
Building a Deck in Central New York
Building a Deck in Central New York: What You Need to Know Before You Start
Every spring, as soon as the mud dries and the snow is off the ground, the phone starts ringing with deck projects. And every year, homeowners ask us the same set of questions: How much will it cost? Wood or composite? Do I need a permit? How long does it take? After years of building decks across Utica, Rome, New Hartford, and the broader Oneida County area, we’ve answered these questions a few thousand times. Here’s the straightforward version.
Why Central New York Is Different from the Rest of the Country
If you’ve ever searched for deck costs online and found numbers that seemed oddly low or weirdly high, it’s because most national estimates don’t account for where you live. Building a deck in Central New York comes with specific climate and code requirements that don’t apply in warmer states, and they affect both the cost and the right material choice for your home.
The big one is frost depth. In Oneida County and the surrounding area, footings must extend below the frost line, typically 48 inches or more underground to prevent heaving and structural movement during freeze-thaw cycles. Compare that to a state like Georgia, where frost depth requirements are minimal or nonexistent, and you start to see why local pricing is what it is. A properly built deck here starts with a serious foundation, not just concrete blocks sitting on top of the ground.
Our winters are also punishing on decking materials. Products that perform beautifully in moderate climates can crack, warp, or lose their finish faster in an Upstate NY freeze cycle. Material selection matters more here than in most of the country.
Wood vs. Composite: The Honest Comparison
This is the single most common question we get, and the honest answer is: it depends on your priorities. Here’s how the two main options compare for homeowners in this region:
| Material | Installed cost | Maintenance | Lifespan |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pressure-treated wood | $20–$35 / sq ft | High (annual stain/seal) | 15–20 yrs |
| Cedar | $30–$45 / sq ft | Medium (stain every 2–3 yrs) | 20–25 yrs |
| Composite (mid-grade) | $35–$60 / sq ft | Low (wash only) | 25–30 yrs |
| Composite (premium) | $50–$70 / sq ft | Very low | 30+ yrs |
| PVC / vinyl | $28–$45 / sq ft | Very low | 30+ yrs |
The most important thing the table above doesn’t show is cumulative cost. A pressure-treated wood deck costs less upfront, but between staining every one to two years and eventual board replacement, many homeowners end up spending more over a 20-year period than they would have on composite. We typically recommend composite for anyone who wants a low-maintenance option they can set and forget, especially with Upstate winters accelerating wear on untreated wood.
If budget is the primary driver and you’re comfortable with ongoing upkeep, a well-built pressure-treated deck is a perfectly solid choice. The key word is “well-built”, shortcuts on framing, fasteners, or ledger attachment create problems regardless of what’s on top.
Permits: What You Need in Oneida County
In New York State, virtually all deck construction requires a building permit, and that applies to municipalities across Oneida County, including Utica, Rome, New Hartford, Whitesboro, and the surrounding towns. The permit process is handled by your local building department, not the state.



Here’s what’s typically involved in the permitting process:
- A permit application with a site plan showing where the deck will be located on your property
- Basic framing and structural details (post size, beam span, joist spacing, footing depth)
- Review and approval by the local codes office, typically one to three weeks for straightforward residential decks
- At least two inspections: footings before concrete is poured, and a final structural inspection


Permit fees in Oneida County municipalities are generally modest, typically $50 to $300 depending on project size and the specific town’s fee schedule. The bigger cost of skipping a permit isn’t the fine if you’re caught. It’s the problem it creates when you sell your home. An unpermitted deck is a disclosed defect that can derail a sale or reduce your sale price.
We pull permits on every deck we build. If a contractor tells you permits aren’t necessary or suggests skipping them to save money, that’s a contractor to avoid.
What Does a Deck Actually Cost in the Utica Area?
Based on projects we’ve completed across Oneida County, here are realistic price ranges for a professionally built deck, fully permitted, including footings, framing, decking, and railings:
- Small deck (10×12 to 12×12, ground level): $9,000 – $17,000
- Mid-size deck (14×20 to 16×20): $16,000 – $28,000
- Large or elevated deck (20×20+, with stairs): $25,000 – $45,000+
These ranges reflect composite decking at mid-grade pricing. A pressure-treated wood deck runs roughly 20 to 30 percent less. Upgrades such as built-in seating, pergola, lighting, outdoor kitchen rough-in, add to the total, but they’re also the features that tend to make a deck actually get used every day rather than sitting empty.
National averages you’ll see online often run lower because they’re aggregating data from lower-cost regions. Central New York labor and material costs are in line with the broader Northeast, and that frost-depth requirement on footings adds real cost that many online calculators don’t account for. At View New Siding/Remodeling, our prices are beyond fair for the quality of workmanship we provide.
When to Start Planning
Deck season in Central New York is essentially May through September for comfortable use, but the best time to plan and build is earlier than most people realize. April and May fill up fast with contractors, and if you start calling in June for a deck you want done by the Fourth of July, you’re likely looking at mid-summer or fall availability.
The smart approach: reach out in late winter or early spring, get your estimate, pull the permit, and lock in your build slot. Footings can be poured as soon as the ground is workable, often in April. A typical residential deck takes one to two weeks from footing to final inspection, weather permitting.
Questions to Ask Any Deck Contractor
Whether you’re calling us or anyone else, these are the questions that separate quality contractors from shortcuts:
- Are you licensed and insured? (General Contractor license and liability insurance, ask for certificates. We have them!)
- Will you pull the permit, or is that my responsibility? (A good contractor pulls it)
- How deep are your footings? (Should be at or below frost line: 42–48″ in this region)
- What fastener system do you use? (Stainless or hot-dipped galvanized, anything else rusts)
- What’s your warranty on workmanship?
- Can I see a recent project in the area, or speak with a recent customer?
A contractor who can answer all six without hesitation is a contractor who knows what they’re doing. That’s us!
If you’re considering a deck construction or deck upgrade this spring, contact us today to learn more about our options and schedule a consultation.