How to Build a Deck in Ontario: Cost, Permits & Code (2026)

Complete Guide · Decks in Ontario

How to Build a Deck in Ontario (2026): The Complete Guide

Everything you need to build a deck in Ontario, in the order you’ll actually face it — is it allowed, do you need a permit, what will it cost, how do you frame and flash it, and should you DIY or hire. Each step links to a deep guide, plus free calculators that do the math.

A deck looks simple until the questions pile up: is it even allowed, do I need a permit, what will it cost, who draws the plans, how deep do the footings go, and should I build it myself or hire? This guide walks the entire journey to build a deck in Ontario from start to finish, and points you to an in-depth guide for every step. Skim the at-a-glance numbers, grab the free calculators, then dive into whichever stage you’re on.

Build a deck in Ontario: the numbers at a glance

QuestionQuick answer
Do I need a permit?Usually yes — over ~108 sq ft or more than 600 mm (24″) above grade
What will it cost (2026)?About $45–$95 per sq ft installed
Railing (guard) height900 mm (36″), or 1,070 mm (42″) once the drop tops 6 ft
Footing depthBelow the frost line — ~1.2 m in the south, deeper up north
Minimum joist2×8 for a guarded deck (confirm against the span tables)

Before you build: permits, zoning, size and cost

Do you need a permit?

In most Ontario municipalities, any deck more than 600 mm (24 inches) above grade or larger than about 108 sq ft needs a building permit — and you can usually pull it yourself.

The permit is where most projects start and stall: people get stuck on whether they need one, the fine if they skip it, and who draws the plans. Full guide: Ontario deck permits →

Property-line setbacks and zoning

Where the deck can sit is a separate question from the building permit — it’s set by your municipal zoning by-law, which controls setbacks from each lot line and how much of the lot you can cover.

A structurally perfect deck can still be refused for sitting too close to a property line, so confirm setbacks and coverage before you design. Full guide: Deck setbacks & zoning →

How big should it be, and what’s the ROI?

Plan roughly 30–50 sq ft per person, map the furniture first, and keep the deck proportional to the house — a well-built deck commonly recoups around 60–75% of its cost at resale.

Size, layout, sun orientation, and planning for a future hot tub all get decided here. Full guide: Deck size, design & ROI →

What will it cost?

Budget about $45–$95 per square foot installed in 2026 — so a typical 12 ft x 16 ft deck runs roughly $8,600–$18,000 depending on material and height. Building it yourself drops it to a material takeoff.

Quotes vary wildly because of what’s (or isn’t) included — footings, railing, stairs, and the permit. Full guide: Cost to build a deck in Ontario →

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The structure: footings, framing and the ledger

Footings and frost depth

Ontario footings must reach below the frost line — about 1.2 m (4 ft) in the south and deeper north of the GTA — or the deck heaves every winter. This is where deck blocks, Sonotubes, and screw piles get decided.

Full guide: Deck footings & frost depth →

Framing: joists, beams and posts

Joist and beam spans, post sizing, and bracing are what keep the deck solid — and what the framing inspection checks. Stay inside the OBC span tables and you usually avoid an engineer.

Our framing guide includes a free joist-size finder. Full guide: Deck framing & spans →

Attaching to the house: the ledger

If the deck attaches to the house, the ledger is the single most important connection — bolt it to solid framing, never nail it, and flash it so water can’t rot the house behind it. When in doubt, go freestanding.

Full guide: Attaching a deck to the house →

First 2 questions free

Stuck on a specific Ontario deck rule?

Permit thresholds, span tables, guard heights, footing depth — ask the OBC Code Navigator any Ontario deck question and get the exact Code Article in plain English.

Ask the OBC Code Navigator free →

The surface and safety: decking, guards and stairs

Decking materials

Pressure-treated is the budget standard, cedar looks better for a bit more, and composite costs more upfront but skips the staining. The right pick depends on budget, sun, and how much maintenance you’ll tolerate.

Full guide: Composite vs wood decking →

Railing height and guard code

You need a guard over 600 mm (24 inches) above grade — 36 inches high, or 42 inches once the drop tops 6 ft — openings can’t pass a 4-inch sphere, and guards can’t be climbable. These are the details inspectors fail most.

Full guide: Deck railing height & guard code →

Railing kits and systems

Once you know the code, you pick the look: aluminum, glass, cable, or wood pickets. Pre-made kits make a clean, compliant railing fast — but cable and glass carry extra rules in Ontario.

Full guide: Deck railing kits & systems →

Stairs and handrails

More than three risers means a graspable handrail (865–1,070 mm from the nosing), and any open stair side over 600 mm needs a guard. Get the rise and run equal and lay out your stringers right the first time.

Full guide: Deck stairs & handrails →

Add-ons and finishing: hot tubs, drawings, hiring and upkeep

Hot tubs and pool decks

A filled hot tub with people can weigh 3,000–6,000+ lbs on one spot — far beyond normal deck load — so it needs extra footings and beefed-up framing, and a pool deck brings its own fence rules.

Full guide: Hot tub & pool decks →

Drawings, timelines and inspections

Most permits need four drawings (site plan, framing, elevation, cross-section), review runs about 10 business days, and you’ll have at least a footing inspection before you pour and a final once it’s built.

Full guide: Deck drawings & inspections →

DIY or hire a builder?

You can legally build your own deck in Ontario — no licence needed — or hire out. If you hire, vet for WSIB and insurance, get it in writing, and confirm who pulls the permit.

Full guide: Hiring a deck builder →

Maintenance, winter and septic

Re-coat a penetrating stain every 2–3 years, shovel with a plastic blade and skip the rock salt, do a spring safety check, and never build a deck over a septic tank or field.

Full guide: Deck maintenance →

Every part of building a deck in Ontario

The complete cluster — 14 in-depth guides plus the railing-kit systems page. Start anywhere:

Not sure where to start? If you’re at square one, begin with permits and cost; if you’re already building, jump to footings and framing. Every permitted deck must meet the current Ontario Building Code.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need a permit to build a deck in Ontario?
In most Ontario municipalities, yes – any deck more than 600 mm (about 24 inches) above grade or larger than roughly 108 sq ft needs a building permit, and you can usually pull it yourself. The application needs drawings. Always confirm the threshold with your local building department.
How much does it cost to build a deck in Ontario?
Budget about $45-$95 per square foot installed in 2026, so a typical 12 by 16 ft deck runs roughly $8,600-$18,000 depending on material and height. Pressure-treated is cheapest; composite costs more upfront. Building it yourself drops the cost to a material takeoff.
How deep do deck footings have to be in Ontario?
Footings must reach below the frost line – about 1.2 m (4 ft) in southern Ontario and deeper north of the GTA. Get this wrong and the deck heaves every winter. Sizing depends on the load above; see the footings guide for deck blocks, Sonotubes, and screw piles.
How tall does a deck railing have to be in Ontario?
You need a guard wherever the drop is more than 600 mm (24 inches). It must be at least 900 mm (36 inches), rising to 1,070 mm (42 inches) once the drop tops 1,800 mm (6 ft). Openings can’t pass a 4-inch sphere, and the guard can’t be climbable.
Can I build a deck myself in Ontario?
Yes. Ontario has no licence requirement to build a deck on your own home. You still need a permit for anything over about 108 sq ft or 600 mm high, it must meet the Ontario Building Code, and it has to pass the same inspections a contractor’s deck would.
Disclaimer: General guidance for Ontario homeowners based on the 2024 Ontario Building Code and common municipal practice; permit thresholds, zoning, costs, and code details vary by municipality and over time. Always confirm with your local building department, and treat span and load questions as engineering matters. This is not legal or engineering advice.
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