includes 30 lf aluminum rail @ $100/lf installed; upgrade to glass + $60/lf.”
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Lighting allowance: “Includes 6 step lights; add fixtures + $95 each installed.”
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Surface alternate: “Upgrade to premium PVC board + $7–$10/ft² materials; labor unchanged.”
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Stair alternate: “Add a 2nd staircase + $1,400–$2,100 installed.”
This section keeps scope changes transparent and prevents mid-project surprises.
Risk register (what blows up budgets—and how to cushion)
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Hidden rot and ledger issues (rebuilds): Add a diagnostic allowance (e.g., $400–$800) and use a 15–20% contingency.
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Soil surprises / frost depth: Plan for additional piers; include 1–2 “optional” footing lines that you can toggle on quickly.
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Lead times on specialty rails/lighting: Order early or list stocked alternates in your allowances.
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Tight access or slopes: Add equipment lines (mini skid, boom). Time is money.
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Weather windows: Build a buffer; rushed installs lead to rework.
Read more: Slip-resistant deck options for rainy climates?
DIY vs pro (strictly from a budgeting standpoint)
DIY works for straightforward, ground-level decks with a simple rectangular layout and minimal rail. Your biggest wins: saving labor, controlling scope, and learning as you go. Your biggest risks: underestimating structure (spans, connections), poor waterproofing at the ledger, and under-pricing stairs/rails.
Hire a pro for elevated decks, long stairs, complex rail infills (cable, glass, aluminum), or when you’re attaching to a house with moisture-sensitive cladding. A credible bid should mirror the line items in this guide and show permit handling, inspection schedule, and warranty terms.
Read more: What’s the cost to build a 300 sq ft deck (DIY vs pro)?
Common budgeting mistakes (and quick fixes)
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Pricing rail by “feel.” Always price per linear foot and name the infill.
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Forgetting waste. Set 5–10% on decking/trim, higher for patterns.
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Hiding lighting costs. Pull conduit during framing—even if fixtures come later.
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No allowance for demo/haul-away. List it. Dump fees and time add up.
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Skipping contingency. You’ll use it. If you don’t, great—you’ve created a surplus for furniture or landscaping.
FAQs
What percentage should I set for contingency on a deck?
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Answer: 10–20%. Use 10% for simple ground-level rectangles; 15–20% for elevated decks, long stairs, complex patterns, or rebuilds with unknowns.
How do I keep railings from blowing up my budget?
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Answer: Price rail per linear foot by material (wood/composite/aluminum/glass) and list the exact infill. Keep a cheaper alternate in your allowances so design changes don’t derail the budget.
Should “waste” be its own line item?
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Answer: Yes—5–10% of materials covers cuts, color matching, and pattern losses. Diagonals and inlays justify the high end of that range.
What’s the quickest way to trim cost if I’m over?
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Answer: Defer built-ins and reduce lighting count before touching structure. Swap to a simpler rail or a lighter surface line rather than cutting essential framing.
Do I really need to publish both the base and all-in numbers?
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Answer: Yes. Showing Base and All-in (with contingency) sets expectations and prevents “scope drift” from turning into conflict later.
Optional: three “budget packages” (clients love these)
Package |
For Who |
Scope |
Base Total |
Contingency |
All-in |
Essential |
Value-focused DIY/pro |
250–300 ft² PT boards, no rail, 2-riser step, basic trim |
$8,500 |
10% |
$9,350 |
Comfort |
Most homeowners |
300 ft² mid-line composite, 30 lf aluminum rail, 3-riser stair, border |
$20,300 |
12% |
$22,740 |
Premium |
Design-driven |
320 ft² premium PVC, 40 lf glass/aluminum rail, long stair, lights, skirting |
$34,800 |
15% |
$40,020 |
Swap in your local prices; the structure is what matters for clarity.