Deck Building
in Etobicoke.

A deck is half outdoor room, half structural carpentry. Get either one wrong and you're rebuilding it in five years. We build decks that pass inspection, drain right, and don't twist or rot. Serving homeowners across Etobicoke — including Mimico, The Kingsway, Long Branch, Islington, Humber Bay.

Typical investment in Etobicoke: $8K–$45K depending on size, height, and material

  • Licensed & Insured
  • Toronto-area since 2016
  • 200+ projects shipped
  • 5.0 ★ Google reviews

Permits in Etobicoke

We handle the municipal paperwork.

Etobicoke falls under City of Toronto permitting (Toronto Building division). Older homes here often hide knob-and-tube wiring or galvanized plumbing — we test and price the fixes upfront, not as surprise change orders.

What’s included

  • Sonotube footings poured below frost line (4 ft minimum)
  • Pressure-treated, cedar, or composite decking
  • Aluminum or wood railings per Code height + spacing
  • Integrated bench seating, planters, or pergola
  • Permits + drawings for any deck over 24" off grade
  • Spring + fall inspection scheduling included
Quick Quote · 60 seconds

See your project's price range — before you call.

Three questions, real numbers from 200+ Toronto-area projects. We'll email the range and a brief on what drives it up or down.

Step 1 of 3

What kind of project?

Etobicoke FAQs

Things Etobicoke homeowners ask.

Do I need a permit for deck building in Etobicoke?
Etobicoke falls under City of Toronto permitting (Toronto Building division). Older homes here often hide knob-and-tube wiring or galvanized plumbing — we test and price the fixes upfront, not as surprise change orders.
Do I need a permit for my deck?
In Ontario any deck over 24 inches off grade needs a building permit. We pull permits, prepare drawings, and book inspections — it's part of the project cost, not an extra.
Cedar, pressure-treated, or composite — what's the right call?
Composite (Trex, TimberTech) costs more upfront but needs zero maintenance for 25 years. Cedar looks best year one but greys without annual oiling. PT is cheapest but warps. We help you pick based on your budget + how much weekend time you want to spend on the deck.