Wraparound 10×10 Deck Cost
A wraparound 10×10 (100 sqft) deck costs $5,700-$9,200 in mid-tier composite — about 15% more than the same size in a clean rectangle. A wraparound deck runs along two or three sides of a house — common on Victorian, ranch, and cottage architectures. Creates multiple outdoor access points from interior rooms.
5 finish tiers — wraparound 10×10
National $/sqft × wraparound shape's 1.15× complexity multiplier × 100 sqft = total installed cost. Materials + labor + standard railing included. Multiply by your state's labor multiplier for a local figure.
Excludes permit ($150-$450 typical), demolition (if replacing), site prep, and waste material premium. $8% waste factor already applied to material side of the tier $/sqft.
What changes vs a rectangular 10×10
When to pick wraparound
Older homes with multiple back-of-house entrances, narrow lots where length compensates for shallow depth, walkout basements with grade variation.
Inside corners can trap snow and ice in cold climates — frame with continuous drainage in mind. Ledger flashing detail must be perfect across every joint.
Open the calculator with wraparound 10×10 pre-loaded
Use the deck-cost calculator to dial in your exact material, railing, and stair specs. For non-rectangular shapes, use the size that approximates your footprint and apply the 1.15× multiplier shown above.
FAQ — wraparound 10×10
How much does a wraparound 10×10 deck cost in 2026?▾
A wraparound 10×10 (100 sqft) deck costs $2,900-$4,600 in pressure-treated, $5,700-$9,200 in mid-range composite, and $8,600-$12,600 in luxury PVC. That's roughly 15% more than the same size in a rectangular shape — about $950 extra at mid-tier composite for the wraparound geometry. Numbers reflect 2026-Q1 national retail with average labor; multiply by your state's labor multiplier for a local estimate.
Why does a wraparound deck cost more than a rectangular one?▾
Continuous ledger along multiple house walls, framed in 3-5 rectangular sub-sections joined at inside corners. Each sub-section has independent beam runs. On top of that framing complexity, the material waste factor for wraparound is roughly 8% versus 7% for a clean rectangle — you'll order ~1% extra decking that ends up as offcuts. Combined, the labor multiplier on a wraparound build is about 1.15× rectangular baseline.
Is a wraparound deck right for a 10×10 footprint?▾
Best for: Older homes with multiple back-of-house entrances, narrow lots where length compensates for shallow depth, walkout basements with grade variation. Watch-outs: Inside corners can trap snow and ice in cold climates — frame with continuous drainage in mind. Ledger flashing detail must be perfect across every joint. At 100 sqft, a wraparound layout is tight — consider whether the visual upgrade is worth the cost penalty at this scale.
What framing changes for a wraparound vs rectangular?▾
Continuous ledger along multiple house walls, framed in 3-5 rectangular sub-sections joined at inside corners. Each sub-section has independent beam runs. For a 10×10 footprint specifically, plan for ~4 footings (vs ~4 for rectangular), and ~49 linear feet of perimeter (vs 40 for rectangular). Permit complexity is moderate — standard residential review path with annotated framing plan.
How does wraparound affect long-term maintenance?▾
Most exposed deck shape — every elevation of the house contributes UV + weather impact. Plan a 2-year re-stain cycle for PT. Over a 25-year lifecycle, the maintenance delta vs rectangular adds roughly $1,200-$2,400 for a 10×10 build. Composite reduces this delta by 60-80% — the more complex the shape, the more composite outperforms PT on TCO.