Atlas variant · First-time buyer edition
Cheapest states for mid-grade deck builds — 2026.
The 32 US states where a typical 1,000 sqft mid-grade deck build (engineered hardwood, luxury vinyl plank, or comparable mid-tier material) lands at or below the national midpoint of $16,700. Built for first-time homeowners doing their first floor — cheapest options first, with the deep-dive guide for each state one click away.
32 states · ranked cheapest first
| Rank | State | Mid-range install | vs national midpoint | First-time friendly | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | $13,600 | -19% | Read guide | ||
| #2 | $13,800 | -17% | Read guide | ||
| #3 | $13,800 | -17% | Read guide | ||
| #4 | $13,800 | -17% | Read guide | ||
| #5 | $13,900 | -17% | Read guide | ||
| #6 | $13,900 | -17% | Read guide | ||
| #7 | $13,900 | -17% | Read guide | ||
| #8 | $13,900 | -17% | Read guide | ||
| #9 | $14,100 | -16% | Read guide | ||
| #10 | $14,300 | -14% | Read guide | ||
| #11 | $14,300 | -14% | Read guide | ||
| #12 | $14,600 | -13% | Read guide | ||
| #13 | $14,700 | -12% | Read guide | ||
| #14 | $14,700 | -12% | Read guide | ||
| #15 | $14,900 | -11% | Read guide | ||
| #16 | $14,900 | -11% | Read guide | ||
| #17 | $14,900 | -11% | Read guide | ||
| #18 | $15,000 | -10% | Read guide | ||
| #19 | $15,000 | -10% | Read guide | ||
| #20 | $15,200 | -9% | Read guide | ||
| #21 | $15,400 | -8% | Read guide | ||
| #22 | $15,400 | -8% | Read guide | ||
| #23 | $15,500 | -7% | Read guide | ||
| #24 | $15,700 | -6% | Read guide | ||
| #25 | $15,700 | -6% | Read guide | ||
| #26 | $15,900 | -5% | Read guide | ||
| #27 | $16,200 | -3% | Read guide | ||
| #28 | $16,200 | -3% | Read guide | ||
| #29 | $16,200 | -3% | Read guide | ||
| #30 | $16,200 | -3% | Read guide | ||
| #31 | $16,500 | -1% | Read guide | ||
| #32 | $16,500 | -1% | Read guide |
All-50 main atlas
Deck cost by state — every state
The full sortable atlas with cost-index, low, high, and mid for all 50 states.
Open the main atlas
ROI atlas
Best deck ROI by state — what pays back at sale
Same data, different angle: which states return the most of the install cost when the home sells.
See the ROI ranking
What's the cheapest state for a new deck in 2026?
The cheapest US state for a 1,000 sqft mid-grade deck build in 2026 is Mississippi at $13,600. The full top-5 cheapest list: Mississippi ($13,600), Arkansas ($13,800), South Dakota ($13,800), West Virginia ($13,800), Alabama ($13,900). These states share three traits: installer wages 15-22% below the national average, low permit-fee jurisdictions, and minimal material-delivery premiums.
How much should a first-time homeowner budget for floors?
Plan for the state-specific mid-range number on the table above, plus a 10% contingency. In an average-cost state, that's $16,700 for a 1,000 sqft mid-grade install. In a low-cost state (MS, AR, SD, WV, AL) you'll see $13K-$14K; in a high-cost state (HI, CA, NY, MA) plan for $20K-$24K. For a single-room install (200 sqft), multiply the mid number by roughly 0.22. For a whole-home (2,000+ sqft) install, multiply by 1.65.
Is it worth picking a cheaper material to save in a high-cost state?
Yes — material choice often matters more than state choice. Luxury vinyl plank (LVP) installs at 40-55% less per square foot than engineered hardwood, and outperforms hardwood on dent/scratch resistance. For a first-time buyer in a high-cost state (CA, NY, MA), specifying LVP for common areas drops a $22K install to roughly $11K-$13K while keeping a wood-look aesthetic. See the deck materials comparison guide for the full breakdown.
Which deck is best for a tight first-time budget?
For first-time buyers under $8K total budget: click-lock LVP is the clear winner — DIY-installable to save another 30-50% on labor, immediately livable, and waterproof on slab-on-grade or basement installs. For $8K-$15K budgets, engineered hardwood in the main rooms + LVP in wet areas (kitchen, baths, laundry) is the highest-perceived-value combo. Above $15K, solid hardwood becomes viable but only in mid-cost states.
Where do most first-time buyers overspend on floors?
Four common traps: (1) specifying solid hardwood in basements or slab-on-grade installs (engineered or LVP is the right choice), (2) using one material for the whole house instead of mixing premium-where-seen + budget-where-not, (3) not pulling old deck themselves ($1.50-$3.00/sqft saving, easily a weekend's work), and (4) letting the contractor source materials at a 15-25% markup instead of buying direct from Floor & Decor or LL deck.