
Tired of staining and sealing every summer? We build Trex composite decks that handle Wellington's heat, humidity, and hurricane season with almost no ongoing maintenance.

Trex deck installation in Wellington means building a composite deck using boards made from wood fibers and recycled plastic, anchored on a pressure-treated frame, most jobs take one to two weeks from groundbreaking to final inspection.
Wellington homeowners deal with a tough combination: 90-degree heat, near-daily summer rain, and a hurricane season that runs half the year. Traditional wood decks warp, crack, and go gray quickly in those conditions. Trex composite decking was built for exactly this climate - the boards won't rot, splinter, or need annual staining, and the company backs most products with a 25-year warranty against fading and staining.
If you are also comparing materials, see our composite deck installation page for a broader look at composite options, or call us and we can walk through the differences for your specific yard.
If your deck boards are cupping at the edges, splitting along the grain, or have gone a weathered gray, the wood is breaking down from Wellington's heat and humidity. Sealing or painting is a temporary fix at best - the underlying damage keeps spreading. Replacing with composite stops the cycle for good.
If you have hired someone to sand, stain, or seal your deck in the last two or three years, those costs add up fast. Many Wellington homeowners find the recurring maintenance bill on a wood deck eventually exceeds what they would have spent switching to composite years earlier.
Walk your deck slowly and notice how it feels underfoot. Soft spots or boards that flex more than expected can mean the wood underneath is rotting - sometimes from the inside out where you cannot see it yet. Visible black or green mold after Wellington's rainy season is another clear warning sign.
Wellington's real estate market is competitive, and buyers notice outdoor living spaces. If your backyard has an aging deck that looks tired, a clean composite deck before listing can improve both appeal and perceived value. A well-built Trex deck photographs well and signals to buyers that the home has been maintained.
We handle the full project - from the footings in the ground to the final railing post. Every build starts with a structural frame of pressure-treated lumber anchored to meet Palm Beach County's wind-load requirements, with Trex composite boards installed on top using hidden clip fasteners for a clean, screw-free surface. We pull the permit, coordinate the county inspection, and handle any HOA submission your community requires.
If you want something more elaborate, we also build pressure-treated wood decks for homeowners who prefer natural wood at a lower upfront cost. And if you are thinking about covered outdoor living, ask us about pairing your deck build with a pergola or patio cover.
Best for homeowners starting fresh - full build from footings to final board, with permit and HOA coordination included.
Ideal when the existing frame is sound but the old wood boards need to come off - composite boards installed over your existing structure.
For elevated decks or any project where Trex Transcend railing systems are needed to match the composite surface.
Suited for homeowners who already have part of a deck and want to extend the footprint or add a second level.
Wellington sits in Palm Beach County where summer temperatures regularly top 90 degrees and humidity stays high for months. That combination destroys untreated wood fast - warping, cracking, and mold are common complaints from homeowners with traditional wood decks here. Trex composite decking was essentially designed for climates like this, with a UV-resistant shell that holds up against South Florida's intense sun and a surface that resists mildew buildup even after weeks of rain.
Wellington is also a village of planned communities with active HOA rules. Neighborhoods from Wellington itself to Royal Palm Beach often require written HOA approval before construction begins, covering deck size, railing color, and visibility from the street. We handle that process as part of every project - you never start construction without approval already in hand.
Palm Beach County's flat terrain and high water table also affect how footings need to be designed. We size and anchor every foundation to stay stable in saturated ground, which is especially important after Wellington's heavy summer storms. Learn more about deck construction standards from NADRA, the North American Deck and Railing Association.
We reply within one business day to ask a few basic questions - size of the space, whether you have an existing deck, and what you are hoping to end up with. No commitment needed on that first call.
We come to your Wellington property, measure the area, check for HOA setback requirements, and give you a written, itemized quote. No lump sums - you see exactly where every dollar goes.
Once you sign a contract, we prepare drawings for your HOA (if needed) and submit the permit application to Palm Beach County. Plan for two to six weeks before construction starts - we handle all of it.
Framing and footings go in first - a county inspector verifies the structure before boards go down. Then composite decking, railings, and finishing details. We do a final walkthrough with you before we leave.
Free estimate, written quote, no pressure. We reply within one business day.
(561) 407-6550Every structural connection - from footings to ledger board - meets Palm Beach County's wind-load requirements. That matters in a hurricane zone where an under-anchored deck is a real liability.
Wellington communities like Olympia and Versailles require written HOA approval before construction. We prepare and submit the drawings as part of every project, so work never starts before you have approval in writing.
We file the Palm Beach County permit application and coordinate every inspection. A county inspector signs off on the framing before boards go down - that record protects your home's value when you sell. See permit requirements at the Palm Beach County Building Division.
Trex composite boards install differently from wood - hidden fastener spacing, gapping for thermal expansion, and proper end-sealing all affect long-term performance. We follow Trex's installation guidelines to keep the product warranty intact.
Every project we build is permitted, inspected, and backed by a written contract. That means you have documentation showing your deck was built correctly - which matters to buyers, lenders, and insurers down the road.
A lower upfront cost option for homeowners who prefer natural wood and plan to seal and maintain it regularly.
Learn MoreExplore the full range of composite decking brands and profiles beyond Trex for your Wellington project.
Learn MorePermit slots and contractor schedules fill up fast before rainy season - lock in your build date now.