Monmouth County, NJ • Instant Estimate

Pergola Cost Calculator

Get a real-time price range for your custom pergola — built for New Jersey homes, engineered for our wind & snow loads. Takes about 60 seconds.

1

Size

Standard NJ backyard pergolas run from 10×10 up to 20×20.

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2

Material

All options are rated for NJ winters and shore-area wind loads.

3

Attached or Freestanding?

Attached pergolas tie into your house and save ~8% in materials.

4

Roof & Shade

Choose how much shade and weather protection you want.

5

Upgrades & Add-Ons

Optional. Pick anything you want included in the estimate.

6

Where in Monmouth County?

Coastal towns require additional wind-load engineering.

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What Drives Pergola Cost in Monmouth County, NJ

Pergola pricing in New Jersey runs wider than most homeowners expect — anywhere from roughly $4,000 for a compact 10×10 pressure-treated build to north of $45,000 for a 20×20 motorized louvered structure in premium composite. Five factors do most of the work in moving a quote up or down:

Material

The single biggest lever. Pressure-treated pine starts at about $38/sq ft installed; a Wolf or Deckorators composite pergola can run $80–$110/sq ft. Aluminum and fiberglass sit in between with very different aesthetics.

Footprint

Pricing scales with square footage, but not perfectly linearly. Larger pergolas need beefier beams and deeper footings, while smaller pergolas pay a fixed cost for permits, mobilization, and design that gets spread thinner.

Roof system

Open rafters are baseline. A retractable canopy adds ~$2,600. A motorized louvered roof — fully waterproof, app-controlled — adds $5,000+ and turns the pergola into a true three-season space.

Coastal wind load

Anywhere within five miles of the Atlantic — Rumson, Sea Bright, Long Branch, Spring Lake, Manasquan, Belmar — needs additional engineering for 130+ mph design wind speeds. Expect $600–$900 in extra structural cost.

Site conditions

Existing concrete, sloped yards, tree roots, and tight access from the street all add labor. New Jersey’s 36" frost line means real footings are non-negotiable, but rocky soil or buried utilities can push prep time.

Permits & finish work

Most Monmouth County townships require a building permit for permanent pergolas (typically $250–$450). Lighting, fans, screens, and built-in seating each add a clean line-item — useful for budgeting in stages.

Pergola FAQs — Monmouth County, NJ

How much does a pergola cost in Monmouth County, NJ?
Most installed pergolas in Monmouth County land between $8,000 and $25,000. A standard 12×14 cedar pergola with open rafters runs roughly $9,500–$13,000 in 2026 pricing. Premium 16×20 builds with composite materials, louvered roofs, lighting, and screens can reach $35,000–$45,000. Use the calculator above for a real-time estimate based on your size, material, and feature choices.
Do I need a permit for a pergola in Monmouth County?
In nearly every Monmouth County township — Holmdel, Middletown, Marlboro, Manalapan, Freehold, Colts Neck, Rumson, Red Bank, Wall — yes. New Jersey’s Uniform Construction Code treats permanent pergolas as accessory structures, which means a building permit and usually a zoning permit before construction starts. Permit fees typically run $250–$450 depending on the town. Legion Build pulls and manages all permits as part of every project.
What’s the best pergola material for New Jersey weather?
For NJ’s humid summers, freeze-thaw winters, and coastal salt air, the most durable options are aluminum, vinyl-clad composites (Wolf, Deckorators), and fiberglass. Western red cedar is the warmest-looking natural option and holds up well with proper sealing. Pressure-treated pine is the budget choice but needs more upkeep. For shore homes east of Route 35, we usually recommend aluminum or composite to handle salt exposure.
How long does it take to build a pergola?
From signed contract to finished pergola, plan on 4–8 weeks. Permits take 2–4 weeks in most Monmouth County townships, materials take 1–3 weeks (Wolf and Deckorators are typically 2–3 weeks), and on-site construction is 2–5 days for most builds. Motorized louvered systems and large composite structures can extend timelines slightly.
Should I get a freestanding or attached pergola?
Attached pergolas tie into your house with a ledger board, use only two posts instead of four, and run roughly 8% less in materials. They work well for extending an existing patio or deck off the back of the home. Freestanding pergolas give you total placement freedom — over a pool, in a garden corner, away from the house — and don’t require flashing into existing siding. Both are equally durable when properly engineered.
Are Wolf and Deckorators pergolas worth the premium price?
For homeowners who plan to stay in their home 10+ years, yes. Both Wolf Pergola Series and Deckorators Voyage carry lifetime structural warranties, won’t rot, warp, or need staining, and color-match to popular composite decking lines. Over a 15-year window, a Wolf or Deckorators pergola usually costs less than cedar once you factor in staining, sealing, and replacement boards. For shorter holds, cedar or aluminum often pencil out better.
Will a pergola handle New Jersey winters and snow load?
Yes — when engineered for it. Open-rafter pergolas shed snow naturally. Slatted, louvered, and canopied pergolas are designed for NJ’s 25–30 psf ground snow load (zone-dependent). Motorized louvered systems automatically open in heavy snow on most current models. We set all footings below the 36" NJ frost line so there’s no heaving in spring.
Do pergolas add value to NJ homes?
A well-built pergola typically returns 50–80% of its cost at resale in Monmouth County, with the bigger return coming from time-on-market — pergolas dramatically improve listing photos and the perceived size of outdoor living space. Composite and louvered pergolas tend to recover more than wood because buyers see them as a finished "outdoor room" rather than a maintenance project.
What’s the difference between a pergola, pavilion, and gazebo?
A pergola has an open or slatted roof — designed for partial shade and airflow. A pavilion has a solid roof (typically pitched, like a house roof) and offers full weather protection. A gazebo is a freestanding pavilion with a polygonal footprint, usually octagonal. Cost ranking, lowest to highest, is generally pergola → gazebo → pavilion.
Serving all of Monmouth County: Holmdel, Middletown, Marlboro, Manalapan, Freehold, Colts Neck, Rumson, Red Bank, Wall, Howell, Tinton Falls, Ocean Township, Spring Lake, Manasquan, and beyond.
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