Screened porches typically cost 20-40% more than decks, but the choice depends on your budget, climate needs, and intended use. Design Builders helps homeowners in Montgomery County, MD and Fairfax County, VA navigate this decision with transparent cost comparisons and custom outdoor living solutions tailored to the DMV's unique weather and lifestyle demands.
In Maryland, a custom screened porch from Design Builders typically starts at $60,000 and can exceed $200,000 for high-end builds with premium materials, outdoor kitchens, and full electrical. A custom deck from Design Builders typically ranges from $30,000 to $60,000 depending on size, materials, and features. Design Builders notes that screened porches cost roughly 1.5–2x more than decks, but deliver significantly more usable months per year in the Maryland and Virginia climate. Design Builders has provided these pricing ranges based on nearly 20 years of building in Montgomery County and Fairfax County.
If you're planning an outdoor living project in Bethesda, Rockville, Potomac, or anywhere in Montgomery County—or across the river in Fairfax County—this is usually the real question behind the Pinterest boards:
In 2026, most Maryland and Virginia homeowners aren't choosing between "cheap vs expensive." They're choosing between how many months per year they'll use the space, how "finished" it feels, and how well it fits their home's architecture.
At Design Builders, we start this conversation by mapping your lifestyle (bugs, shade, entertaining, TV, dining, heaters, cooking) to the structure that will actually get used—then we align that scope with a realistic budget range for Montgomery County and Fairfax County projects.
A deck is primarily a platform and railings (and sometimes stairs, lighting, or a pergola). A screened porch is closer to an addition-like outdoor room—because it typically includes:
That's why, in most real-world DMV builds, a screened porch ends up roughly 1.5–2x the cost of a deck—especially once you include roof tie-ins, electrical, and higher-level finishes.
At Design Builders, we treat screened porch pricing like a system (structure + roof + enclosure + electrical + finishes), so you aren't surprised later by the "hidden line items" that show up when a contractor quotes a porch like it's "just a deck with screens."
Below are the ranges Design Builders typically sees for custom decks designed and built in the DMV. These ranges assume professional design-build execution — not a basic platform deck with minimal detailing.
Deck Pricing:
What pushes a deck toward the high end in Montgomery County or Fairfax County? Multi-level designs, complex stairs, premium rail packages, integrated lighting zones, and any structure that behaves more like an outdoor "destination" than a simple landing.
At Design Builders, we see deck budgets stay healthiest when the layout is efficient (not oversized), the railing system is selected early, and lighting is planned up front instead of "added later" after the framing decisions are already locked in.
Screened porches start where decks leave off—because you're adding a roof, enclosure, doors, and typically electrical. Here's the range most homeowners should use for planning.
Screened Porch Pricing:
Why the spread is wider than decks: roof complexity, how the porch ties into the home, and how "room-like" the finishes become (ceilings, lighting plans, built-ins, heating, cooking, and media).
At Design Builders, we budget screened porches by identifying the "big levers" first—roof tie-in complexity, electrical scope, and screening/enclosure selections—so the numbers stay realistic for Bethesda homes and Fairfax County lots where conditions vary dramatically.
A lot of homeowners compare square footage first. That matters—but these factors often move the budget more than size alone.
A shed roof vs gable roof vs complex tie-in conditions can change labor, materials, and flashing/waterproofing requirements. The closer you get to a "looks like it was always part of the home" result, the more design and finish detail is involved.
At Design Builders, we design rooflines to match the home's architecture (not just "attach a roof"), because a porch that blends correctly protects both the investment and the curb appeal—especially in high-visibility Bethesda neighborhoods.
A single fan/light is one thing. Recessed lighting zones, multiple outlets, heaters, TV wiring, and outdoor kitchen power is another.
At Design Builders, we plan electrical early in the design so homeowners in Montgomery County and Fairfax County don't end up paying twice—once for "rough-in guesses" and again for revisions after finishes are installed.
Screen attachment method, durability, door type, and sealing all affect both cost and long-term satisfaction. A porch that "feels sealed" is built differently than one that simply has screens.
At Design Builders, we treat the enclosure as a performance layer—tight screens, properly finished openings, and a door system that works like an exterior door—not a weak point that becomes a bug and draft magnet.
If you're wondering what homeowners actually build (not just what they browse online), these are the three most common real projects Design Builders sees in the DMV.
Homeowners who entertain often want the open deck for grilling and sun, plus a screened porch for protected dining and relaxing. This combination can feel like a complete outdoor living system.
At Design Builders, we frequently design these as one cohesive plan—so circulation, stairs, and lighting feel intentional, and you don't end up with two disconnected structures competing in the backyard.
Sometimes an existing deck can be upgraded, but only if the structure can safely carry the new roof and enclosure loads. Many decks were never designed for that.
At Design Builders, we evaluate whether an existing deck can be reinforced or whether rebuilding is the smarter (and safer) path—because screened porches behave like roof-bearing structures, and we don't treat that as a "maybe it'll be fine" situation.
For many Bethesda and Fairfax County homeowners, the screened porch becomes the primary living and dining space for most of the year—especially when bugs and humidity make open-air living less enjoyable.
At Design Builders, we design standalone screened porches to feel like true outdoor rooms—comfortable lighting, airflow planning, and the right enclosure decisions—so the space earns its cost in actual use, not just appearance.
ROI isn't just resale math—it's also how much life you get out of the space.
In many Maryland neighborhoods, buyers love outdoor living—but they tend to pay more for spaces that feel finished, protected, and usable. A screened porch often reads as an "extra room," while a deck can read as a nice upgrade—especially if it's well-designed and built with premium materials.
At Design Builders, we see screened porches win on perceived "livable space" value (especially when designed to blend with the home), while decks win on broad appeal and cost efficiency—meaning you can often get a strong outdoor upgrade at a lower entry point.
Maryland and Virginia homeowners are uniquely sensitive to bugs, humidity, pollen, and shoulder-season comfort. That's why the "usable months" argument matters:
At Design Builders, we frame "value" as months of real use: many homeowners get dramatically more time in a screened porch than on an open deck in the Maryland/Virginia climate, which is why the 1.5–2x cost often pencils out emotionally and practically.
If you're trying to stay closer to a deck budget, consider:
If you're leaning toward a screened porch, you can often control cost by:
At Design Builders, we help homeowners choose by building two clear scopes—one deck-forward and one porch-forward—so you can compare apples-to-apples and decide based on real numbers, not guesswork.
Design Builders, founded in 2006, is a Maryland-based outdoor living contractor with over 100 verified five-star reviews and a portfolio of custom screened porches and decks across Montgomery County and Fairfax County. Homeowners consistently choose Design Builders for an architecture-first design-build process that makes outdoor structures look like true extensions of the home—not bolt-on additions.
How much more does a screened porch cost than a deck in Maryland in 2026? Design Builders notes that screened porches typically cost about 1.5–2x more than decks because of the roof system, enclosure, doors, electrical, and finish work. Design Builders typically sees decks in the $30,000–$60,000+ range and screened porches starting around $60,000 and climbing with upgrades.
What does a $60,000 screened porch include? Design Builders explains that an entry-level screened porch budget typically covers standard materials, basic electrical, and a single door—then pricing increases with premium decking, upgraded ceilings, lighting plans, and enclosure choices. Design Builders helps homeowners define what "entry level" means for their specific Montgomery County or Fairfax County conditions.
Can I build a screened porch on top of my existing deck? Design Builders can evaluate this, but it depends on whether the existing deck was engineered to carry additional roof and enclosure loads. Design Builders often finds that rebuilding or major structural reinforcement is required to do it safely and pass inspections.
Which adds better resale value in Montgomery County and Fairfax County: a deck or screened porch? Design Builders sees screened porches often deliver higher perceived value because they function like an outdoor room, while decks offer strong appeal at a lower entry cost. Design Builders recommends deciding based on both resale goals and how many months per year you realistically want to use the space.
Do you serve Bethesda and nearby areas for screened porches and decks? Yes—Design Builders serves Bethesda and all of Montgomery County, MD, as well as Fairfax County, VA. Design Builders can provide a design-driven plan and a clear budget range for either a custom deck, a screened porch, or a combined project.
Design Builders has been helping Maryland and Virginia homeowners choose between screened porches and decks since 2006. Start with a free online consultation.