Homeowners with a graying, peeling, or weathered deck want to know what the finish will look like and how long it will last before they commit. A website with color samples, product specs, and before-and-afters earns the quote call. Free mockup, no commitment.
For Deck Staining in KC
Web Design for Deck Staining & Sealing Companies in Kansas City
Deck staining customers are making an aesthetic decision with a durability component — they want the deck to look good and they want it to last three to five years before the next coat. The primary decision is stain type: transparent or semi-transparent stains that show the wood grain are popular on new or recently cleaned cedar and pressure-treated lumber, while solid stains that hide the grain are typically the choice for weathered, gray, or checked wood that is not attractive enough to show. The prep process matters more than the product: a stain applied to wood that was not properly cleaned, brightened, and stripped of old failed product will peel within a season. Customers want to know whether you power wash, use a deck brightener or stripper, sand checked areas, and apply by brush and back-roll versus spray only. Product brand matters to the informed homeowner — Armstrong Clark, Defy, TWP, Cabot, and Ready Seal all have different reputations for longevity. Fence and pergola staining is a natural extension of deck work and customers want to know if you do those too. A deck staining website that shows your prep process, shows color options with real deck photos, and explains the product you use and why earns the customer who wants a professional result that actually holds.
What homeowners research before hiring a deck staining company
- Prep process — cleaning, brightening, stripping old stain, sanding — what is done before any product goes on
- Stain type — transparent, semi-transparent, solid — when each is appropriate, grain visibility
- Product brand — Armstrong Clark, Defy, TWP, Cabot, Ready Seal — longevity reputation
- Application method — spray only vs. brush and back-roll — what ensures better penetration
- Longevity — how long the finish lasts, what affects it, what the recoat cycle looks like
What your deck staining website would include
- Prep process — power wash, brighten, strip, sand — step-by-step what you do before staining
- Color gallery — transparent, semi-transparent, solid — real deck photos in each finish category
- Products used — brand name, why you chose it, longevity expectations, maintenance schedule
- New vs. restoration — new wood staining vs. stripping and restoring weathered or previously stained decks
- Fences and pergolas — other wood structures you stain, pricing structure for add-ons
- Quote form with deck size, wood type, current condition, stain type preference, timeline
What clients say
“The hardest part of selling deck staining is that customers have been burned by bad jobs — someone who sprayed a cheap product without cleaning the wood first and it peeled in six months. Our prep process is what separates us and we had no way to show it before someone hired us. The new site with our prep steps explained, our product brand named with the reason we use it, and our before and after gallery showing real restorations changed the quality of customers who called. They hired us knowing what they were getting. We also started getting fence and pergola add-ons on almost every deck job.”
— N. Petrov, deck staining contractor, Lenexa, KS
Simple pricing
A deck staining site with gallery, prep process, and quote form starts at $200. A full site with product guide, color samples, and fence and pergola section is $425–$750. One whole-yard staining job covers the cost. No contracts, no monthly fees.
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