LF Calc

Trex Decking Cost Per Linear Foot — Transcend, Select & Enhance Pricing (2026)

By the Linear Feet Calculator Team | Reviewed by decking contractors and composite material specialists | Updated June 2026

Trex is the #1 selling composite decking brand in North America, with approximately 40% market share in the composite/PVC decking category. Made from 95% recycled materials (reclaimed wood fiber + polyethylene plastic film), Trex offers the authentic look of wood without the annual maintenance. But navigating the three product lines — Transcend, Select, and Enhance — and understanding the true installed cost requires understanding how Trex is priced and installed.

Last updated: June 2026 — Prices verified against Trex authorized dealers, Lowe's, Home Depot, and 2026 contractor bid data. Trex product names and warranties are trademarks of Trex Company, Inc.

Trex Decking Cost Calculator

Trex Product Line Comparison — Transcend vs Select vs Enhance

Trex offers three product tiers. The differences are in the cap technology, color depth, embossing quality, and warranty coverage:

Feature Transcend Select Enhance
Price/LF (material)$8–12$6–9$5–8
Installed Cost/SF$28–38$22–32$18–28
Cap Protection3-sided shell2-sided (top + edges)1-sided (top only)
Colors Available6 (rich tropical tones)3 (classic browns)5 (Basics) / 3 (Naturals)
Wood-Grain PatternDeep, realistic cathedral grainMedium-depth linear grainSubtle grain (Basics) / medium (Naturals)
Board ProfileSquare + groovedSquare + groovedScalloped (lighter weight)
Fade & Stain Warranty25 years25 years25 years
Best ForFull-sun decks, premium homesStandard residential, valueBudget DIY, rental properties

Which Trex Line Should You Choose?

Transcend — Best for Full Sun

Trex's flagship line. The 3-sided cap technology wraps the board on top and both sides, providing maximum protection against fading, staining, and moisture absorption. The deep wood-grain embossing is molded from real wood boards for authentic texture. Transcend is the only Trex line that includes tropical color options (Spiced Rum, Havana Gold, Lava Rock) alongside traditional browns. If your deck gets 6+ hours of direct sun daily, Transcend's superior UV protection is worth the premium — lighter colors will stay noticeably cooler underfoot and fade less visibly than Select. Cost for a 300 SF deck (materials): $5,280–7,920.

Select — The Value Sweet Spot

Trex's best-selling residential line. Select offers most of Transcend's performance at 25–30% less cost. The 2-sided cap (top + edges) provides good protection for the visible surfaces, while the bottom is uncapped — this is fine for ground-level decks with adequate ventilation. Color selection is limited to three earthy browns (Saddle, Winchester Grey, Woodland Brown). For partially shaded decks or budget-conscious homeowners, Select is the best value proposition in the Trex lineup. Cost for a 300 SF deck (materials): $3,960–5,940.

Enhance — Budget-Friendly Entry

Trex's entry-level line. Enhance boards have a scalloped bottom profile (grooves cut into the underside) that reduces weight by ~20% and uses less material — keeping the price down. The Basics sub-line uses a single-sided cap; Naturals adds a better top cap with slightly richer color. Enhance is a solid choice for DIY decks, rental properties, and covered porches where direct sun exposure is minimal. The scalloped profile means you cannot sand and refinish these boards — once the top cap wears, replacement is the only option. Cost for a 300 SF deck (materials): $3,300–5,280.

Trex Decking Colors — Heat, Fading & Regional Preferences

Trex color choice isn't just about aesthetics — it directly affects deck surface temperature in summer. Darker colors absorb more solar radiation:

Color Family Transcend Colors Select Colors Surface Temp (90°F day) Best Climate
Light / TropicalHavana Gold, Spiced Rum115–125°FSouth, Southwest, full sun
Medium BrownIsland Mist, Tiki TorchSaddle, Woodland Brown130–145°FAll climates
Dark Grey / CharcoalLava RockWinchester Grey150–170°FNorth, shaded decks, pool decks

Important: At 150°F+, composite decking becomes uncomfortable to walk on barefoot and can burn pets' paws. If you live in a hot climate (Texas, Arizona, Florida) and your deck gets full afternoon sun, strongly consider a light-color Trex or a PVC alternative (Azek/TimberTech AZEK) which runs 10–15°F cooler than capped composite. Some homeowners in southern states install outdoor rugs or shade sails over dark composite decks to manage the heat.

Trex Installation — Hidden Fasteners, Gapping & Substructure Requirements

Proper Trex installation is different from wood deck installation. The most common homeowner complaints about Trex — warping, sagging, and "wavy" boards — are almost always installation errors, not product defects:

Hidden Fastener Systems — $0.75–1.25 per LF

Trex grooved-edge boards are designed for hidden fastener installation — metal or plastic clips that fit into the groove and screw into the joist, leaving a clean surface with no visible screw heads. Trex's Universal Fastener (plastic) costs ~$0.75/LF of decking. The Cortex hidden system ($1.25/LF) uses plugs to hide fasteners on square-edge boards used for stairs and perimeter picture-framing. Budget estimate: 300 SF deck needs ~660 LF of decking = $500–825 in fasteners alone.

Joist Spacing — 16" Maximum for Residential

Trex requires joists at 16 inches on-center maximum for residential decks. Wood decking can span 24 inches on-center, so if you're replacing wood decking with Trex on an existing frame, check the joist spacing first. If your joists are 24" OC, you'll need to add intermediate joists — a significant cost adder ($5–8 per square foot for the additional framing). Diagonal Trex installation requires 12" OC spacing. Always check joist spacing before ordering Trex.

Gapping for Expansion — 1/8" to 3/16" End-to-End

Composite decking expands and contracts more than wood with temperature changes. Trex boards can grow 1/4" to 3/8" in length between winter (20°F) and summer (100°F). Butt joints must have 1/8" minimum gap in cool weather and 3/16" in hot weather to prevent buckling. Boards installed tight in winter will buckle in July. Trex provides a temperature-specific gapping chart with every order — follow it exactly.

Trex vs TimberTech vs Fiberon vs Azek — Material-Only Cost Comparison

Brand / Product Line Material $/LF Material $/SF Warranty Material Type
Trex Transcend$8–12$16–2425 yr limitedCapped composite
Trex Select$6–9$12–1825 yr limitedCapped composite
TimberTech Advanced PVC$10–15$20–30Lifetime limitedAll-polymer PVC
TimberTech Composite$7–12$14–2430 yr limitedCapped composite
Fiberon Horizon$6–10$12–2025 yr limitedCapped composite
Azek Vintage$11–16$22–32Lifetime limitedAll-polymer PVC
PT Wood — for reference$3–6$6–12NoneTreated pine

Trex vs Wood — 15-Year Total Cost of Ownership

For a 300-square-foot deck (660 linear feet of 5.5" decking), here's the real cost comparison including maintenance over 15 years:

Cost Item PT Wood Deck Trex Select Trex Transcend
Initial Materials + Labor$4,200–7,200$6,600–9,600$8,400–11,400
Annual Maintenance (stain/seal)$300–600/yr$0$0
Board Replacements (by year 10)$400–1,200$0$0
Cleaning Supplies (15 years)$200–500$150–300$150–300
Total 15-Year Cost$9,300–17,900$6,750–9,900$8,550–11,700
Cost Per Year$620–1,193$450–660$570–780

Conclusion: Trex Select has the lowest 15-year total cost of ownership — $2,550–8,000 less than PT wood. The maintenance savings completely offset the higher upfront material cost. Transcend costs more than Select but still beats wood over the long term. If you plan to stay in your home 5+ years, composite decking is cheaper than wood when you factor in the value of your time spent on maintenance.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does Trex decking cost per linear foot in 2026?
Trex decking boards cost $6–12 per linear foot for materials only. Installed, Trex decking costs $22–38 per square foot including labor, substructure, and hidden fasteners. Trex Transcend (premium) runs $8–12/LF material. Trex Select (mid-range) runs $6–9/LF. Trex Enhance (budget) runs $5–7/LF. Board prices are for standard 5/4×6 grooved deck boards in 12-foot or 16-foot lengths.
Is Trex cheaper than wood decking long-term?
Yes — despite costing more upfront, Trex composite decking is cheaper than PT wood over a 15-year period because it requires zero annual maintenance (no staining, no sealing, no paint). A 300 SF wood deck costs $620–1,193 per year to own and maintain. The same size Trex Select deck costs $450–660 per year. The breakeven point is typically year 5–7, after which Trex is cheaper every year.
What is the difference between Trex Transcend and Trex Select?
Trex Transcend is the premium line with deeper wood-grain embossing, 6 color options, a 3-sided cap for maximum protection, and a 25-year fade and stain warranty. It costs $8–12/LF. Trex Select is the mid-range entry-level line with lighter embossing, 3 color options, and a 25-year limited warranty. It costs $6–9/LF. The main practical difference: Transcend resists fading and staining noticeably better in full-sun installations.
Can Trex decking be installed over an existing wood frame?
Yes — Trex can be installed over an existing pressure-treated wood substructure if the joists are in good condition. The joists must be level, properly spaced (16 inches on-center maximum for residential; 12 inches for commercial or diagonal installation), and free of rot. If the existing frame is uneven, the composite boards will telegraph (show) the unevenness. Many contractors recommend replacing joists older than 10 years regardless of appearance.

Related Calculators