
Tired of refinishing your wood deck every few years? A Trex composite deck gives you a beautiful outdoor space that handles Missouri City's heat, humidity, and clay soils without the upkeep.

Trex deck installation in Missouri City means building a composite surface on a pressure-treated frame, and most residential decks take two to five days of on-site work once permits are approved.
Missouri City homeowners switch to Trex after one too many rounds of sanding, staining, and sealing a wood deck in the summer heat. Composite boards handle this area's humidity and afternoon storms far better than wood, and once the deck is built, your main job is a quick wash twice a year. If you are still deciding between materials, take a look at our composite deck installation page to compare options side by side.
Trex is a specific brand of composite decking with one of the most recognized warranties in the industry - 25 years against fading, staining, and structural defects. That kind of protection matters in a climate where outdoor surfaces take a beating every summer.
If pressing your foot down on a board makes it flex or feel spongy, the wood has started to rot. In Missouri City's humid climate, wood decks can reach this point in as little as eight to ten years. Replacing the surface with composite boards solves the problem permanently.
A gap forming between your deck and the house, or a structure that wobbles when you walk on it, points to a failing frame or ledger board. This is a safety issue - a deck builder should assess whether the frame can be repaired or whether a full replacement is the right call.
If you have refinished your wood deck twice already and the cycle is getting old, that is a practical reason to switch to composite. Many Missouri City homeowners make the move after doing the math on what they have spent versus the cost of a Trex deck that needs no refinishing at all.
Fort Bend County's clay soil shifts seasonally, and that movement can work its way up through deck footings, causing boards to lift or gaps to grow wider. If your boards no longer lie flat, the structure underneath may need attention before the surface is replaced.
We handle every part of a Trex deck project - design, permits, framing, board installation, railings, and final walkthrough. The structural frame is built from pressure-treated lumber, because the frame carries the weight of the deck and has to handle Fort Bend County's clay soil movement. On top of that frame, we install Trex composite boards using hidden fasteners so the surface looks clean and finished from every angle. If you want a full railing upgrade at the same time, we can pair the deck with a pressure-treated wood deck frame or discuss your railing preferences during the estimate visit.
Trex offers dozens of board colors and finishes - warm cedar tones, cool gray weathered looks, and everything in between. We bring samples to the estimate visit so you can see the colors in natural light before committing. Clients who want to compare materials before deciding can also look at our composite deck installation options to see what fits their budget and style.
Best for homeowners who want to add outdoor living space and skip the maintenance cycle from day one.
Best for homeowners with a solid existing frame who want to replace only the surface boards and finish the refinishing cycle for good.
Best for homeowners whose current deck has structural issues - frame, footings, ledger - and needs to be done right from the ground up.
Best for homeowners building a raised deck or upgrading an existing railing system to match new composite boards.
Missouri City sits in Fort Bend County, where summer humidity regularly stays above 80 percent and temperatures hold above 90 degrees for months. That combination is brutal on wood - moisture gets into any crack or gap and starts the decay process faster than in drier climates. Composite decking handles this better because the boards don't absorb water the way wood does, and they don't need to be refinished every two to three years to stay in good shape. Homeowners in Sienna Plantation and Friendswood have been making this switch for years because the math on lifetime cost - when you factor in staining, sealing, and eventual board replacement - favors composite.
The clay soil under most Missouri City yards adds another layer of complexity. This soil swells when it rains and shrinks when it dries out, putting stress on anything anchored in the ground. A contractor who has built decks in Fort Bend County will dig footings below the active soil zone so your deck stays level through every wet season and dry summer. We also handle the Missouri City permit process and HOA coordination for communities like Sienna and Quail Valley, so you don't have to chase paperwork while we build.
Call or fill out the form and we reply within one business day. We ask about your yard, your HOA, and what you want to use the deck for - so the estimate visit is focused and useful.
We visit your yard, take measurements, look at the soil and existing structure, and walk through color and railing options with you. You get a written quote that breaks down materials, labor, and permit fees - no surprises later.
Once you sign the contract, we submit the permit application to Missouri City Development Services and handle any HOA submission. Permit processing typically takes one to three weeks - you don't need to visit city hall.
Construction runs two to five days for most residential decks. The city inspector checks the frame before boards go down. When the crew leaves, your yard is clean and your deck is ready to use - no curing or drying period.
Free estimate, no obligation. We handle permits and HOA paperwork so you don't have to.
(281) 549-0235We have built decks on Fort Bend County's expansive clay soils and know how deep footings need to go to stay stable through the seasonal swelling and shrinking. That experience means your deck stays level for years, not just the first season.
We submit the permit application and handle HOA submissions for communities like Sienna and Quail Valley. You get a fully approved, code-compliant deck without chasing paperwork - and no surprises at closing when you sell your home.
The North American Deck and Railing Association sets best-practice guidelines for deck construction - from footing depth to railing strength. We follow those standards on every job, which means your deck passes inspection the first time and holds up the way it should.
Trex carries a 25-year residential warranty against fading and staining, and we back our installation workmanship in writing. If something is not right with our work, we come back and fix it - that is the deal, and we stand behind it.
Every one of these proof points comes down to the same thing: you get a deck that is built correctly, approved by the city, and backed by people who stand behind their work in this community. That is what makes the difference between a deck you enjoy and one that costs you money down the road.
Compare the most affordable wood framing option - pressure-treated lumber - for homeowners who want a classic deck at a lower upfront cost.
Learn MoreExplore the full range of composite board brands and profiles beyond Trex to find the finish and price point that fits your project.
Learn MoreMissouri City contractors book up fast between February and May - reach out now and lock in your project date before the season closes.