Oasis Custom Decks

Frequently Asked Questions

Absolutely. The first step is getting a little information so we can point you in the right direction. What is the project address, and are you looking for a repair, resurfacing, full rebuild, or a new deck?

The helpful basics are the address, a few photos, the approximate size, whether there are stairs, whether the deck is elevated, and whether you are thinking repair, resurface, rebuild, or new construction.

Yes, pictures are very helpful. Please send photos of the whole deck, the problem areas, the stairs and railing, and the underside if you can safely get them.

That is completely normal. Most homeowners do not price decks very often. As a rough range, small repairs are often $750 to $3,500. Bigger structural repairs can be $3,500 to $10,000+. Resurfacing can be $8,000 to $20,000+. New wood decks often start around $12,000 to $25,000, and composite decks are commonly $20,000 to $45,000+. Larger elevated, covered, or custom decks can be $50,000 or more.

I can give a rough range, but I do not want to pretend it is a real estimate without seeing the deck. Tell me the size, height, stairs, material direction, and whether this is repair, resurface, or rebuild, and I can help you understand the likely category.

That depends on whether we are talking about a repair, resurfacing, or a full build. A small repair may be a few thousand dollars. A full composite deck with stairs and railing can easily be tens of thousands. The first thing we need to figure out is which category your project falls into.

Decks vary a lot. Size matters, but so do height, stairs, railing, footing work, material choice, access, demolition, permits, and the condition of the existing frame. Two decks can be the same size and still price very differently because one is simple and one has a lot more structure and finish detail.

We can look at ways to simplify the scope, but I do not want to cut price in a way that creates a bad project. The right way to lower the number is to look at material, railing, stairs, layout, or finish level and decide what trade-offs actually make sense.

We can take a look. A repair depends heavily on what the existing structure looks like. Some decks need a targeted repair, and others look simple from above but have framing, railing, footing, or attachment issues underneath.

Possibly, but we need to see why the boards failed. If the boards are soft because of age or surface wear, that may be simple. If the joists underneath are rotten or the fasteners are failing, the repair may need to go deeper.

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