Deck or patio??

I powerwash and stain my deck once every two years. Takes a day out of your summer every other year, not a big deal. Looks nicer than a patio.
 
I like the deck better. The wood is just easier on bare feet than the concrete. The only advantage that I can see for the concrete patio is that you can have a turkey fryer on there.
 
We have a treated wood deck. Not nearly as expensive as the composite. After the initial stain/seal, the only maintenance is restaining every other year. That takes all of a couple of hours and $60 worth of stain.
 
I powerwash and stain my deck once every two years. Takes a day out of your summer every other year, not a big deal. Looks nicer than a patio.

We have a treated wood deck. Not nearly as expensive as the composite. After the initial stain/seal, the only maintenance is restaining every other year. That takes all of a couple of hours and $60 worth of stain.

Both these are correct, if you use the proper stain and actually keep up on a maintenance schedule the will be easy to maintain and stay looking great. Most people don't do this though, they either paint or use a solid stain on the wood, or don't do it every other year.

Once you put paint on a deck there is really no going back, by that point it is almost cheaper to just replace the deck boards.
 
Both these are correct, if you use the proper stain and actually keep up on a maintenance schedule the will be easy to maintain and stay looking great. Most people don't do this though, they either paint or use a solid stain on the wood, or don't do it every other year.

Once you put paint on a deck there is really no going back, by that point it is almost cheaper to just replace the deck boards.


I went the solid stain route and it was a complete nightmare. I ended up hating the color and the only way to get it back to original was sanding the whole deck by hand. That was a nightmare that I will never go through again.
 
I went the solid stain route and it was a complete nightmare. I ended up hating the color and the only way to get it back to original was sanding the whole deck by hand. That was a nightmare that I will never go through again.

Precisely why I went with the composite. Plus...staining those 1x1's is just brutal.
 
I went the solid stain route and it was a complete nightmare. I ended up hating the color and the only way to get it back to original was sanding the whole deck by hand. That was a nightmare that I will never go through again.

I use a semi-solid stain. I felt like the label on the stain can misled me, it was not supposed to be as solid as it turned out. I realized soon after applying it that I was never going back (at least not without a lot of elbow grease). It looks nice, but I wouldn't recommend that route to anyone for that simple reason.
 
Precisely why I went with the composite. Plus...staining those 1x1's is just brutal.

I agree. This is one of the reasons that we went with the metal spindles on our new deck. More expensive but I like the looks of it better and it will be much easier to stain.

We had a similar issue on a deck at a previous house where the builder didnt know the codes so he placed the original spindles 6 inches apart. I think the code is that they can be no more than 4 inches apart so instead of starting over he just put a spidle in between all of the ones spaced at six inches which meant that ther were nearly twice as many as needed and they were extremely close together. It took forever to stain.
 
The spindles don't wear much at all though because water doesn't sit on them. I skipped the spindles last time I stained the deck and you'd never be able to tell the difference.
 
I agree. This is one of the reasons that we went with the metal spindles on our new deck. More expensive but I like the looks of it better and it will be much easier to stain.

I would think masking all of those metal spindles so you don't get stain on them would be a nightmare or are you able to just wipe any stain off of them?
 
Precisely why I went with the composite. Plus...staining those 1x1's is just brutal.

I use a sprayer when I apply stain, I would never do it by hand, except close to the house. With your composite deck if you have it professionally cleaned every 2 years it will clean very easily. If you want to do it yourself I would do like brianhos posted and use a mild soap and water on it once every 3 months or so. If you let it go more than 2 years it will be pricey to clean.

The spindles don't wear much at all though because water doesn't sit on them. I skipped the spindles last time I stained the deck and you'd never be able to tell the difference.

When we maintain the decks we service. We do horizontals every 2 years and the verticals every 4. When year 10 comes around it is time to take it down to bear wood and start the cycle over again
 
I'd definitely go with a paver patio and not stained concrete. I'd also choose a patio over a deck, but that's just me.
 

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