
Stop spending weekends sanding and sealing. We install composite decks in Corona built to handle the Inland Empire heat - so you can actually enjoy your backyard.

Composite deck installation in Corona, CA involves boards made from a blend of wood fibers and recycled plastic that look like real wood but hold up far better in heat and UV exposure. Most residential installations - a 300- to 400-square-foot deck - take a professional crew three to seven days to complete once materials are on-site, plus permit review time.
Composite decking is a strong choice for Corona homeowners who want an outdoor space they can actually use without committing to annual maintenance. If you are starting from scratch and want to explore the full design process before choosing a material, our custom deck design and build page walks through the full range of options. For homeowners with an existing wood deck that has run its course, composite installation is a direct replacement that ends the sanding-and-sealing cycle for good.
A well-built composite deck can last 25 to 30 years or more. The boards resist fading and moisture damage. The longevity comes mostly from what is underneath - the framing needs to be right from day one. We build both the structure and the surface, permitted through the City of Corona and inspected at key stages.
If you feel boards flex underfoot, notice cracks along the grain, or find soft spongy areas near the house, the structure is breaking down. In Corona's climate, wood decks that were not sealed regularly degrade faster than most homeowners expect. Composite replacement eliminates that cycle entirely.
Natural wood in Corona's high-sun environment grays out and stains quickly without consistent maintenance. If your deck looks tired even after cleaning and you are not committed to annual sanding and staining, that is a clear signal composite is a better fit for your lifestyle.
If you have recently updated your home's interior or simply want more usable outdoor space, a composite deck is one of the most effective ways to extend your living area. Many Corona homeowners add decks when they remodel kitchens or primary bedrooms.
If you avoid your deck during Corona's long, hot summers because the surface burns your feet, that is a solvable problem. Modern composite products in lighter colors and heat-reducing formulations stay significantly cooler than dark wood or older composite boards.
We manage the entire project - site prep, permits, framing, composite board installation, railings, and stairs. The composite brands we work with include products rated for high-UV environments, which matters in a climate where the sun hits your deck for most of the day. For homeowners interested in a specific brand, Trex deck installation is covered on its own page with brand-specific details.
Railings are not an afterthought. If your deck sits 30 inches or more above the ground, California requires guardrails, and the right railing system can define the finished look of the space. Our deck railing installation options include composite, aluminum, and cable rail profiles that complement composite boards without adding maintenance requirements.
Best for homeowners who want maximum stain, fade, and moisture resistance - the most popular choice for sun-heavy Corona backyards.
Lower upfront cost than capped products, still far less maintenance than wood - suits covered or shaded deck areas.
For any deck 30 inches or more off the ground - pairs composite boards with matching or contrasting railing systems.
Removes an existing failed wood deck and replaces it with composite boards on the existing or new framing, depending on structural condition.
Corona's location in the Inland Empire means composite decking performs differently here than it would in a coastal or temperate climate. Summer temperatures climb above 100 degrees regularly, and south- and west-facing backyards absorb direct sun for most of the day. Board color selection matters more here than it does in most of the country - darker boards absorb more heat and can get uncomfortably hot underfoot. Choosing lighter-colored products rated for high-UV environments is the practical decision for most Corona installations.
Beyond surface temperature, the year-round outdoor living culture in this area means a composite deck gets used across ten or more months each year - far more than in regions with true winters. That extended use is part of why the quality of framing and footings matters as much as the board surface. We serve homeowners in Corona and nearby Eastvale, and our familiarity with the permitting processes and HOA requirements specific to each community means fewer delays and no mid-project surprises.
You tell us the size you have in mind, whether you have an existing deck to remove, and what you want the finished space to feel like. We schedule a free on-site visit to measure and talk through options before giving you a written estimate. We respond within 1 business day.
Once you choose your composite material and color, we prepare drawings for permit submission to the City of Corona's Building and Safety Division. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we help you prepare the materials for architectural review. This phase takes two to four weeks.
We dig and pour concrete footings sized for local soil conditions, then build the frame of posts, beams, and joists. This structural work is the most critical part of the build, even though it is largely hidden once the deck is finished. Expect one to three days for this phase.
With the frame inspected and approved, composite boards go down, followed by railings, stairs, and any additional features. After the city's final inspection, we walk you through the finished deck and hand over all permit documentation. Keep those records - they matter when you sell.
We respond within 1 business day. Fill out the form and we will schedule a free on-site estimate at your convenience - no pressure, no commitment.
(951) 508-0140Not every composite board handles 100-degree summers equally. We have worked in this climate since 2016 and know which products hold their color and stay cooler underfoot in South and West-facing backyards. We show you heat ratings and samples before you commit.
Our license is verifiable with the California Contractors State License Board. We pull permits ourselves, attend all required inspections, and carry general liability and workers' compensation coverage - so you are protected throughout the project.
Corona homeowners in communities like Sycamore Creek, Eagle Glen, and Dos Lagos face both city permit requirements and HOA architectural review. We manage both processes so you are not left handling paperwork you have never dealt with. No surprises, no stop-work orders.
Clay-heavy soils in parts of Corona expand when wet and contract when dry. A contractor unfamiliar with the area may use footing depths designed for a different part of the country. We have seen what happens to decks built that way - and we size and anchor footings to handle what the ground here actually does.
Every composite deck we install in Corona comes with a written estimate, city permits, a final inspection record, and a contractor who shows up on the scheduled day. That combination is straightforward - but it is not universal. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission notes that the structural framing of a deck - not just its surface - is the primary safety factor in long-term deck performance.
Trex is one of the most recognized composite decking brands - see how a Trex-specific installation compares for your project.
Learn MoreComplete your composite deck with matching composite or cable railings that hold up in Corona's sun without constant upkeep.
Learn MoreInstallation schedules book out weeks in advance - contact us now to lock in your spot before the busy season.