Key Takeaways:
- Cottage decks need low-maintenance materials — you're not there every week to stain and repair
- Composite and PVC are the top choices for seasonal properties
- Pressure-treated wood is affordable but deteriorates faster without regular maintenance
- Wildlife damage (porcupines, raccoons) is a real concern — deck skirting is essential
- Building permits may differ in unorganized townships — check with your local municipality
The Cottage Deck Challenge
Building a deck at a cottage or vacation property in Canada is fundamentally different from building one at your primary residence. The deck sits unattended for weeks or months at a time, exposed to weather extremes without the regular maintenance that keeps residential decks looking good.
Ontario's cottage country alone has over 250,000 seasonal properties around Muskoka, Kawartha Lakes, and Georgian Bay. Quebec's Laurentians, BC's Okanagan, and the Maritimes add hundreds of thousands more. Every one of these properties benefits from a well-built deck — but the material choice matters more here than anywhere.
Why Low-Maintenance Matters More at the Cottage
At your primary residence, you notice when a board starts to warp or a stain starts to peel. At the cottage, damage accumulates silently between visits:
- Moisture sits longer — no one sweeps off puddles or clears snow mid-winter
- UV exposure is uninterrupted — no shade from activity, patio umbrellas, or regular staining
- Wildlife is more aggressive — porcupines chew PT wood for the salt in the treatment chemicals
- Freeze-thaw cycles hit harder — snow sits on the deck surface for months
This is why composite or PVC decking is the recommended choice for cottage properties, despite the higher upfront cost. The lifetime maintenance savings more than offset the initial premium.
Dock Decking
Many cottage properties include a dock or waterfront platform. Dock decking requirements differ from standard deck construction:
- Marine-grade fasteners required — 316 stainless steel minimum
- PVC decking excels — completely immune to water
- Cedar is traditional for docks — naturally water-resistant, lightweight
- Pressure-treated rated UC4B (below ground/water contact) for submerged portions
- Aluminum for permanent dock surfaces — no maintenance, fireproof
Building Permits in Cottage Country
Permit requirements vary significantly in rural areas:
- Organized municipalities (Huntsville, Bracebridge, Gravenhurst) require permits for decks >24" above grade
- Unorganized townships may not have building departments — check with your district
- Waterfront setbacks typically require structures to be 15–30m from the high-water mark
- Conservation authority approval may be needed near lakes and rivers
- Septic system proximity — decks must be minimum distance from septic bed
Cost Considerations
Cottage deck projects often cost 10–20% more than equivalent urban projects due to:
- Delivery surcharges for remote locations
- Limited contractor availability
- Difficult site access (steep lots, island properties)
- Foundation challenges (Canadian Shield rock, sandy soil near lakefronts)
Budget accordingly: a 200 sq ft cottage deck in Muskoka costs approximately $8,000–$18,000 in composite, or $4,000–$8,000 in pressure-treated.
