How to Design a Deck (Step by Step)

Designing a deck means more than an outline: you set the height, the framing, and the footings, then verify the material list — because free deck tools usually under-count.

01

Measure and set the height

Measure the space and the height of the door threshold off the ground; your deck surface sits about an inch below it. Draw the deck outline to scale against the house.

02

Frame it: joists, beams, footings

Set joist spacing (16 inches on-center is typical), beam sizes, and footing locations. Good tools let you adjust these; if yours can’t change framing sizes, treat the plan as conceptual and confirm spans with local code or the ICC DCA 6 deck guide.

03

Pick a railing and check code

Most decks over 30 inches need a guardrail, commonly 36 inches tall, and any raised or attached deck usually needs a permit. The software flags standards but can’t know your local rules — confirm with your building department.

04

Verify the material list

Export the plan and material list, then re-check the lumber yourself. Free brand tools (Trex, TimberTech, Lowe’s) commonly skip waste, blocking, hangers, and stair framing — add 10 to 15 percent before you buy.

Questions, answered

Do I need a permit to build a deck?

Usually yes for any raised or attached deck. Requirements vary by locality, so confirm with your building department before you build — design software can’t determine local code for you.

Part of the WebHomeTools guides. See all guides.