Deck Repair

Single boards, full board refresh, railing repair, structural issues, and composite deck repair — across the Wasatch Front. Utah winters and UV are rough on decks; we keep them safe and looking good.

Same-week scheduling · Licensed General Contractor · Fully insured · 1-year labor warranty

The most common deck issue we see on east-bench Holladay, Cottonwood Heights, and Millcreek homes is ledger-board rot — the board attaching the deck to the house, often hidden by snow piled against the siding. Catching it early means a $895 fix; ignoring it leads to the deck pulling away from the house. We inspect the ledger first on every deck visit.

What This Includes

  • Single board replacement (PT, cedar, composite)
  • Multiple board replacement
  • Ledger board inspection and repair
  • Railing baluster and section repair
  • Structural joist repair
  • Stair tread replacement
  • Deck-to-house re-flashing
  • Composite deck board repair (Trex, TimberTech, AZEK)
  • Loose fastener and squeak repair
  • Full deck refresh (boards + railing + stain — paired with deck staining service)

How Pricing Works

Listed prices are starting points — actual quote depends on scope, materials, access, and site conditions. Walkthrough confirms.

Single board replacement: starts at $195. Multiple boards (5–10): starts at $395. Railing section repair: starts at $245. Ledger repair + re-flash: starts at $895. Structural joist repair: starts at $695 per joist. Full deck refresh quoted at the walkthrough.

FAQ

How do I know if my deck needs repair vs replacement?

Two key checks: (1) ledger attachment — if the deck-to-house connection is failing, it must be repaired regardless. (2) joist condition — if more than 25% of joists show rot, full replacement often makes more sense than repair. We assess at the walkthrough and tell you straight.

Can you match my existing decking material?

Yes for pressure-treated, cedar, and redwood. Composite (Trex, TimberTech, AZEK) — we order the matching color/profile directly from the manufacturer, usually 7–14 days.

Do you stain and seal too?

Yes — most customers bundle: replace bad boards → sand → stain whole deck. Best value when boards need attention anyway.

How often should I stain my deck?

Every 2–4 years for most Utah decks. South-facing decks may need annual re-staining.

Selling Your Home?

A clean, safe deck is a key curb appeal item in back-of-house listing photos. See GoMarketReady for coordinated pre-listing prep.

Get a Free Estimate

Call (801) 895-2084 or request a quote online.


Business License #13840882-0160 · Licensed Utah General Contractor #14195166-5501 · Licensed & Insured · 1-Year Labor Warranty

Licensed Licensed Utah General Contractor, insured. Trade-specialty work is performed by a licensed Utah contractor in that specific trade.





Related Services

Other exterior & yard jobs we handle: