The DFW Fieldbook·Collin County·2026 edition

How much does a deck cost in Frisco?

Frisco's housing stock is among the newest in DFW — most decks here go on subdivision homes built since 2005, where rear-yard grades are pre-engineered for a walkout off the kitchen or family room.

Editor's note — the calculator below uses the same coefficients as the homepage, tuned to typical Frisco lots. Numbers move with your inputs in real time; nothing is gated.

§Estimate your Frisco deck below

Build your deck

Adjust the inputs to match your project. Numbers update live.

Deck size

16 ft × 12 ft = 192 sq ft
16 ft
12 ft

Material

Height above ground

Railing

Stairs

3 steps

Built-in features

Project extras

Estimated total

Live
$5,400 – $10,500

$28/sq ft$55/sq ft installed, before state sales tax

  • Materials & labor$4,150 – $7,750
  • Railing (36 ft)$700 – $1,450
  • Stairs (3 steps)$400 – $750
  • Building permit$150 – $600

§ Cost levers

  • Upgrading from Pressure-treated lumber to PVC (Azek-tier) would add roughly $10,250.
  • Your Wood railing costs about the same as adding 39 sq ft of deck area at your current material rate.
  • Each additional step adds about $150–$250.

Adjust the inputs above to model different scenarios — material choice, height, and railing are the biggest cost levers. The numbers reflect installed totals from current DFW contractor rates, before state sales tax.

§ II. Local context

What we see on Frisco deck quotes

Collin County · approx. 232K residents. The notes below are what tends to differ from the DFW average when builders quote in this city.

On the ground
  • Walkout grade off the kitchen is near-universal in newer Frisco builds, which means most decks need a railing and trigger the permit threshold.
  • Standard 60-foot lot widths in newer Frisco subdivisions set a comfortable ceiling for 18–22 ft wide decks.
  • Composite is the default first-build material in Frisco — pressure-treated is the minority choice even on first-time decks.
  • Frost line in DFW is roughly 6 inches, but local code typically requires deck footings 24″+ deep to reach stable bearing below the expansive clay layer that moves seasonally.
Permit basics

Most DFW cities require a building permit for any attached deck or any deck more than 30″ above grade, applying the IRC with local amendments. Setback and easement rules are set locally — applications go through the City of Frisco's Building Inspection division. Frisco is one of the stricter DFW cities on residential deck review and routinely requires both engineered drawings and an inspection at the footing and final stages..

Always confirm setbacks and lot-coverage with your municipality before finalizing the design — rules vary at the lot level.

Neighbourhoods we cover in Frisco
  • Stonebriar
  • Phillips Creek Ranch
  • Starwood
  • Newman Village
  • Lone Star Ranch
  • The Grove
What tends to trip up Frisco deck projects

The dominant Frisco challenge is the inspection process rather than the build itself. Frisco's footing and final inspections are stricter than most DFW cities, and contractors used to working Dallas or Denton sometimes get caught off-guard by the pier-depth verification or the rebar spacing requirement. A reputable Frisco crew bakes the inspection schedule into the build calendar; a generalist may not.

§ III. Working with builders here

What to ask Frisco contractors before signing

Local builder market

Frisco's builder market includes a high share of contractors who specialize in newer subdivision builds and have learned the city's inspection process inside and out. That's good for build certainty and bad for unusual designs — a multi-level or off-pattern deck often draws a custom-design premium here because the standard product is so well-optimized. Ask any Frisco contractor for examples of recent work in your specific subdivision; identical builds across nearby streets are a strong signal of efficient pricing. For non-standard builds, budget for a 10–15% premium over the per-square-foot starting rate. Confirm in writing that the contractor handles both the permit application and the two required inspections.

Booking calendar

Frisco crews book on the Collin County premium schedule — fully booked for spring through early summer by mid-January. The fall discount window is narrow because resale-focused buyers want completion in the same calendar year. February is the only realistic discount window if timing matters.

§ IV. Reference builds

Three reference builds for Frisco

The mid-range composite walkout is by far the most common Frisco build — it matches a typical post-2005 subdivision home almost exactly. Premium PVC outdoor rooms are routine in Stonebriar and Phillips Creek Ranch. Budget PT 12×12 decks are uncommon as primary builds in Frisco; they tend to show up only as secondary platforms or on rental properties. Costs are derived from the same pricing model the calculator uses; ranges are installed totals before state sales tax.

Budget pressure-treated — 12×12 ground level

A simple 144 sq ft pressure-treated deck, sitting under 30″ off grade, with wood-picket railing and 3 stairs to the yard.

  • PT lumber decking, joists, and posts
  • Wood-picket railing on three sides
  • 3 stairs with one handrail run
  • Site cleanup; no demo of an existing deck

Installed total

$4,500 – $7,500

Mid-range composite — 16×14 walkout

A 224 sq ft capped-composite deck off a kitchen walkout, 2–4 ft above grade with aluminum railing, low-voltage lighting, and 4 stairs.

  • Capped composite decking (Trex-tier)
  • Powder-coated aluminum railing
  • Low-voltage stair lights and post caps
  • 4 stairs to grade; building permit included

Installed total

$13,200 – $22,800

Premium outdoor room — 20×16 PVC build

A 320 sq ft PVC deck 4–8 ft off grade with cable railing, a built-in bench, low-voltage lighting, and a 12×12 pergola.

  • PVC (Azek-tier) decking with hidden fasteners
  • Stainless cable railing in metal frames
  • Built-in bench seating along one edge
  • 12×12 wood or aluminum pergola
  • Lighting package and building permit

Installed total

$28,000 – $52,000

§ I. How it works

Three quiet steps. No funnel, no follow-up calls.

The site exists to give homeowners a real number before they ever speak to a contractor. That's the whole pitch.

  1. Estimate

    Adjust the inputs and watch the range move.

    Size, material, height, and features. The price range updates the moment you change a slider — there's no email gate, no "see your results" button, no waiting room. The calculator is the page.

  2. Compare

    Toggle materials to see where the dollars actually go.

    Pressure-treated, cedar, composite, and PVC each shift the bottom line in predictable ways. Open the line-by-line breakdown and you'll see exactly which line items move when you switch — framing stays roughly flat, decking and railing do most of the work.

  3. Quote

    Take the breakdown to any DFW builder.

    Use the printed estimate as a sanity check on the quotes you receive. If a contractor's number for, say, framing is well outside our range, that's a question worth asking — not a deal-breaker, just a conversation starter.

§ II. The cost guide

How much does a deck cost in DFW in 2026?

The honest answer, with the math behind it.

Most homeowners in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex can expect to pay between $25 and $95 per square foot installed for a new deck in 2026, with the final price driven primarily by material choice, height above grade, and railing type. A typical 16′ × 12′ deck (192 sq ft) lands somewhere between $6,000 on the low end (ground-level, pressure-treated, no built-ins) and $24,000+ on the high end (raised PVC deck with glass railing, stairs, and built-in features). The calculator above gives you a tighter range based on your specific inputs.

What you’re actually paying for

Roughly half of any deck quote is labour. The rest splits across lumber or composite boards, fasteners and structural hardware, footings, permit fees, and disposal of the old deck if you’re replacing one. Contractors who break out their quote line-by-line are easier to compare; quotes with a single “turnkey” number make it harder to spot where corners are being cut.

Material choice is the biggest single lever

  • Pressure-treated lumber — $20–$35/sq ft installed. The default. Lasts 15–20 years if you stain it every 18 months and clear off leaves and debris each fall.
  • Western red cedar — $28–$45/sq ft installed. Naturally rot-resistant, smells great when freshly cut, weathers to silver-grey if you let it. Needs occasional staining to keep its colour through DFW UV.
  • Composite (Trex-tier) — $40–$70/sq ft installed. A wood-fibre + plastic blend with a 25-year warranty. No staining ever. Dark-tone composites run hot underfoot in DFW summers — lighter colours are noticeably cooler.
  • PVC (Azek-tier)— $55–$95/sq ft installed. Pure capped polymer. Won’t absorb moisture, runs the coolest of any synthetic in Texas sun, costs about 2.5× pressure-treated. Worth it if you’re staying put 15+ years and have heavy afternoon sun exposure.

Height adds cost faster than you’d expect

A ground-level deck and a 6-foot raised deck can use identical decking boards but have wildly different framing costs. Raised decks need engineered footings to anchor below the expansive-clay layer (most DFW jurisdictions require piers 24″+ deep to stable bearing), heavier joists, beam reinforcement, and code-compliant guardrails on every exposed edge. Expect a raised 4–8 ft deck to cost 18–30% more than the same square footage at ground level.

Railing is a sneaky line item

Wood pickets are cheapest at roughly $20–$40 per linear foot installed. Aluminum jumps to $50–$85, and tempered glass panels run $100–$180 per linear foot. On a 16′ × 12′ deck with railing on three sides, that’s a $1,300 spread between wood and aluminum, and over $5,500 between wood and glass. If view matters, glass is worth it; if it doesn’t, you have better places to put the money.

Don’t skip the permit

Almost every DFW city requires a building permit for any deck attached to the house or more than 30 inches above grade. Dallas, Fort Worth, Plano, Frisco, Arlington, Irving, McKinney, Garland, Richardson, Denton, Grand Prairie, Mesquite, and Carrollton all enforce this with their own IRC amendments; fees typically run $150–$600 for a residential deck. Plano and Frisco often require an engineered drawing on top of the permit fee. Skipping the permit seems like a way to save money until you go to sell the house and the buyer’s home inspector catches it — or worse, a neighbour complains and the city issues a stop-work order. Get the permit. It also means a building inspector will catch framing mistakes before they’re hidden under decking.

When to start the conversation

DFW deck builders are usually booked 6–10 weeks out from March through June. If you want a deck for spring, start collecting quotes in January or February. Late-fall quotes are often more competitive — some contractors will lock in an October/November build at a lower rate to keep their crews busy after the summer heat. The calculator above is a good starting point, but the real next step is getting a few licensed local builders to look at your lot.

§ III. Reader questions

Frequently asked questions

Practical answers, no upselling.