Guides

How Much Does Composite Decking Cost in Ireland? 2026 Price Guide

By Seamus · · 6 min read

A finished composite deck in a Co. Louth back garden showing the kind of build covered by these 2026 prices

If you have started gathering quotes, the figures may have given you a fright. A common story on Irish forums goes something like this: a homeowner asks about a 23m² composite deck with a railing, gets quoted close to ten grand, and wonders if they are being taken for a ride. Some of those quotes are fair, some are not, and the only way to tell is to understand what composite decking actually costs in Ireland in 2026 and what should be in the price. This guide gives you real supply-and-fit figures from jobs across County Louth, the things that push the price up, and how to read a quote so you are not caught out.

Composite Decking Cost Per Square Metre in Ireland (2026)

Decking is priced per square metre for supply and install, including the subframe. That all-in figure is the number to compare between quotes, not the price of the boards on their own, which is where a lot of confusion starts. A board you see online for €55 a metre is just the timber sitting in a yard. It does not include the frame, the fixings, the labour, or the cleanup. A full composite decking supply and fit price wraps all of that into one figure.

These are the typical 2026 ranges we work to, and they have held broadly steady over the last year:

Composite typeCost per m² (supply and fit, inc. subframe)
Standard composite€150 to €200
Premium capped composite€200 to €275+

A word on the very cheap boards. You will find flat-pack composite advertised far below these figures. It tends to be thin, uncapped and prone to fading and staining, and it is a false economy on a deck you want to last twenty-five years. We do not fit it, and we would tell you straight if a quote that looks too good to be true is built on it. If you want the wider picture across timber and composite, our decking pricing guide sets out every material side by side.

What a 20m² Composite Deck Costs in a Louth Back Garden

Most back gardens we deck in Dundalk and around the county land somewhere near 20m², so it is a useful yardstick. For a straightforward ground-level or low-level deck, no steps, no handrails, reasonable access:

  • Standard composite: roughly €3,000 to €4,000
  • Premium capped composite: roughly €4,000 to €5,500

That is the bare deck. The moment you add steps, a raised section or a railing, the figure climbs, which brings us neatly to the part of a quote that catches people out.

What’s Included, and What Costs Extra

This is where the ten-grand quotes come from, and where an honest quote earns its keep. A proper supply-and-fit price should already include the subframe, the boards fastened and finished, a weed membrane underneath, and a basic cleanup. What is almost always priced separately:

  • Steps. These are labour-heavy and add roughly €300 to €800 per step run depending on width and material.
  • Handrails and balustrades, especially on anything raised.
  • Integrated lighting run into the boards or risers.
  • Skirting or fascia to close off the perimeter.
  • Removal and disposal of an old deck, which takes time and a skip.

None of this is a hidden cost when it is itemised up front. It only becomes one when a vague quote leaves it out and it reappears at the end. We list every line so the price you hear is the price you pay, and we include old-deck removal rather than leaving you with a pile of rotten boards. For the full rundown on the extras that quietly inflate a bill, see our guide to the extras that should already be in your decking quote.

Why Composite Costs More Than Timber Upfront, and Less Over Time

There is no getting around it: composite costs more on day one. Pressure-treated softwood comes in lower per square metre, which is why a lot of people start there. The honest comparison is not the upfront figure, it is what you spend over the life of the deck.

A timber deck needs a clean and a fresh coat of oil or stain every year or two to stop it greying, cracking and going slippery in our damp climate. Over twenty years that adds up in both money and weekends. Composite needs little more than an annual wash with warm soapy water. No oiling, no staining, no yearly upkeep. Most quality capped boards carry a 25-year structural warranty to back that up.

So composite is dearer to buy and cheaper to own. For most gardens in County Louth, particularly north or east-facing ones that get less sun and stay damp longer, it works out the better value once maintenance is in the sum. That is value over time, not the cheapest sticker price, and it is the call we would make in our own gardens.

What Moves the Price Up or Down

Two identical-sized decks can be priced very differently, and for good reason. The main factors:

  • Size and shape. A simple rectangle is the most cost-effective deck to build. Curves, angled boards, notching around posts and multi-level designs all take more time per square metre.
  • Height and slope. A ground-level deck on flat ground is straightforward. A raised deck on a sloped garden needs more framing, longer posts and sometimes bracing, all of which add up.
  • Access. Carrying materials through the house or down a narrow side passage, or nowhere to park the van, all add labour.
  • Ground preparation. Levelling, drainage or digging out an old slab is extra groundwork before a board goes down.
  • Planning. Garden decking in Ireland is generally exempt from planning permission as long as it does not raise the ground level by more than one metre above the adjoining ground, is not to the front of the house facing a road, and you are not in a conservation area. Separately, on safety grounds a raised deck (commonly anything above about 600mm) needs proper edge protection, which adds to the build. If your deck is going up high or could overlook a neighbour, check with Louth County Council before starting.

How to Sense-Check a Quote in County Louth

If you take one thing from this, make it this: get every quote itemised, and compare the all-in per-square-metre figure, not the headline total. A €4,000 quote with steps, a rail and removal included can be far better value than a €3,200 quote that turns into €4,500 once the extras land.

When we quote a deck in Dundalk, Blackrock, Carlingford or anywhere across the county, we put the board, the frame, the steps, the lighting and the cleanup on separate lines, and old-deck removal goes in the price. You see exactly what you are paying for and where, which makes it easy to hold any other quote up against it. That is the difference between a local team you can ring and a number pulled out of the air.

We do not put a flat figure online because no two gardens are the same, and a real price needs a real look at the job. What you will get from us is a free, written, itemised quote with old-deck removal included and no surprises at the end. Get your free decking quote, call Seamus on 085 168 5170, or send a message on WhatsApp, and he will call out to measure up and price it properly.

Frequently asked

Quick answers

How much does composite decking cost in Ireland in 2026?

Expect roughly €150 to €200 per square metre supply and fit for standard composite, and €200 to €275 or more for premium capped boards, both including the subframe. For a typical 20m² back garden that works out at about €3,000 to €4,000 for standard and €4,000 to €5,500 for premium, before any steps, railings or removal.

How much does a 20m² composite deck cost?

A straightforward ground-level 20m² composite deck with no steps or handrails usually runs €3,000 to €4,000 for standard boards and €4,000 to €5,500 for premium capped boards. Steps add around €300 to €800 per run, and railings, lighting and old-deck removal are costed on top, which is why an itemised quote matters.

Is composite decking worth the extra cost over timber?

For most gardens here, yes. Composite costs more upfront but needs no oiling or staining, holds its colour and grip, and most boards carry a 25-year warranty. Once you factor in years of timber maintenance, composite is often the lower total cost, and it is the better bet for damp, shaded gardens that dry out slowly.

Do you need planning permission for composite decking in Ireland?

Usually not. Garden decking is generally exempt as long as it does not raise the ground level by more than one metre, is not built in front of the house facing a road, and you are not in a conservation area. A high raised deck or one that overlooks a neighbour can need permission, so check with Louth County Council if in doubt.

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