What Charlotte Pros Are Building Right Now: The Top Deck Designs for Summer Entertaining in 2026

It’s a Saturday evening in June. The neighborhood smells like someone’s grilling that sweet Carolina BBQ, music is drifting over the fence, and the laughter from two doors down makes you realize your backyard could be doing so much more. Here in Charlotte, summers are long, warm, and genuinely made for outdoor living spaces. We’re talking April evenings on the deck all the way through Panthers season in the fall. If you’ve been searching for deck design ideas to make a real investment in your home, you’re not alone. As a premier custom deck builder in Charlotte, NC, we are seeing some of the most thoughtful, well-designed deck builds we’ve ever worked on and we want to show you exactly what’s driving them.

Here’s what Charlotte homeowners are building right now, and why it works.

Multi-Level Decks: Moving Beyond Basic Single-Level Layouts

If there’s one design shift we’re seeing more than any other, it’s the move toward multi-level decks and once you experience one, you’ll understand why.

Think about how you actually use your backyard. There’s the cooking zone, the dining area, the lounge spots where people naturally settle in with a drink. On a single-level deck, all of that competes for the same space. A multi-level design gives each zone its own place: a sun deck up top, a shaded lounge below, distinct areas that flow into each other naturally rather than bumping into each other.

For Charlotte lots with slopes, grades, or a nice tree canopy (and we see a lot of those in neighborhoods like Waxhaw, Weddington, and Myers Park)  multi-level designs work with what the land is already doing. The result doesn’t feel like a deck that was added to a house. It feels like it was always supposed to be there.

The staircases matter too. In a well-designed multi-level build, the stairs aren’t an afterthought, they’re part of the architecture. With wide, open treads and clean lines, a landing becomes its a design statement. That’s the difference between a construction project and custom craftsmanship.

Choosing the Best Materials for Custom Decks in Charlotte

Material selection is one of the most important conversations we have with homeowners, and it’s one that goes deeper than most people expect. Charlotte’s climate is no joke with hot summers, humidity, the occasional ice storm in February. What your deck is made of determines how it looks in year one and how it looks in year ten.

Composite and PVC decking (especially Trex and TimberTech) are our most specified materials right now, and for good reason. They handle heat well, resist staining, and hold up in Carolina humidity in ways that lower-quality materials simply don’t. But as your trusted Charlotte deck builders, what we really want you to understand is that choosing the right material is only part of the equation. The design comes from how those materials work together.

Alternating board widths across different zones of the deck. Mixing textures between a smooth dining surface and a more tactile lounge area. Playing with color variation to define spaces without building walls. These are the decisions that give a custom deck its personality and makes someone walk onto your deck and feel like it was genuinely designed, not just installed. Natural tones are leading right now: grays, taupes, and weathered wood shades that settle beautifully into Charlotte’s lush, tree-lined yards rather than competing with them.

imberTech English Walnut composite decking with white Impression Rail Express powder-coated aluminum railings on a custom build.

Why Custom Outdoor Kitchens Are the Ultimate Backyard Anchor

Let’s be honest: food just tastes better when it’s cooked outside.

Whether you’re spending a Sunday low-and-slowing a brisket on the Big Green Egg, flipping pancakes on the Blackstone on a slow Saturday morning, or keeping it simple with burgers on the grill while everyone hangs around, a grill isn’t just an accessory, it’s a necessity. The air is better, the company is better, heck the whole vibe is better.

An outdoor kitchen makes all of that effortless. Instead of running inside every fifteen minutes for tools, ingredients, or another round of drinks, everything you need is right there. Built-in cooking stations, prep counter space, a beverage fridge stocked and ready. You have a cold drink in hand while the kids are tearing around the yard and your friends are settling into their chairs. Getting comfortable is the whole point.

When we work as an outdoor kitchen builder in Charlotte, we design these spaces to be the ultimate backyard anchor. Everything else, the seating areas, the dining zone, the lounge spots, arranges itself around it naturally. When you design a deck with the kitchen as the centerpiece, the whole layout clicks into place. And when you’re out there on a Tuesday evening just because you feel like grilling, you’ll know exactly why it was worth doing right.

Shade and Shelter: Plan for Covered Decks and Pergolas Before the First Board Goes Down

Anyone who’s hosted a July afternoon in Charlotte knows the truth: shade isn’t a luxury, it’s a necessity. The sun hits hard, and if your guests don’t have somewhere cool to land, the party moves inside, which is not ideal.

The best builds treat shade as a design element. Whether it’s a deck with a pergola or a fully covered deck, planning for it early allows them to be integrated in the original design. They look like they belong. When they’re added after the fact, you can always tell.

This is one of the places where the design-first process pays off most clearly. Getting the shade and shelter right on paper means the finished build feels cohesive, like an extension of the home rather than an addition to the deck. If you’re starting a design conversation, this is one of the first things we’ll want to talk through together.

Lighting, Fire, and the Details That Make It

Here’s something we’ve noticed over the years: guests always compliment the details first. Not the square footage, not the material spec but the way the lighting hits the stairs at dusk, the glow of a fire feature after dinner, the way the whole space transforms once the sun goes down.

Fire features are still one of the most-requested elements in Charlotte deck builds, and the aesthetic is shifting. Clean, linear built-in fireplaces are replacing bulkier standalone units as they fit the architecture of the deck rather than sitting on top of it. Paired with layered LED lighting under railings, along step edges, and overhead, the result is a deck that lives just as well at 9pm as it does at 3pm.

These are the finishing decisions that separate a good deck from a great one. And they’re worth planning for, because once you’ve sat out there on a warm October evening with a fire going and the lights down low, you’ll never want to go back inside.

Luxury covered patio featuring a rustic stone fireplace with mounted TV, wood ceiling, and comfortable outdoor lounge chairs.

What the Best Builds Have in Common

When we look at the decks we’re most proud of, and the ones homeowners tell us they use every single day, a few things show up consistently. They were designed around how the family actually lives, not around a floor plan or a feature checklist. The materials were chosen for this climate and this home, not just pulled from a catalog. The outdoor kitchen was treated as the heart of the space. The shade and lighting were planned from the start. And the whole thing feels like it’s always been there.

Custom Outdoor Living FAQ

What is the best decking material for Charlotte, NC’s climate? Composite and PVC decking are the top choices for Charlotte-area builds. Both handle heat and humidity exceptionally well, resist staining, and hold their appearance over time in ways that make them well worth the investment in our climate.

What are the top features of modern deck designs for entertaining? The builds we see get used the most consistently include defined zones for cooking, dining, and lounging, often across multiple levels, along with an outdoor kitchen as the anchor, built-in shade or cover, fire features, and layered lighting. The more intentional the design, the more the space actually gets used.

How long does it take to build a custom deck in Charlotte NC? Every build is different depending on size, complexity, and design. The best first step is a design consultation where we can look at your space, talk through what you want, and give you a realistic picture of timeline and process.

What neighborhoods in Charlotte do you build in? We work throughout the Charlotte metro, including Myers Park, Ballantyne, Waxhaw, Weddington, Matthews, Fort Mill, and surrounding communities. If you’re not sure whether we serve your area, just reach out, we’re happy to talk.

And if any of this has gotten you thinking about what your backyard could be this summer, that’s exactly the right place to start. We’d love to have that conversation. There’s no obligation, just a good conversation about what’s possible. Book a free estimate or call us at (980) 414-0320

Looking for inspiration? Check out more Outdoor Living Features from Carolina Decks or read our previous blog post.

They Had an Outdoor Space That Wasn’t Working on Either Level. Here’s What We Built Instead.

When an outdoor space has deteriorated to the point where starting fresh makes more sense than saving what’s there, a full custom build isn’t just the better investment,  it’s often the only one that actually solves the problem. Our project in Stonehaven is a good example of what that looks like.

What they had and why starting over made sense

The house had two levels of outdoor space and neither one was being used. On the lower level, a concrete slab that had cracked and stained its way past any cosmetic fix and was chalky, tired, and collecting leaves. Above it sat a wood deck that had been through too many Charlotte summers: boards gone soft, structure questionable, a canvas awning that sagged more than it shaded. The whole thing had that feeling of a space the family had mentally checked out of.

They weren’t wrong to check out. It wasn’t working. The key decision: to patch it or build something worth having

New builds are what we do best at Carolina Decks, and this is exactly the kind of project that shows why. Patching a failing outdoor space can buy time, but it rarely gets homeowners where they actually want to go. For this family, the structure wasn’t worth saving. More importantly, they’d already spent years working around a backyard that didn’t work. The better question wasn’t “how do we fix this?” It was “what do you actually dream of being out here?”

What we built: two levels, done right

The answer turned out to be two distinct outdoor living zones built off the same structure, which is exactly what the house was always set up for but never delivered.

Up top: a new upper deck with TimberTech composite decking in Dark Roast and black Trex aluminum railing. The new deck features clean lines, stays low maintenance, and is built to hold up through Charlotte’s humid summers without the annual staining and sealing routine that wore out the old wood.

Below: the under-deck space became a proper covered patio: exposed timber framing, a rainproof ceiling system running between the joists, and a finished concrete floor that gives the lower level its own identity. When it rains, the upper deck drains away from the space below. Both levels stay usable.

The result

Two outdoor spaces where there was effectively zero before. The upper deck handles entertaining from morning coffee to evening grilling, the kind of space you actually point people toward when they come over. The covered patio below is its own space: shaded, dry, a place to sit even when the weather doesn’t cooperate.

Charlotte summers being what they are, that matters more than most people expect until they have it.

Project details:

Decking: TimberTech composite

Railing: Trex black aluminum

Levels: Upper deck + covered lower patio 

Lower patio: Exposed timber framing, rainproof ceiling system between joists, concrete floor

Columns: Natural wood

Multi-level solution: Two complete outdoor living spaces from one structure 

Custom builds are what Carolina Decks is built for. If your outdoor space has reached the point where you know something needs to change, that’s the conversation we love to have. Book a free estimate or call us at (980) 414-0320 and let’s talk about what’s possible.

Curious about our process? Check out our Custom Decks page or browse our latest blog post!