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224 sqft · 14×16 ft

How much does a 14×16 deck cost?

PriceADeck Editorial·Updated April 18, 2026

A 14×16 (224 sqft) deck costs $16,080–$24,210 installed in 2026, depending on material and state. The lower end is pressure-treated pine in an average-labor state; the upper end is premium hardwood in a high-labor metro. Most homeowners picking a mid-tier composite land at $20,599.

What a 14×16 deck fits

At 224 square feet, a 14×16 deck comfortably holds a dining table for 6, a separate lounge zone, and a grill area — the most common build size in the US.

For perspective: a 4-person round dining table needs about 80 sqft clear space. A standard outdoor couch plus coffee table needs 50–70 sqft. A built-in grill station needs 20–30 sqft plus clearance. Add 6 feet of circulation paths on active sides.

Cost by material — 14×16 deck (US average)
Mid-height (4–6 ft) build, composite balusters, one stair run, permit, 8% contingency. Baseline uses a national average labor rate.
Pressure-Treated Pine
15–20 yrs · Stain every 2–3 yrs
$72/sqft
$16,080
Cedar / Redwood
20–25 yrs · Seal every 2–3 yrs
$79/sqft
$17,754
Composite (Trex, TimberTech)
25–30 yrs · Rinse yearly
$92/sqft
$20,599
PVC / Cellular
30+ yrs · Rinse yearly
$101/sqft
$22,724
Ipe / Cumaru Hardwood
40+ yrs · Oil annually (optional)
$108/sqft
$24,210
14×16 composite deck cost by state
Same 224 sqft composite build, state-by-state. Metro labor can shift these another ±5–15%.
Texas
$92/sqft
$20,599
California
$107/sqft
$23,930
New York
$110/sqft
$24,615
Florida
$93/sqft
$20,857
Colorado
$102/sqft
$22,886
Minnesota
$100/sqft
$22,331
Massachusetts
$108/sqft
$24,232
Georgia
$92/sqft
$20,599
Ohio
$97/sqft
$21,674
Arizona
$96/sqft
$21,490

14×16 deck cost — FAQ

How much does a 14×16 deck cost?+

A 14×16 (224 sqft) deck costs $16,080–$24,210 installed in 2026. Pressure-treated pine is the cheapest at ~$72/sqft; composite (Trex, TimberTech) runs ~$92/sqft; premium hardwood (ipe) runs up to ~$108/sqft. Labor is 40–55% of the total.

Can I build a 14×16 deck myself?+

Possibly, but a 14×16 deck at 224 sqft is on the larger side for DIY. Framing, ledger attachment, and stair construction are code-critical steps many jurisdictions require to be inspected. Expect to save 40–55% on labor if you're capable; add 10–15% to material budget for wasted cuts and mistakes.

Do I need a permit for a 14×16 deck?+

Yes in nearly all US jurisdictions. Decks over 30 inches off the ground or attached to the house require a building permit and at least a footing and final inspection. Permit costs typically run $100–$500; a 224 sqft deck lands in the middle of that range.

How long does a 14×16 deck take to build?+

2–3 weeks of active build time for a crew of 2–3 once permits are approved. Permit approval itself adds 2–6 weeks upfront. Composite and PVC installs run slightly faster than wood; multi-level or wraparound designs add another 1–2 weeks.

What shape should a 14×16 deck be?+

Rectangle is the cheapest and fastest to build. L-shape adds 10–15% cost but wraps around corners well. For footprints where 14×16 is the bounding box, check what fits inside — an L-shape or wraparound at a 14×16 envelope will have less actual deck surface than a solid 224 sqft rectangle.

Price your own 14×16 deck
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