How Much Does a Deck Cost in Fresno County, CA?
Composite decks in Fresno County run $8,720 to $17,440 in 2026. Local carpenter wages of $34.15/hr push costs 9% above national averages.
What homeowners in Fresno County actually pay.
Local market ranges built from regional labor, materials, and permitting data — not national averages.
Pressure-Treated Wood Deck (300 sq ft)
Composite Deck (300 sq ft)
Deck Repair / Board Replacement
National avg $6,500 × 1.09x local adjustment = $7,085; range $4,905 to $9,810
Why Fresno County prices look like this.
Labor Costs for Deck Building in Fresno County
Wildfire, Flood, and Hazard Risks for Fresno County Decks
How Fresno County's Climate Affects Deck Materials and Longevity
Energy Costs and Solar Potential for Deck Projects in Fresno County
Financing a Deck in Fresno County
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Questions buyers ask about decks in Fresno County.
Short answers to the most common things we hear about local pricing, scope, and timing.
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What does a pressure-treated wood deck cost in Fresno County in 2026?
A 300-square-foot pressure-treated deck in Fresno County runs $4,905 to $9,810, with a midpoint around $7,085. These figures apply a 1.09x local adjustment to national averages, reflecting Fresno metro carpenter wages of $34.15 per hour versus the $29.58 national median.
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What does a composite deck cost in Fresno County?
Composite decks in Fresno County range from $8,720 to $17,440 for a standard 300-square-foot build, with a midpoint near $11,990. Composite materials cost more upfront but resist UV degradation and moisture better than pressure-treated wood, which matters given Fresno County's wildfire risk score of 98.44 out of 100.
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How much does deck repair or board replacement cost in Fresno County?
Deck repair and board replacement runs $545 to $2,725 in Fresno County, with most projects averaging around $1,310. Scope varies widely depending on how many boards need replacing and whether structural members like joists or ledger boards are involved. Hail damage (county risk score 95.52) can accelerate board wear, making periodic inspections worthwhile.
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Does Fresno County's wildfire risk affect deck material choice?
Yes, significantly. Fresno County scores 98.44 out of 100 on FEMA's wildfire risk index. In Wildland-Urban Interface zones, which cover much of the county, California's building code restricts untreated combustible materials on decks. Composite decking or fire-retardant-treated pressure-treated wood is both the safer and often code-required choice in those areas.
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Will adding a deck increase my property taxes in Fresno County?
It may. California's Proposition 13 limits reassessment on existing value to 2% per year, but new construction additions, including decks, can trigger a supplemental assessment on the improvement value. Fresno County homeowners pay $2,704 in median annual taxes. The added tax from a deck is modest but worth confirming with the Fresno County Assessor before finalizing your budget.
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What financing options are available for a deck project in Fresno County?
Home equity loans and HELOCs are the most common paths. The 30-year fixed mortgage rate is 6.36% as of May 2026, providing a useful benchmark. With a median home value of $362,600 in Fresno County, most owners have meaningful equity to draw on. Some composite decking manufacturers offer contractor-partnered financing, but compare those rates against your HELOC offer before committing.
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How does Fresno County's climate affect deck lifespan?
Fresno sits in IECC climate zone 3B (hot-dry/mixed-dry), with 1,576 cooling degree-days and 2,138 heating degree-days annually. Zero annual snowfall means no freeze-thaw stress on fasteners or boards. The main threats to deck longevity are UV exposure and high-heat thermal cycling in summer. Composite materials handle both better than untreated wood, making them worth the higher upfront cost for most Fresno County homeowners.
How these numbers were built.
Cost estimates are derived from government data including the U.S. Census Bureau (ACS), Bureau of Labor Statistics (OEWS), FEMA National Risk Index, EIA energy data, IECC climate zone classifications, Federal Reserve (FRED), and HUD Fair Market Rents.