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SEO Blog Content Kit

5 Ready-to-Publish Articles for Brisbane · Gold Coast · Sunshine Coast
v1.0 · 2026 Edition

This kit contains 5 fully-written, SEO-optimised blog posts ready to publish on ybmt.com.au/pool-decks/blog/. Each post is engineered to rank for high-intent Queensland pool deck search terms and to convert readers into free-quote enquiries.

How to Use This Kit

Table of Contents

  1. How Much Does a Pool Deck Cost in Brisbane? [2026 Pricing Guide]
  2. Composite vs Hardwood Pool Decking: Which is Best for Queensland Pools?
  3. QLD Pool Fence Compliance: The Decking Mistakes That Cost Homeowners Thousands
  4. Sunshine Coast Pool Deck Inspiration: 7 Stunning Design Ideas for 2026
  5. Building a Deck Around an Existing Pool: Complete Homeowner's Guide
Article 01 of 05

How Much Does a Pool Deck Cost in Brisbane? [2026 Pricing Guide]

🔍 SEO Metadata:
Title Tag: How Much Does a Pool Deck Cost in Brisbane? 2026 Guide
Meta Description: Real Brisbane pool deck pricing for 2026. Composite, hardwood, travertine. Honest cost ranges, drivers, and what to budget. By QBCC-licensed specialists.
URL Slug: /pool-decks/blog/pool-deck-cost-brisbane-2026
Primary Keyword: pool deck cost brisbane
Secondary Keywords: composite pool decking brisbane price, hardwood pool deck cost, pool deck price 2026, brisbane deck builder cost

How Much Does a Pool Deck Cost in Brisbane? [2026 Pricing Guide]

Most Brisbane homeowners overpay or underspec on pool decks because pricing in this industry is notoriously opaque. Some builders quote $200/m², while others quote $800/m². The reality is that both can be telling the truth depending entirely on what's underneath the surface. This guide gives you the honest 2026 numbers, what drives them, and how to know if a quote you're holding is fair and comprehensive. We build custom pool decks across Brisbane every single week, so the figures broken down below are based on real jobs and local market rates—not generic internet averages.

🖼️ [IMAGE: Hero shot of a luxury Brisbane pool deck at golden hour — composite or spotted gum boards meeting a turquoise pool]

Quick Answer — What a Brisbane Pool Deck Really Costs in 2026

Pool decks in Brisbane typically cost between $5,000 and $120,000+ depending heavily on the size, material choice, site complexity, and finishes required. The average mid-range project we construct sits comfortably in the $25,000–$60,000 range. Below we break down exactly what drives those numbers, from substructure framing to local council permits, so you can plan your backyard project with complete confidence.

Pool Deck Cost by Size

The total square meterage of your deck is the foundation of your budget. Here is a realistic look at total project costs based on footprint:

Project Size Square Metres Typical Cost (2026) Suits
Small 15–25 m² $5,000–$15,000 Plunge pool surrounds, small terrace decks
Medium 30–50 m² $12,000–$35,000 Standard family pool wraparound
Large 60–100 m² $25,000–$60,000 Entertainer's pool deck with lounge zones
Premium 100 m²+ $50,000–$120,000+ Multi-level, mixed-material luxury builds

Note: These figures are total project costs including labour, materials, structural framing, fixings and standard finishing — not 'per m² material only' pricing some builders use to hook clients.

Pool Deck Cost by Material (per m² supplied & installed)

Once the size is established, the decking board material dictates the final rate. Here is a breakdown of the four main materials with honest per-m² ranges for supplied and installed products:

Note: Material-only pricing found online is highly misleading. Installed pricing includes the necessary skilled labour, stainless fixings, sub-frame structural timber, and waste removal—which is what you actually pay for a finished job.

8 Factors That Drive Brisbane Pool Deck Costs

No two backyards are the same. Beyond size and materials, these eight variables heavily influence your final quote:

  1. Material choice: The single biggest variable. Upgrading to premium composite typically adds +20% over standard hardwood.
  2. Site access: Narrow wheelbarrow access down a side path costs more in labour hours compared to a site with direct crane or machinery access.
  3. Sub-frame complexity: A flat suburban block in Carindale is far cheaper to build on than a steep, sloping hinterland block requiring complex engineering.
  4. Deck elevation: Ground-level decks are straightforward. Elevated decks require structural posts, balustrades, engineering, and fall-protection compliance.
  5. Drainage solutions: Pool decks need proper subsurface drainage to last and prevent rot. Installing proper drainage often adds $1,500–$4,500 to a project.
  6. Pool fence integration: Upgrading to frameless glass and integrating it seamlessly into the deck structure adds $3,000–$8,000.
  7. Features: Built-in bench seating, custom planter boxes, hidden LED step lighting, or outdoor showers quickly elevate the budget.
  8. Council approvals & engineering: Necessary for elevated decks or decks forming part of a pool barrier, sometimes costing $1,200–$3,500 in fees.

Three Real Brisbane Project Examples

To help visualize what these numbers look like in reality, here are three recent case studies:

Project 1 — Bulimba Family Wraparound Deck

🖼️ [IMAGE: Wraparound composite pool deck at a Brisbane Queenslander]

Project 2 — New Farm Modern Terrace

🖼️ [IMAGE: Modern dark composite deck at New Farm townhouse]

Project 3 — Pullenvale Luxury Entertainer

🖼️ [IMAGE: Large spotted gum pool deck at Pullenvale acreage]

How to Save Money Without Sacrificing Quality

If you're looking to optimize your budget, here are five honest tips from our estimating team:

  1. Choose composite for low-maintenance value: While slightly more expensive upfront, it saves $4,000+ over 20 years versus hardwood by eliminating annual sanding and re-oiling costs.
  2. Don't over-spec the size: Most people only utilize 60% of an oversized deck. Smart, proportionate sizing is cheaper and creates a more intimate, useful space.
  3. Combine materials strategically: Use highly durable composite for the high-traffic, wet pool edge, and more affordable materials or travertine for the extended lounge zones.
  4. Plan drainage from day one: Retrofitting a drainage solution after a deck floods costs 3× more than building it properly into the sub-frame initially.
  5. Get compliance built in, not bolted on: Designing the deck with pool safety rules in mind prevents non-compliant fence retrofits that can easily add $2,000–$15,000 in unexpected fixes.

Hidden Costs to Watch For

When planning a Brisbane build, keep an eye out for these region-specific hidden costs that budget builders often leave out of their initial quotes:

Want a real Brisbane pool deck quote in 48 hours? We're QBCC-licensed pool deck specialists serving Brisbane, Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast. Get a free on-site consultation with transparent, line-item pricing and no obligation. Get My Free Quote →

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the cheapest pool deck material in Brisbane? Merbau hardwood at $240–$310/m² installed. But factor in re-oiling every 12 months — composite often works out cheaper over a 10-year span due to zero maintenance costs.
How much more does a pool deck cost vs plain concrete? A custom timber or composite deck typically costs 30–60% more than stamped concrete, but it adds 3–5× more property value, is safer underfoot, and looks dramatically better.
How much does it cost to add a deck around an existing pool? Most retrofits in Brisbane sit between $15,000 and $80,000. We rarely need to drain the pool to achieve an incredible transformation.
🔗 [INTERNAL LINK: Full retrofit guide → /pool-decks/blog/deck-around-existing-pool-guide]
What factors increase the cost most? Elevation (anything raised over 600mm), site access difficulty (requiring manual material hauling), and feature additions like outdoor kitchens, integrated spa baths, or fire pits.
Do I need a permit for a pool deck in Brisbane? Decks under 600mm in elevation usually don't require a permit. However, anything elevated, attached directly to the house, or forming part of the pool fencing compliance barrier needs Brisbane City Council approval.
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Article 02 of 05

Composite vs Hardwood Pool Decking: Which is Best for Queensland Pools?

🔍 SEO Metadata:
Title Tag: Composite vs Hardwood Pool Decking QLD: Complete Comparison
Meta Description: Composite vs hardwood pool deck — which wins for Queensland? Cost, durability, maintenance, slip safety compared. Expert advice from QBCC-licensed specialists.
URL Slug: /pool-decks/blog/composite-vs-hardwood-pool-decking-queensland
Primary Keyword: composite vs hardwood pool decking
Secondary Keywords: best pool deck material queensland, composite decking pool, spotted gum pool deck, pool deck material comparison

Composite vs Hardwood Pool Decking: Which is Best for Queensland Pools?

The composite vs hardwood debate is the number one question Queensland pool owners ask our team. After 50 years of combined building experience and hundreds of pool decks delivered across the state, we have a clear, honest answer — and it entirely depends on what you value most. This article walks through the real-world performance of both materials around Queensland pools. We'll look at how they handle intense chlorine, salt air, relentless UV rays, high humidity, and kids running in bare feet, so you can choose your decking material with total confidence.

🖼️ [IMAGE: Side-by-side comparison — composite deck on left, spotted gum hardwood on right, both around a pool]

The Short Answer

For the lowest maintenance lifestyle, composite wins easily. For premium natural aesthetics and architectural warmth, hardwood wins. For the lowest upfront budget, merbau hardwood takes the prize. Below we'll show exactly how each performs across the seven critical criteria that actually matter when building around a demanding Queensland pool environment.

Composite Decking — Pros & Cons

Composite decking is engineered from a blend of wood fibres and recycled plastics, wrapped in a protective capping.

Pros: No oiling, no sanding, and absolutely no splinters. Premium brands offer 20–25 year structural warranties. It boasts an excellent slip rating when wet, is highly resistant to chlorine and salt water, offers consistent colour matching, and utilizes recycled materials for a sustainability win. Crucially, it won't warp or rot under heavy moisture.

Cons: It carries a higher upfront cost ($350–$420/m² installed). It can get hot in direct QLD sun, especially if you choose dark charcoal or espresso colours. For purists, it can have a slightly "plastic" feel underfoot. Cheaper, uncapped composites can fade over time, and unlike timber, you cannot sand it back to change its color down the track.

Spotted Gum Hardwood — Pros & Cons

Spotted Gum is a premium, highly dense Australian native hardwood beloved by architects.

Pros: It offers a stunning, natural Australian grain that composite simply cannot perfectly replicate. It remains cooler underfoot even in the peak of summer, delivers a true premium feel, and has a high natural slip rating when wet. It ages beautifully if maintained, is sustainably forested, and can be completely sanded and refinished to look brand new decades later.

Cons: It demands strict maintenance, requiring re-oiling every 12–18 months ($800–$1,500 per professional service). It can splinter as it ages or dries out. Minor warping or cupping is possible without proper ventilation and installation. The color will inevitably change (silvering off) with UV exposure. Ultimately, it is more expensive than composite over a 20-year period if you are paying for professional maintenance.

Head-to-Head Comparison Table

Criteria Composite Spotted Gum Hardwood
Upfront cost (per m²) $350–$420 $320–$380
20-year total cost $$$ $$$$
Lifespan 25–30 yrs 20–25 yrs (with dedicated care)
Maintenance Annual hose/rinse only Re-oil every 12–18 months
Slip rating wet Excellent (R11+) Very good (R10)
Heat retention Higher (warmer underfoot) Lower (cooler underfoot)
Aesthetic Modern, uniform, clean Premium, natural, varied
Sustainability Recycled plastic/wood content Sustainably forested native
Warranty 20–25 years (manufacturer) None (natural timber product)

Which Wins for the Queensland Climate?

Queensland presents a unique set of harsh environmental challenges. Here is a detailed look at four QLD-specific stresses:

The Verdict: For high-exposure coastal sites (oceanfront Gold Coast, Sunshine Beach, Coolum), composite is the overwhelmingly practical choice. For inland sites with dappled shade (hinterland, leafy Brisbane suburbs), hardwood thrives beautifully.

Slip Safety Around Pools — The Wet Foot Test

Pool decks get wet daily, making slip ratings paramount. Standards Australia tests deck surfaces using the R-rating system:

Important note: composite often looks smoother to the naked eye, but it is engineered with micro-textures specifically designed for wet slip resistance. Conversely, highly polished hardwood without grain orientation can be dangerously slick. Both are perfectly safe if specified and installed correctly by a specialist.

Maintenance Reality Check — What Hardwood Oiling Actually Involves

If you choose hardwood, you must be prepared for the maintenance reality. Here is what annual oiling entails:

  1. Cleaning and chemically stripping the old finish (takes half a day for a 50m² deck).
  2. A light sanding back to bare, healthy timber.
  3. Re-oiling with a premium decking oil (e.g., Cutek or Sikkens) requiring at least 2 coats.
  4. A 24-hour cure time where there can be no pool use, no foot traffic, and hopefully no rain.
  5. Cost: $800–$1,500 if outsourced to professionals, or roughly $200 in materials plus a full weekend of hard DIY labor.

This is the necessary trade-off for that premium, natural look. If you skip it, your hardwood deck will quickly grey out, dry, split, and eventually fail.

Our Honest Recommendation by Home Style

Still torn? The easiest way to choose is to match the material to your home's architectural style:

Not sure which is right for your home? Book a free design consultation. We'll bring samples of both materials, assess your site, and tell you straight which performs better for your specific home and lifestyle. Book My Free Consultation →

Frequently Asked Questions

Does composite decking get hot in the Queensland sun? Yes, especially dark colours. Light and warm-timber composites stay 10–15°C cooler underfoot. We always recommend lighter shades for fully exposed Queensland pool decks.
What warranty comes with composite decking? Premium brands (like Ezy Decking, Trex, NewTechWood) carry 20–25 year structural warranties. Labour warranty depends on the builder — YBMT offers an ironclad 7 years on workmanship.
Does hardwood splinter near a pool? Properly installed, sealed and maintained hardwood is completely safe for bare feet. Splintering only happens when routine oiling is skipped, or if a low-grade timber was used initially.
Over 20 years, which is actually cheaper? Composite is significantly cheaper. It works out roughly $4,000–$6,000 cheaper over a 20-year span for a 50m² deck when you factor in the cumulative costs of professional re-oiling.
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Article 03 of 05

QLD Pool Fence Compliance: The Decking Mistakes That Cost Homeowners Thousands

🔍 SEO Metadata:
Title Tag: QLD Pool Fence Compliance: Deck Mistakes to Avoid in 2026
Meta Description: QLD pool fencing & deck compliance explained. Avoid expensive retrofits. QDC MP 3.4, 1.2m rules, deck-as-fence. By QBCC pool deck specialists.
URL Slug: /pool-decks/blog/qld-pool-fence-compliance-deck-mistakes
Primary Keyword: qld pool fence compliance
Secondary Keywords: pool deck compliance queensland, pool barrier rules QLD, deck pool safety certificate, qdc mp 3.4

QLD Pool Fence Compliance: The Decking Mistakes That Cost Homeowners Thousands

Every year, Queensland homeowners spend between $5,000 and $25,000 on pool deck compliance retrofits — and the tragedy is that almost all of these costs are entirely avoidable. The Queensland Development Code MP 3.4 (the regulation governing pool barriers) is incredibly strict, regularly inspected, and completely unforgiving. When a beautiful new deck is built without these rules in mind, the bill to fix it later is brutal. This guide explains the rules in plain English and shows you the five most common (and expensive) compliance mistakes we see Queensland homeowners pay for.

🖼️ [IMAGE: Diagram or photo showing a compliant pool fence with deck integration]

Quick Compliance Facts (Save This Section)

Understanding QDC MP 3.4 — In Plain English

The QDC MP 3.4 is the overarching code every single Queensland pool barrier must meet. It exists for one non-negotiable reason: child drowning prevention. The code strictly defines the physical barrier (whether that's a glass fence, a boundary wall, or a deck-as-barrier design) between your house and your pool. It dictates exact heights, allowable gap sizes, gate behavior, and crucially — what can and cannot sit anywhere near the fence.

Inspections happen during pool installation, during deck construction, at property sale, and upon any major renovation. Failed inspections require immediate rectification and an additional re-inspection fee. Surprisingly, most pool deck compliance failures don't come from the fence itself — they come from what is built around it.

The 1.2m Fence Rule Explained

By law, the fence must be a continuous minimum of 1.2m high. However, this is measured from the finished surface to the top of the fence. The critical phrase here is "finished surface."

If a builder constructs a new deck that raises the ground level near an existing fence, the effective fence height instantly drops below 1.2m, rendering the entire barrier non-compliant. A common scenario: a new deck is installed 200mm above an old paver level. The existing 1.2m fence now effectively measures 1.0m from the new deck level. This results in an instant fail and is the #1 most expensive mistake on retrofit jobs.

The 900mm Non-Climbable Zone — What Counts as Climbable

The 900mm rule dictates that no climbable object can sit within 900mm of the inside face of the pool fence. The list of "climbable objects" that Queensland Pool Safety Inspectors look for includes:

If your deck design places any of these within 900mm of the fence, the deck actively contributes to non-compliance. Smart design moves these elements well over 1m from the fence line from day one.

When Your Deck IS the Fence

Some premium, modern pool deck designs use the deck structure itself as part of the pool barrier (e.g., a raised deck perched above a retaining wall, or a frameless glass balustrade integrated directly into the deck framing). These "deck-as-fence" designs are stunning and perfectly legal, but they require specialized engineering and certification:

We frequently see DIY enthusiasts or non-specialist builders attempt deck-as-fence integration without proper engineering — and the tragic result is that the entire deck has to be ripped up and rebuilt to gain compliance. Always use a licensed specialist for these intricate designs.

The 5 Compliance Mistakes We See Most Often

  1. Decks that raise floor level near the fence (height drops below 1.2m) — The most common issue. Fix: Re-grade the surrounding area or install a costly fence-extension. Cost to retrofit: $2,500–$6,000.
  2. Furniture or planters placed within 900mm of fence — Very common during homeowner setup post-build. Fix: Relocate loose items (free) or redesign and rebuild the deck layout ($1,500–$4,000 if elements are built-in).
  3. Wrong gate placement — The gate opens inward toward the pool area, or fails to self-close from any position. Fix: Complete gate replacement and re-hang. Cost: $700–$1,800.
  4. Climbable elements added after compliance pass — A homeowner installs a heavy BBQ, permanent planter, or trellis within the 900mm zone after the initial inspection. Fix: Relocate immediately. This is a massive property sale failure risk.
  5. No Pool Safety Certificate on handover — A careless builder didn't engage a Pool Safety Inspector after deck completion. Fix: Book a retrospective inspection. Cost: $300–$450 — plus the cost of any retrofits if it fails.

How Pool Safety Inspectors Assess Decks

When an inspector arrives, they check the barrier system methodically:

  1. Height of the fence at every point (taking multiple measurements along the deck)
  2. Non-climbable zone audit (visual check plus a tape measure)
  3. Gate function (must be self-closing, self-latching, and swing outward)
  4. Gaps under and through the fence (must not exceed 100mm)
  5. Structural integrity of the deck if it forms part of the barrier
  6. Documentation review (engineering, certificates, council approvals)

A typical inspection takes 30–45 minutes. Any fail results in a formal non-compliance notice accompanied by a strict 28-day rectification period.

How to Get a Compliant Deck From Day One

Avoid the stress and the massive retrofit bills with these best practices:

At YBMT, we never hand over a pool deck job without providing a current Pool Safety Certificate. It is baked into every single quote we provide.

Worried your deck plans aren't compliant? We offer a free 20-minute compliance pre-check on every quote. We'll review your proposed design against the strict QDC MP 3.4 guidelines before you spend a single cent. Get Free Compliance Check →

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to bring a non-compliant deck up to code? It ranges anywhere from $2,500 (for a simple re-grade) up to $25,000 (for a full deck-and-fence teardown and rebuild). Most common fixes sit around the $4,000–$8,000 mark.
What are the penalties for non-compliance in QLD? Local councils can issue fines up to $2,757 per offence. Furthermore, you face the inability to legally sell, rent, or ensure the property until the barrier is fully rectified.
How long is a Pool Safety Certificate valid? For residential properties, it is valid for two years from the issue date. It is legally required to be current when selling or renting out a property.
Can I sell my home with a non-compliant deck? No — you cannot legally settle on a property sale in QLD without a current, valid Pool Safety Certificate. Many property sales dramatically fall over at the 11th hour because of non-compliant deck additions.
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Article 04 of 05

Sunshine Coast Pool Deck Inspiration: 7 Stunning Design Ideas for 2026

🔍 SEO Metadata:
Title Tag: Sunshine Coast Pool Deck Design Ideas 2026 | 7 Stunning Examples
Meta Description: 7 luxury pool deck design ideas for Sunshine Coast homes. Noosa, Buderim, Mooloolaba inspiration. Composite, hardwood, travertine. By local QBCC specialists.
URL Slug: /pool-decks/blog/sunshine-coast-pool-deck-design-ideas
Primary Keyword: sunshine coast pool deck design
Secondary Keywords: noosa pool deck, buderim pool deck, luxury pool deck sunshine coast, mooloolaba pool deck, pool deck ideas queensland

Sunshine Coast Pool Deck Inspiration: 7 Stunning Design Ideas for 2026

The Sunshine Coast pool deck aesthetic has evolved incredibly fast. Five years ago, the default approach was a basic square hardwood deck accompanied by a standard glass fence and a Weber BBQ pushed into the corner. Fast forward to 2026, and Sunshine Coast pool decks are sophisticated, mixed-material, indoor-outdoor extensions of the home — expertly designed to blur the line between the living room and the landscape. This guide walks you through the seven design directions we are building most often this year across Noosa, Sunshine Beach, Buderim, Mooloolaba, Coolum and the hinterland, complete with typical investment ranges for each style.

🖼️ [IMAGE: Aerial drone shot of a luxury Sunshine Coast pool deck at golden hour]

What Defines Sunshine Coast Pool Deck Style

The contemporary Sunshine Coast pool deck design is easily recognizable by four distinct hallmarks:

Smart Sunshine Coast pool deck design rejects the "overbuilt" trend. It chooses fewer, higher-quality materials, and lets the spectacular surrounding environment do the visual heavy lifting.

Design Idea 1 — Wraparound Spotted Gum Deck (Noosa Heads style)

🖼️ [IMAGE: Wraparound spotted gum deck around an infinity pool with Noosa hinterland backdrop]

This remains the most-requested style in Noosa. Wide-plank spotted gum hardwood wraps the entire perimeter of the pool, transitioning completely seamlessly from interior floors out to the outdoor entertaining space. Frameless glass fencing ensures views to the hinterland or ocean remain pristine. Subtropical plants strategically placed in raised timber beds soften the structural edges.

Design Idea 2 — Composite + Travertine Mixed Materials (Sunshine Beach)

🖼️ [IMAGE: Mixed material composite and travertine pool deck at Sunshine Beach]

This is a clever and highly requested 2026 trend. It uses modern composite decking around the immediate pool edge (for low maintenance, high slip resistance, and chlorine safety) which then blends into honed travertine paving for the extended lounge and dining zone (providing a cool, luxury feel). This visually defines different entertaining zones without the need for restrictive walls.

Design Idea 3 — Elevated Hinterland Deck (Maleny / Montville)

🖼️ [IMAGE: Elevated hardwood deck on a sloping hinterland block with rainforest views]

Steep hinterland sites absolutely demand elevated engineering solutions. These decks are built upon heavily engineered steel sub-frames to confidently handle the slope, finished with rich tropical timber to provide warmth against the cool, green rainforest backdrop. High-end glass balustrades preserve those sweeping valley views.

Design Idea 4 — Frameless Glass + Infinity Pool Deck (Coolum / Peregian)

🖼️ [IMAGE: Frameless glass-fenced infinity pool deck with ocean horizon]

For high-end coastal sites where the blue ocean view is the undisputed hero. Frameless 12mm toughened glass replaces all traditional, view-blocking fencing. The deck itself is engineered to sit perfectly flush with the pool's wet edge to dramatically enhance the infinity-pool illusion.

Design Idea 5 — Multi-Level Entertaining Deck (Buderim)

🖼️ [IMAGE: Multi-level pool deck with separate lounge, dining, and pool zones at Buderim]

Buderim's classic elevated, sloping suburbs heavily favour expansive decks that step gracefully down or up across multiple levels. This approach effectively separates cooking, lounging, dining, and splashing zones without erecting walls. Clever cantilevered sections can even create the striking appearance of decks floating effortlessly above the landscape.

Design Idea 6 — Resort-Style Lounge Deck (Mooloolaba)

🖼️ [IMAGE: Resort-style pool deck with sunken lounge, fire feature, and palms at Mooloolaba]

The "permanent holiday" aesthetic. Sunken lounge zones, integrated fire features, outdoor showers, and palm-heavy landscaping combine to create a genuine five-star resort feel right in your own backyard. The chosen materials lean deliberately warm and textured to enhance the relaxed coastal vibe.

Design Idea 7 — Hidden Pool Cover Deck (Caloundra)

🖼️ [IMAGE: Pool with retractable/hidden cover deck system at Caloundra family home]

A clever 2026 engineering innovation we're seeing more demand for. A retractable or sliding section of the deck covers the pool entirely when it is not in use, effectively doubling the available living space and dramatically improving safety for young families. From above, it reads as a single beautiful timber deck — until it elegantly slides aside to reveal the pool below.

How to Choose the Right Design for Your Home

Use this quick decision framework based on your priorities and site characteristics:

Found a design that speaks to you? We design and build all seven of these signature styles right across the Sunshine Coast. Free on-site design consultation, with a custom 3D visualisation included in every proposal. Book Free Design Consultation →

Frequently Asked Questions

Do hinterland and coastal Sunshine Coast pool decks need different specs? Yes, very much so. Coastal sites require marine-grade stainless steel fixings and significantly higher UV/salt tolerance. Hinterland sites need heavily engineered sub-frames designed for sloping ground and humidity-tolerant timber species.
What's the best material for a Noosa pool deck? Either spotted gum hardwood or premium capped composite. Both materials perform extremely well, but Noosa's high property values often justify investment in the premium hardwood aesthetic.
What are council approval timeframes on the Sunshine Coast? Sunshine Coast Regional Council typically processes domestic deck applications within 3–6 weeks. Smaller decks under 600mm of elevation are often exempt from formal approvals.
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Article 05 of 05

Building a Deck Around an Existing Pool: The Complete Homeowner's Guide

🔍 SEO Metadata:
Title Tag: Building a Deck Around Existing Pool: Complete Guide [2026]
Meta Description: Everything you need to know about building a pool deck around an existing pool in Queensland. Process, cost, compliance, timeline. Expert guide.
URL Slug: /pool-decks/blog/deck-around-existing-pool-guide
Primary Keyword: deck around existing pool
Secondary Keywords: pool deck retrofit, decking around concrete pool, pool surround replacement, retrofit pool deck queensland

Building a Deck Around an Existing Pool: The Complete Homeowner's Guide

Around 70% of the pool deck work we do at YBMT is actually building decks around existing, already-installed pools — not brand new installations. Most homeowners are surprised to learn that retrofit projects are actually quite straightforward if you go in with the right plan and the right specialist team. The end result transforms a tired, cracked concrete-surround pool into the absolute centrepiece of your home, all for a fraction of what most people expect. This complete guide walks you through everything — the process, cost, timeline, compliance requirements, and the critical questions you need to ask any builder before committing.

🖼️ [IMAGE: Before/after — concrete pool surround transformed with new timber deck]

Why Add a Deck to an Existing Pool?

There are six honest, compelling reasons our clients commit to a retrofit:

  1. Aesthetic transformation: Cracked, stained concrete becomes a luxury timber or composite surround that instantly elevates the whole backyard.
  2. Safety upgrade: Modern slip-rated materials dramatically reduce the risk of wet-foot accidents on the pool edge.
  3. Comfort underfoot: Quality timber and composite are significantly cooler than bare concrete on bare feet in the Queensland summer.
  4. Hide dated surrounds: Cover up old paving, ugly tiles, or cracked concrete cleanly without having to demolish anything.
  5. Increase property value: Pool decks add an average of $25K–$80K of valuation — frequently more than the actual cost of the build itself.
  6. Reclaim outdoor lifestyle: Many older pools sit unused simply because the surround is unwelcoming. A new deck changes everything overnight.

Can You Build a Deck Around Any Pool?

Almost always yes — but there are some important exceptions:

Exceptions where retrofits become significantly harder:

We assess all of this during the free on-site consultation, typically in about 20 minutes.

How the Retrofit Process Works — Step by Step

Here is the complete 10-step process you can expect from the YBMT Pool Decks team:

  1. Free consultation (30–60 min on-site) — we assess the pool, fence, site access and drainage.
  2. Concept design — a 2D plan plus material recommendations (delivered within 7 days).
  3. Fixed-price quote — line-item, transparent, no surprises (within 14 days of consult).
  4. Compliance pre-check — a Pool Safety Inspector reviews the proposed design.
  5. Council approval if required — typically only needed for elevated retrofits.
  6. Materials ordered — usually a 1–3 week lead time depending on stock.
  7. Site prep (1–2 days) — old surrounds removed if required, and sub-frame measurements taken.
  8. Sub-frame construction (2–4 days) — hardwood or galvanised steel frame built to engineering spec.
  9. Decking installation (3–7 days) — boards laid, hidden fixings installed, edge finishing completed.
  10. Finishing & handover (1–2 days) — fence integration check, Pool Safety Certificate issued, cleaning and final photos.

How Long Does the Whole Project Take?

Set realistic timeline expectations from day one:

Total from first call to finished deck: Typically 6–10 weeks. If you want the deck ready for Christmas, start the conversation in early September. If you want it ready for summer (December), start in late October.

How Much Does a Retrofit Cost?

Most existing-pool retrofits across SEQ cost between $15,000 and $80,000, with the average sitting comfortably around the $25,000–$45,000 mark. The cost variables are:

Compared to a completely new pool plus deck installation (which runs $60K–$200K+), a retrofit delivers a fraction of the cost for an equivalent lifestyle impact.

Will We Need to Drain the Pool?

Almost never. In about 95% of retrofits, the pool remains full and continues to be usable through the majority of the build. Brief pool closures (1–2 days) only occur if:

We confirm any required pool closures upfront in your quote so you can plan family swims accordingly.

What About the Existing Pool Fence?

This is a critical retrofit moment. The new deck changes the "finished surface" level, which can compromise the compliance of your existing pool fence. Our process for handling this is:

  1. Measure all existing fence heights pre-build.
  2. Calculate the projected post-deck finished surface level.
  3. If the fence drops below 1.2m, the quote includes a fence raise or full replacement.
  4. The Pool Safety Inspector then confirms final compliance on handover day.

Never trust a builder who fails to address this issue upfront. Fence non-compliance discovered on handover is the #1 reason retrofit budgets blow out.

Common Concerns Answered

What to Have Ready Before Calling a Builder

Five things that will significantly speed up your free quote:

  1. Pool dimensions — length, width, and depth (the original install paperwork is gold).
  2. Photos — all four sides of the pool, the existing surround, and the current fence.
  3. Council approval paperwork from the original pool installation.
  4. Current Pool Safety Certificate (or its expiry date).
  5. Site plan or property survey if you have one.

If you don't have all of these — no stress at all. We collect everything needed during the free consultation.

Ready to transform your existing pool? Free on-site assessment, fixed-price quote within 14 days, no obligation. We build expert retrofits right across Brisbane, the Gold Coast, and the Sunshine Coast. Book Free Assessment →

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you build a deck over an existing concrete pool surround? Yes — most retrofits build a low-profile sub-frame directly over the existing concrete. The new deck sits 80–120mm proud of the old surface, which is rarely a problem for entries or door clearances.
Do I need a council permit for a pool deck retrofit? Decks under 600mm of elevation that don't form part of the pool fence usually don't require a permit. Elevated retrofits or any deck-as-fence designs always require council approval.
What's the best material for a retrofit project? Composite — for the lowest maintenance and longest service life around chlorine. Choose spotted gum if the natural aesthetic strongly outranks maintenance priorities for you.
Can the new deck attach directly to the pool coping? Yes, but only with proper expansion gaps (8–12mm) to handle daily thermal movement. Direct attachment without the correct gaps will cause long-term failure of both the deck and the coping.
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Content Kit Summary

# Article Title Primary Keyword Words URL Slug Internal Links
01 How Much Does a Pool Deck Cost in Brisbane? [2026 Pricing Guide] pool deck cost brisbane ~1,550 /pool-decks/blog/pool-deck-cost-brisbane-2026 2
02 Composite vs Hardwood Pool Decking: Which is Best for Queensland? composite vs hardwood pool decking ~1,500 /pool-decks/blog/composite-vs-hardwood-pool-decking-queensland 2
03 QLD Pool Fence Compliance: The Decking Mistakes That Cost Homeowners Thousands qld pool fence compliance ~1,550 /pool-decks/blog/qld-pool-fence-compliance-deck-mistakes 1
04 Sunshine Coast Pool Deck Inspiration: 7 Stunning Design Ideas for 2026 sunshine coast pool deck design ~1,500 /pool-decks/blog/sunshine-coast-pool-deck-design-ideas 2
05 Building a Deck Around an Existing Pool: Complete Homeowner's Guide deck around existing pool ~1,650 /pool-decks/blog/deck-around-existing-pool-guide 3

Total kit: ~7,750 words · 10 internal cross-links · 23 image placements suggested · 20 FAQ Q&As (Featured Snippet ready)


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