
Stop spending weekends sanding and sealing. A Trex composite deck holds up to Beaumont's humidity, heat, and storm season with almost no upkeep required.

Trex deck installation in Beaumont, TX means building a composite deck using boards made from reclaimed wood fibers and recycled plastic, set on a pressure-treated wood frame, with most residential projects completed in two to five days of active construction once the permit is approved and materials are on-site.
Trex is the most recognized brand in composite decking - and for good reason in a climate like Beaumont's. The boards do not rot, splinter, or absorb moisture the way wood does. They hold their color without annual staining. And unlike a standard wood deck in Southeast Texas, they do not require you to set aside a weekend every spring just to keep them from falling apart. The brand carries a 25-year limited residential warranty against fading, staining, and structural defects - coverage that reflects how the product is built to perform over time.
If you are comparing materials before committing, it is worth reading about composite deck installation more broadly - Trex is one brand within the composite category, and understanding the full range of options helps you make a confident choice.
Press down with your foot in a few places across the deck surface. If any boards feel soft, springy, or give slightly underfoot, that is a sign of rot. In Beaumont's humidity, rot spreads fast once it starts. Replacing the deck with composite is a chance to solve the problem permanently rather than patch it again next spring.
Beaumont's combination of intense summer UV exposure and frequent rain cycles is brutal on untreated wood. If your boards are visibly cracking, turning gray, or throwing splinters, the wood has dried out and broken down. At that point, you are either looking at major refinishing every year or a one-time replacement with a material built for this climate.
Beaumont's clay soil expands and contracts with the seasons, and footings that were not set deep enough can shift over time. If your deck feels unstable, has visible gaps between posts and the ground, or leans in any direction, the structure underneath needs attention - and that is the right time to evaluate whether a full replacement makes more sense than another repair.
If you have owned a wood deck in Beaumont for a few years, you know the cycle - sand in spring, stain or seal before summer, watch it fade and peel by fall. If that routine has worn you out, composite decking is worth a serious look. The ongoing maintenance is genuinely minimal compared to wood in this climate.
Every Trex installation starts with a site visit so we can measure the space, check ground conditions, and understand how you plan to use the deck. From there, we put together a written proposal covering materials, labor, permit fees, and timeline - no lump-sum numbers that make fair comparison impossible. Trex offers several product lines ranging from entry-level boards to premium finishes with enhanced fade resistance, and we will walk you through the options that match your budget and usage. If you want to compare Trex against other brands in the composite category, our composite deck installation page covers the broader landscape. For homeowners who prefer a wood surface at a lower upfront cost, we also build pressure-treated wood decks rated for Southeast Texas conditions.
We handle the permit application through the City of Beaumont, schedule and attend the city inspection, and do a final walkthrough with you when the project is complete. You will receive warranty documentation and a copy of the passed inspection - that paperwork protects your home's value and matters if you ever sell.
Suits homeowners who want the core composite benefits - no rotting, no splinters - at the most accessible price point in the Trex lineup.
Suits homeowners who want a more natural wood-grain appearance and enhanced fade resistance in Beaumont's intense sun and long outdoor season.
Suits most residential lots - a clean, functional addition to any backyard that is straightforward to permit and build on a predictable timeline.
Suits homes where the back door sits above grade - adds safe access and meets Beaumont building code requirements for elevated structures.
Beaumont averages over 55 inches of rain per year and sits in a subtropical climate where summer humidity regularly tops 90%. Wood decks in that environment need constant attention to prevent mold, mildew, and rot. Composite decking was essentially designed for climates like this - it resists moisture absorption and does not support the mold growth that plagues untreated wood in Southeast Texas. The city's expansive clay soil is another factor: we set footings to account for the soil movement that has shifted many decks in this region, a detail that keeps a deck level and stable across wet seasons and dry spells. Homeowners in Port Arthur and Nederland deal with the same soil and climate conditions, and we build the same way across the whole service area.
Hurricane and tropical storm season is a real consideration in Jefferson County - Beaumont has been impacted by major storms, and deck structures here need to be built with wind uplift in mind. Every connection point in our builds, where the deck meets the house and where posts meet beams, is secured with hardware rated for the loads this region sees. Beaumont's building permit and inspection process is an additional layer of oversight: an independent city inspector checks the framing before anything gets covered up, which is a second set of eyes that catches problems before they become yours.
We ask a few basic questions - roughly how large a deck you are thinking about, whether it is ground level or elevated, and what you want to use the space for. You will hear back within one business day. You do not need all the answers yet; we just want to show up to the site visit prepared.
We come to your home, measure the space, check the ground conditions, and ask about board color, railing style, and any features you want. We walk you through Trex product options in person. You receive a written, itemized estimate - not a ballpark number - within a few days of the visit.
Once you approve the scope and price, we submit the building permit to the City of Beaumont. This step typically takes one to three weeks. We handle it entirely and keep you updated. No construction begins before the permit is in hand - that is non-negotiable.
The crew digs and pours concrete footings, builds the pressure-treated frame, and installs the Trex boards, railings, and stairs. A city inspector checks the framing before boards go down. Once everything passes final inspection, we walk through the completed project with you and hand over warranty paperwork and your inspection copy.
No obligation, no sales pitch. We come to your home, take measurements, and give you a written quote that breaks out every cost so you can compare bids fairly and make a confident decision.
(409) 247-1986Southeast Texas clay soil is some of the most reactive in the country, swelling when wet and shrinking during dry spells. We dig and set footings specifically for local soil conditions - not a generic depth that works in drier regions. That detail is what keeps a deck level and stable after several wet seasons and hot summers.
We pull the permit, attend the city inspection, and hand you a copy of the passed inspection when the job is done. That document protects your home's value and gives you something concrete to show a buyer if you ever sell. A deck without a permit is a liability - not an asset.
Your estimate breaks out materials, labor, permit fees, and cleanup separately. No lump sums that make it impossible to compare bids fairly. If something unexpected comes up during construction, we talk to you before doing anything that changes the price - that is a commitment, not a disclaimer.
Beaumont sits in a Gulf Coast hurricane corridor. Every connection point - where the deck meets the house, where posts meet beams - is secured with hardware rated for the wind loads this region sees. The North American Deck and Railing Association sets standards for this kind of connection; we build to meet them on every project.
When you hire a contractor who knows Beaumont, you get someone who has seen what local soil movement, storm season, and year-round humidity do to structures that were not built for them. That local experience shows up in every decision made on your project - from footing depth to framing hardware to which Trex product line actually holds up in this climate.
A solid, affordable wood deck option built with materials rated for Southeast Texas humidity, heat, and termite pressure.
Learn MoreExplore the full range of composite decking options beyond Trex - including materials, colors, and price points that may suit your project.
Learn MorePermit season fills up fast in late winter - reach out now to hold your spot on our build calendar and lock in a written estimate before material costs move.