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Deck vs Patio: Which Is Right for Your Ontario Backyard?
Peace Love Landscaping

Deck vs Patio: Which Is Right for Your Ontario Backyard?

Cost, maintenance, lifespan and lifestyle fit

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Quick answer: Decks make sense when your back door is more than 60 cm above grade, you want a faster build, or you want a softer surface underfoot. Patios make sense when your back door is close to grade, you want maximum lifespan with minimum maintenance, or you want an outdoor space that flows seamlessly to the lawn or garden.

“Should I build a deck or a patio?” is one of the most common questions on a first consultation. The answer is rarely either/or; many Ontario yards work best with both, but knowing the trade-offs helps you decide which to invest in first.

The core trade-offs

Factor Deck Patio (interlocking)
Best when grade is… Above grade (door is high) At or near grade
Typical lifespan 20-30 yr (composite), 12-18 yr (wood) 25-30+ yr
Maintenance Wood: yearly staining; composite: low Very low; resand joints every 5-7 yr
Cost per m² installed $350-$600 (composite) $110-$220 (mid-grade pavers)
Feel underfoot Soft, warm in summer Hard, cool in summer
Heat retention Less heat absorption Absorbs and re-radiates heat
Design freedom Easy to build complex shapes Easier to integrate with garden + walls
Permit needs Yes for raised structures Usually no for ground-level

When to choose a deck

The single best reason to build a deck is grade. If your back door sits 60+ cm above the surrounding ground, a deck is the cleanest, fastest, most cost-effective way to bridge that height. Building a patio at the same level would require massive fill, retaining walls and grading that costs many times the price of a deck.

Other good reasons: you want a softer surface for kids; you live somewhere your bare feet care about (composite decking does not get as hot as concrete or stone in direct summer sun); you want a multi-level outdoor space; you have great mature trees and want to wrap a structure around them.

When to choose a patio

The single best reason to choose a patio is lifespan with minimum maintenance. A properly built interlocking patio looks the same on day 9,000 as it did on day 1, with one re-sand of the polymeric joint sand every five to seven years. A wood deck needs annual or biennial staining and will need replacement boards in fifteen years. Composite decks are better but still cost 2 to 3x what a patio costs per square metre installed.

Other good reasons: your back door is close to grade and the patio flows directly to the yard; you want to integrate with retaining walls or garden beds (much easier with hardscape); you want maximum durability under outdoor furniture, BBQs and foot traffic; you want the lowest-fuss option long-term.

The hybrid: deck plus patio

Most Ontario yards we work with end up with both. A small deck at the back door for immediate access (especially if there is grade), stepping down to a larger patio that becomes the main entertaining space. This combination plays to both surfaces’ strengths and is the most common configuration in mid-sized Hamilton, Burlington and Oakville backyards.

Frequently asked questions

Is a deck or a patio cheaper to install?

A patio is usually cheaper per square metre ($110-$220 for mid-grade interlocking vs $350-$600 for composite decking). But on a high-grade lot, a patio at the same level as the back door requires retaining walls and fill that can cost more than a simple deck. The grade decides the cost more than the surface choice.

Does a deck or a patio add more home value in Ontario?

Both add value; pavers typically score slightly higher on resale because of the perceived premium feel and lower maintenance. But a well-built deck on the right lot can outperform an over-built patio. Fit-to-lot matters more than surface type.

How long does a composite deck last vs a paver patio?

Composite decks: 20 to 30 years. Wood decks: 12 to 18 years. Paver patios: 25 to 30+ years. Patios edge out decks on raw lifespan, but the gap is smaller than people think with modern composite decking.

Can I build a deck and a patio on the same yard?

Yes, very common. A deck off the back door, stepping down to a patio, with a railing or planter between them is one of the most popular configurations in our market. Both surfaces can do what they each do best.

Which is more eco-friendly?

Paver patio, generally. Concrete and stone last longer with less maintenance, and at end-of-life the pavers can be re-used. Composite decking is plastic-based but lasts longer than wood. Wood decks use renewable material but need stain/sealer and shorter life.

Sources and further reading

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