
A bare backyard is wasted space. We build properly framed, fully permitted pressure-treated wood decks in Beaumont that hold up to the wind and heat of the San Gorgonio Pass for years to come.

Pressure-treated wood deck construction in Beaumont starts with setting concrete footings and building a structural frame - posts, beams, and joists - then laying deck boards on top. Most standard decks take two to five days of active construction, plus one to three weeks for the City of Beaumont permit to process before work can begin. Pressure-treated lumber is wood that has been soaked in a preservative solution under high pressure, making it resistant to rot and insects - the most common choice for outdoor decks in Southern California.
If you are deciding between wood and composite, our Trex deck installation page gives an honest comparison. Wood decks cost less upfront and have a natural warmth that many homeowners prefer, but they require regular sealing - typically every one to two years in Beaumont's intense sun. Composite decking requires less ongoing maintenance but carries a higher initial price. Both are good options; the right choice depends on your budget, lifestyle, and how you plan to use the space.
A well-built pressure-treated deck that is properly maintained can last 15 to 25 years or longer. The frame quality and framing hardware are what determine how long it holds up - not just the surface boards. Our deck staining and sealing service can help you keep a new or existing wood deck in top shape once the lumber has cured.
When pressure-treated wood dries out from years of sun and heat - which happens faster in Beaumont's high-desert climate - the surface cracks and splinters. If you can catch a splinter just by running your hand along a board, or the wood looks gray and weathered, the surface protection has broken down. This may not mean full replacement, but it needs professional attention soon.
Grab your deck railing with both hands and push firmly sideways. If it moves more than a tiny amount, the connections have loosened - possibly from years of wind stress through the San Gorgonio Pass. Loose railings are a safety hazard, especially if you have children or older adults using the deck. This is one of the clearest signs your deck needs repair or replacement.
Press a screwdriver into any wood close to soil level. If it sinks in easily or the wood feels spongy, that's rot - and rot spreads. Dark staining around post bases or where boards meet the frame is an early warning sign. Irrigation systems and sprinkler overspray can keep wood wet enough to rot even in Beaumont's dry climate, especially on the shaded north side of a home.
Many of Beaumont's newer production homes were delivered with a bare backyard - no patio, no deck, no landscaping. If you've moved into one of these homes and want to turn your unused square footage into actual living space, a new deck is the most common first improvement homeowners in Beaumont's newer subdivisions make.
We build complete wood decks from concrete footings to finish - not just the surface boards. Every project includes setting footings below grade, building the structural frame with properly sized beams and joists, laying deck boards with correct drainage spacing, and installing stairs and railings. We handle the City of Beaumont permit application and any HOA submittal your neighborhood requires, and we coordinate the final city inspection before we call the project complete. The cedar wood deck construction option is worth considering if you want the natural appearance and aroma of a premium hardwood without the greenish tint of pressure-treated lumber.
We also handle improvements that build on a completed deck. After your lumber has cured, our deck staining and sealing service applies the first coat of sealant at the right time. If you want an enclosed or shaded outdoor space, we can add a structure over your new deck through our covered decks and patio covers service.
The most common project - a single-level deck attached to the back of your home, permitted and built to local code.
For homeowners whose lot layout calls for a deck that stands independently rather than attaching to the house structure.
Best for homes where the back door sits above grade - includes a full stair structure built to the same permit standards as the main platform.
Adds finished wood or metal railings for both safety compliance and curb appeal, matched to your home's existing style.
Beaumont sits at roughly 2,600 feet in the San Gorgonio Pass - a natural wind corridor between the Los Angeles Basin and the Coachella Valley. Summer temperatures regularly climb above 100 degrees F, UV exposure is stronger than at sea level, and the pass funnels some of the strongest sustained winds in Southern California. Wind gusts during Santa Ana events can exceed 50 mph, which puts real lateral stress on railing connections, post anchors, and ledger attachments. A deck built to the minimum standards used in calmer coastal neighborhoods may develop wobble and loose connections within a few years here. We frame every project with the local wind load requirements that Beaumont's building department expects, using the anchoring hardware those conditions actually call for. For an independent reference on framing standards, the American Wood Council publishes the prescriptive residential deck construction guide that California's building code references.
Beaumont's rapid growth also means most of the city's housing stock is relatively new - homes in neighborhoods like Sundance and Tournament Hills are now hitting the age where homeowners are ready to invest in the backyard improvements the builder never included. We work throughout the area, including nearby Yucaipa, CA and Redlands, CA, and we understand the permit timelines and HOA approval processes across this part of Riverside County. You can verify contractor licensing with the California Contractors State License Board before hiring anyone for deck work.
Call or submit the contact form and we respond within 1 business day. You don't need to have all the answers at this stage - most homeowners don't - so just tell us roughly what you're thinking and we'll help you sort out the details.
We come to your home, measure the space, check site conditions like drainage and slopes, and talk through what you want. You receive a written estimate that breaks down what's included, typically within a few days of the visit.
Once you sign a contract, we submit the permit application to the City of Beaumont on your behalf and prepare any HOA submittal documentation your neighborhood requires. Permit review typically takes one to three weeks - we start this process as soon as you're ready.
Active construction takes two to five days for a standard deck. We clean up at the end of each workday. After the city inspection passes, we walk you through the finished deck and tell you exactly when the wood will be ready for its first coat of sealant.
We respond within 1 business day. There's no obligation after the estimate - just a free on-site visit, a written quote, and honest answers to your questions. After you submit the form, someone from our office will call you to set up a convenient time.
(951) 574-0539Every deck we build uses anchoring hardware sized for Beaumont's wind load requirements. The San Gorgonio Pass delivers lateral forces that a deck framed to coastal minimum standards won't handle well. We know this because we work here, and we build accordingly - not because it's required on paper, but because it's what makes your deck stay solid for 15 to 20 years.
We pull every permit through the City of Beaumont's Building and Safety Division and handle the inspection process from submittal to sign-off. A fully permitted deck is protected at resale - an unpermitted one can hold up escrow or require costly teardown remediation. We handle the paperwork so you never have to chase it. You can also check our active license on the North American Deck and Railing Association's member directory at nadra.org.
Neighborhoods like Sundance, Tournament Hills, and other master-planned communities in Beaumont have active HOAs with specific rules about deck materials and design. We've prepared HOA submittals across this area and know what documentation local associations typically require. That experience keeps your project moving instead of stalling in committee.
In Beaumont's intense sun and heat, not all pressure-treated lumber performs the same way. We explain the wood species and treatment grade being used for your project before a single board is ordered. You'll know what you're getting and why it suits the climate - not just whatever's cheapest or most convenient to source.
We've been building decks in the Beaumont area since 2015. That time in the market means fewer surprises on your project - we've worked with local inspectors, navigated HOA processes, and built in the soil and wind conditions that make this area different from the rest of Southern California.
Looking for a premium natural wood option? Cedar offers a warmer appearance and natural rot resistance without the greenish tint of pressure-treated lumber.
Learn MoreOnce your new pressure-treated lumber has cured, we apply the first coat of sealant at the right time to extend your deck's life.
Learn MoreSpring books fast in Beaumont - reach out now to get your project on the schedule before the best building season fills up.