Deck Materials & Building Calculator
Calculate deck costs based on size, materials, and features designed for Minnesota and Wisconsin winters. Get instant estimates for durable, weather-resistant decks.
How much does it cost to build a deck in Minnesota or Wisconsin?
Building a deck in Minnesota or Wisconsin typically costs $25–$60 per square foot installed in 2026, including materials and labor. A 12×16 deck runs $7,200–$14,400 for most homeowners. Composite decks cost more upfront but require far less maintenance through our freeze-thaw winters. Every attached deck needs footings dug below the frost line — 42 inches minimum in the Twin Cities metro, 60 inches in northern Minnesota — which adds cost that national calculators don’t account for. Use the calculator below to get an instant estimate based on your deck size, material, and project details.
Deck Building Costs in Minnesota & Wisconsin — 2026 Estimates
| Material | Cost Per Sq Ft (Installed) | Typical Total Cost | Lifespan |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pressure-Treated Wood | $25 – $50 | $7,200 – $16,000 | 15–20 years |
| Cedar / Redwood | $30 – $47 | $8,600 – $15,000 | 20–25 years |
| Composite (Trex, TimberTech) | $40 – $70 | $11,500 – $22,400 | 25–30 years |
Based on a 12×16 deck (192 sq ft). Prices reflect 2026 Twin Cities metro labor rates. Elevated decks, complex layouts, stairs, and railings add cost. Always get 2–3 contractor quotes — labor rates vary 30–40% within the same market.
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Cost Breakdown
In Minnesota and Wisconsin, professionally built decks run $25–$60 per square foot installed in 2026, including materials and labor. Here’s what that means by deck size.
Labor typically runs $15–$35 per square foot in Minnesota and Wisconsin. Always get 2–3 quotes — labor prices can vary 30–40% between contractors in the same market.
Minnesota and Wisconsin have specific cost drivers that national calculators don’t account for. Here’s what actually moves your number.
- ✓Frost line footings. Minnesota building codes require deck footings dug below the frost line — 42 inches minimum in the Twin Cities metro and southern counties, and 60 inches in northern counties above St. Cloud. Wisconsin requirements are similar. This means significantly more digging, more concrete, and more inspection time than in milder climates. On sloped or wooded lots, add $2,000–$5,000 for extra structural work.
- ✓Decking material. The single biggest cost driver. Pressure-treated wood is cheapest at $25–$50 per sq ft installed. Composite runs $40–$70 per sq ft. Material choice also determines how much maintenance you’ll face over the life of the deck.
- ✓Deck height and elevation. Ground-level decks are simplest and cheapest. Elevated or second-story decks require longer posts, more structural framing, taller railings, and a full staircase — which adds $1,500+ on its own. High decks cost significantly more than the square footage math suggests.
- ✓Railings and stairs. Required on most elevated decks and part of your permit inspection. Options range from basic pressure-treated railings to cable systems or glass panels. Composite or aluminum railings add $150–$600 per linear foot depending on style.
- ✓Design complexity. A simple rectangle is the least expensive build. Angles, curves, multiple levels, built-in benches, or pergolas all add labor time and cost. Custom features can push a project 30–50% above a basic estimate.
- ✓Season and timing. Deck builders in MN and WI are busiest May through August. Scheduling your project in fall or early winter can save on labor — contractors are more available and some material suppliers offer end-of-season pricing. Book spring projects early or you’ll wait.
- ✓Permit fees. Most decks over 200 sq ft or elevated more than 30 inches require a permit. Fees run $150–$500 depending on your city or county.
Our climate puts decks through freeze-thaw cycles, heavy snow loads, and brutal sun in summer. Here’s how the main materials hold up.
Pressure-Treated Wood
The most common starting point. Handles MN/WI winters adequately but requires staining and sealing every 1–2 years to prevent rot and cracking. Cheapest upfront at $25–$50 per sq ft installed. Lifespan 15–20 years with maintenance.
Composite Decking
Increasingly the top choice for MN/WI homeowners who want durability with minimal upkeep. Resists rot, warping, and fading through freeze-thaw cycles. Costs more upfront ($40–$70 per sq ft installed) but saves on maintenance over time. Lifespan 25–30 years. The 2024 Cost vs. Value Report shows deck additions returning 75–83% at resale — buyers actively prefer low-maintenance composite over wood that needs refinishing.
Cedar / Redwood
Naturally resistant to rot and insects without chemical treatment. Beautiful natural look that many homeowners prefer. Costs $30–$47 per sq ft installed. Requires resealing every 1–2 years in our climate. Note: cedar prices have been affected by 2026 tariffs — get a current quote.
MN/WI climate note: Whatever material you choose, the framing and substructure underneath matters just as much as the decking boards. Proper flashing, joist tape, and below-frost-line footings are non-negotiable in our climate. A deck built without them won’t last — regardless of how premium the surface material is.
Almost all deck projects in Minnesota and Wisconsin require a building permit. Your contractor should pull it — if they suggest skipping it, walk away. Unpermitted decks create serious problems when you sell, and structural issues won’t be caught without inspection.
- 🏛When a permit is required: Any deck over 200 sq ft, elevated more than 30 inches off the ground, or attached to the house typically requires a permit. Ground-level floating decks under 200 sq ft may be exempt — check with your city.
- 🏛Frost line requirement: All permitted decks in MN must have footings dug at least 42 inches below grade. This is inspected — there’s no shortcut. WI requirements are similar depending on county.
- 🏛Permit fees: Typically $150–$500 depending on your city or county. Inspection is included.
See your county permit guide:
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The calculator gives you the range. A vetted local contractor gives you the real number. TenPenny Home approves only one deck contractor per county — so when we connect you, you’re getting someone who knows MN and WI builds, not a national lead service.
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