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Lakeshore (Houston) Pier Construction Cost Guide

Insured 20+ years on Lake Houston USACE Section 10 / TCEQ permits handled

Last Updated: June 2026 β€” pricing reflects current Lakeshore (Houston)-area pier construction conditions.

Lakeshore (Houston) piers cost $20–$100+ per square foot installed, depending on decking and piling material, pier size, water depth, and Lake Houston access. A typical 300 sq ft residential pier (about 4 ft Γ— 75 ft) runs roughly $6,000–$18,000 fully installed; concrete and steel commercial piers scale higher.

Pier cost in the Lakeshore neighborhood of Houston, TX: Most projects range from $20 to $100+ per square foot of deck area, depending on material, water depth, pile count, boat-wake fatigue exposure, and installation access.
A typical 300 sq ft residential pier (about 4 ft Γ— 75 ft) runs roughly $6,000–$18,000 fully installed (concrete and steel commercial piers scale higher).
This guide is designed for waterfront property owners, marinas, and developers planning pier construction, repair, or replacement projects along Lake Houston and the San Jacinto River shorelines. Local Harris County estimating experience covering Lake Houston boat-wake fatigue, lake-drawdown exposure and severe-storm wind load, water-depth and bathymetry assessment, pile embedment in sandy clay and loam over weathered shale, barge access, demolition requirements, and material-based pier pricing.

Cost: $20–$100+ per square foot

Material Cost per square foot Typical Use
CCA-Treated Wood
$20–$35
Economical residential and fishing piers on sheltered the San Jacinto River coves
Marine-Grade Aluminum
$25–$50
Lightweight modular and removable framing for tidal and fluctuating water-level sites
Composite Decking
$40–$60
Low-maintenance residential family piers on the San Jacinto River and the San Jacinto River frontage
Reinforced Concrete
$50–$100+
Commercial, deep-water, and exposed Lake Houston piers requiring maximum lifespan
Steel Pipe Pile
$60–$95
Heavy-load commercial piers, barge landings, and deep-water Lake Houston structures
$0 $50 $100/sq ft

Typical 300 sq ft residential pier (about 4 ft Γ— 75 ft): roughly $6,000–$18,000 fully installed depending on decking and piling material β€” treated wood at the low end, composite mid-range. Concrete and steel commercial piers scale higher; deeper water and longer piling add cost.

Actual pricing depends on deck area in square feet, decking and piling material, water depth and pile count, boat-wake fatigue exposure along Lake Houston, demolition of any existing pier, barge or land equipment access, permitting through the USACE Galveston District and TCEQ, and whether the project integrates a boat lift, floating dock, or stairs. For an exact written estimate, call 281-501-7940 or request a free site evaluation.

Wood Piers

Cost Start at
$20 per square foot
labor and materials
Diagram of a typical pier: pilings, stringers, decking, and bull rail β€” typical recreational and commercial pier structure. CCA-treated pine wood piers for residential lakefronts, fishing platforms, and HOA waterfront access classic warmth, proven longevity.

Composite Piers

Cost Start at
$40 per square foot
labor and materials
Diagram of a typical pier: pilings, stringers, decking, and bull rail β€” typical recreational and commercial pier structure. Splinter-free, UV- and moisture-resistant composite piers β€” ideal for high-traffic family docks, HOA amenities, and barefoot decks.

Aluminum Piers

Cost Start at
$25 per square foot
labor and materials
Diagram of a typical pier: pilings, stringers, decking, and bull rail β€” typical recreational and commercial pier structure. Marine-grade aluminum modular piers β€” corrosion-resistant, lightweight, removable for ice-out lakes in Wisconsin, Illinois, and Texas reservoirs.

Concrete Piers

Cost Start at
$50 per square foot
labor and materials
Diagram of a typical pier: pilings, stringers, decking, and bull rail β€” typical recreational and commercial pier structure. Reinforced concrete piers engineered for commercial marinas, ferry landings, and hurricane-rated coastal storm zones β€” decades of service life.

Steel Piers

Cost Start at
$60 per square foot
labor and materials
Diagram of a typical pier: pilings, stringers, decking, and bull rail β€” typical recreational and commercial pier structure. Steel H-pile piers for industrial waterfronts, barge landings, and heavy-load commercial marine construction β€” maximum strength and capacity.

Pier Replacement
Cost

Cost Start at
$25 per square foot
labor and materials
Diagram of a typical pier: pilings, stringers, decking, and bull rail β€” typical recreational and commercial pier structure. Replacement pricing covers demolition, disposal, new pilings, stringers, decking, and hardware β€” turnkey rebuild on residential and commercial waterfronts.

Pier Repair
Cost

Cost Start at
$10 per square foot
labor and materials
Diagram of a typical pier: pilings, stringers, decking, and bull rail β€” typical recreational and commercial pier structure. Repair pricing depends on pile reinforcement, decking, stringers, splash-zone damage, marine-borer attack, and hurricane recovery.

Lakeshore (Houston) Pier Cost & Pricing FAQ

This FAQ covers real pier construction costs for Harris County waterfront properties along Lake Houston and the San Jacinto River β€” repair pricing, replacement cost, composite vs concrete comparisons, USACE Section 10 and TCEQ permitting through the Galveston District, installation timelines, water-depth and access factors, the most affordable material options, and Shore Protect's workmanship warranty. Property owners in Kingwood, Atascocita, Humble, Huffman, Crosby, and surrounding Harris County areas can use this guide to understand pier costs before requesting a written estimate.

Pier construction in the Lakeshore neighborhood of Houston, TX waterfront properties typically runs from $20 to $100+ per square foot of deck area, driven by decking and piling material, pier size, water depth, pile count, demolition scope, and barge or land access. Deeper water and longer piling push pricing toward the higher end.

Typical Pier Cost Per Square Foot by Material

  • CCA-Treated Wood: $20–$35 per sq ft (sheltered the San Jacinto River coves)
  • Marine-Grade Aluminum: $25–$50 per sq ft
  • Composite Decking: $40–$60 per sq ft
  • Reinforced Concrete: $50–$100+ per sq ft
  • Steel Pipe Pile: $60–$95 per sq ft

Need guidance on construction, repair, or replacement along Lake Houston? Visit our Lakeshore (Houston) pier builder page for service options, site evaluation details, and local marine construction guidance, or browse all Texas pier service areas.

Pier repair along Harris County waterfronts typically costs between $10 and $45 per square foot, depending on the failure mode and what is being repaired. Lake Houston boat-wake fatigue, freshwater rot at the splash zone, and freshwater rot fungi and termites accelerate certain failure patterns β€” fastener corrosion, rot at the waterline, and pile damage β€” that drive the repair scope and price.

  • Minor repairs: decking-board replacement, re-bolting loose fasteners, railing sections
  • Moderate repairs: stringer replacement, added sway bracing, single-piling splice or jacket
  • Major repairs: multiple rotted or freshwater rot fungi and termites-damaged pilings, pile reinforcement below the waterline, lake-drawdown exposure and severe-storm wind load damage to framing

Common Lakeshore (Houston) Repair Scenarios β€” Specific Cost Ranges

  • Decking-board replacement (100 sq ft section): $1,000–$2,500
  • Single-piling splice or jacket (per pile): $800–$2,500
  • Stringer and sway-bracing repair: $1,500–$5,000 depending on span and access
  • lake-drawdown exposure and severe-storm wind load framing repair: $3,000–$12,000+

When repair costs approach 50% of the full replacement price, full replacement is typically the stronger long-term investment β€” particularly for older timber piers that have weathered multiple storm cycles along Lake Houston, including the 2011 and 2022 Texas drought drawdowns and seasonal severe-storm events.

Pier repair is typically the right choice in the Lakeshore neighborhood of Houston, TX when damage is confined to decking, fasteners, a single stringer, or one or two pilings β€” and the overall frame and pile embedment remain sound. Repair usually ranges from $10 to $45 per square foot, while full replacement runs from $25 to $55+ per square foot depending on material, pier size, water depth, pile count, and Lake Houston access conditions.

  • Multiple broken, rotted, or heaving pilings
  • Widespread decking and stringer rot, or a deck frame that racks throughout
  • freshwater rot fungi and termites damage tunneling through the piling below the waterline
  • lake-drawdown exposure and severe-storm wind load damage that has displaced framing and decking
  • Repeated repairs after each storm season that no longer hold

Full replacement re-establishes design pile embedment, restores the load rating for boat lifts and add-ons, and protects long-term property value. Need a structural recommendation for your site? Our Lakeshore (Houston) pier construction & repair services page covers site evaluation and repair-vs-replacement assessment.

in the Lakeshore neighborhood of Houston, TX, composite-decked piers offer a lower upfront cost than reinforced concrete, but the choice usually depends on water depth, exposure, and intended use rather than budget alone. Composite delivers a low-maintenance, rot- and splinter-free deck; concrete delivers maximum load capacity and lifespan for exposed Lake Houston sites, deep water, and commercial piers.

MaterialCost / sq ftDesign LifeBest for Lakeshore (Houston) conditions
CCA-Treated Wood$20–$3515–25 yrSheltered the San Jacinto River coves
Marine-Grade Aluminum$25–$5030+ yrTidal, modular, and removable installations
Composite Decking$40–$6025–30 yrLow-maintenance residential family piers
Reinforced Concrete$50–$100+50+ yrExposed Lake Houston, deep-water & commercial piers
Steel Pipe Pile$60–$9530–50 yrHeavy-load commercial piers & barge landings

Composite decking performs reliably on residential the San Jacinto River, the San Jacinto River frontage for 25–30 years with minimal upkeep. Concrete typically exceeds 50 years and is the preferred specification for open Lake Houston exposure, deep water, and commercial piers. Need help picking the right build for your site? Discuss material trade-offs with our Lakeshore (Houston) pier builders.

Yes. In Harris County, a pier that extends into Lake Houston, the San Jacinto River, or other navigable waters typically requires USACE coordination through the Galveston District β€” most commonly under Section 10 for work in navigable waters, with Section 404 review when fill is placed in waters of the US β€” plus TCEQ water quality certification. Permit review timelines and compliance requirements affect both project scheduling and total cost.

Typical permit cost and timing: permit coordination (USACE Section 10 + TCEQ + Texas GLO tideland) adds roughly $1,500–$4,000 and 6–14 weeks to a Lakeshore (Houston) pier project. Barge-dependent sites along Lake Houston add mobilization cost.

A pier over state-owned submerged land usually requires Texas GLO tideland authorization. Waterfront subdivisions such as Kingwood, Atascocita, and Humble may add HOA design review or material restrictions. See our Lakeshore (Houston) pier builder page for full USACE / TCEQ permit support details.

Most residential pier projects in the Lakeshore neighborhood of Houston, TX take 1 to 4 weeks of on-site work, depending on pier size, water depth, pile count, and Lake Houston access conditions. Pile driving is scheduled around weather windows during severe-storm season (April through October), which can stretch the working calendar.

  • Small repair projects: a few days
  • Standard residential piers: 1–2 weeks
  • Large or commercial piers with deep piling and barge work: 3–6+ weeks

Permit lead time through the USACE Galveston District, TCEQ, and Texas GLO tideland adds 6–14 weeks before active construction, so the total timeline from contract signing to a finished pier is typically 8–20 weeks including permitting.

Pier pricing in the Lakeshore neighborhood of Houston, TX changes with water depth, pile count, and site access. Deeper water requires longer piling and often more of it, raising both material and pile-driving cost. The water-depth and bathymetry reading taken during the site evaluation is what sets pier length and pile count.

  • Water depth: deeper water means longer, heavier piling and more pile-driving time
  • Limited access: closed-front lots with no land-side staging require barge-supported installation, adding mobilization cost
  • Site constraints: narrow easements between neighboring docks, overhead utilities, and weather-window-only pile driving

In access-limited or barge-only areas β€” narrow easements, no land-side staging, or properties separated from the road by other buildings β€” pricing typically falls toward the higher end of the cost range. A site evaluation is the most accurate way to determine scope and total project cost for your Harris County waterfront property.

Pier construction cost in the Lakeshore neighborhood of Houston, TX varies based on several interconnected factors that affect both material selection and installation method along Lake Houston and the San Jacinto River waterfront properties:

  • Deck area and material: total square footage plus wood, composite, aluminum, concrete, or steel
  • Piling type and count: timber, concrete, or steel pile sized for water depth and load
  • Water depth: deeper water drives longer piling and more pile-driving time
  • Existing pier demolition: removal and disposal of a failed structure adds equipment time
  • Permits and access: USACE Section 10 (Galveston District), TCEQ, Texas GLO tideland review, and barge access all factor in

These variables explain why pier pricing can differ significantly between adjacent Harris County properties on the same waterfront, even when overall project scale appears similar.

The most affordable pier in Harris County depends on the water depth and exposure your site actually faces:

  • CCA-treated wood: $20–$35/sq ft β€” the most economical option for sheltered, lower-salinity the San Jacinto River coves
  • Marine-grade aluminum: $25–$50/sq ft β€” cost-competitive and corrosion-proof for tidal and fluctuating water-level sites
  • Composite decking: $40–$60/sq ft β€” higher upfront, but a much longer low-maintenance service life

An under-built wood pier on an exposed Lake Houston site is attacked by freshwater rot fungi and termites and fatigued by boat-wake fatigue, and it commonly fails years early β€” the 2011 and 2022 Texas drought drawdowns and seasonal severe-storm events both stripped decking from under-built Lakeshore (Houston)-area piers. The cheapest material that matches actual water depth and exposure is the right call, not the cheapest line item.

Yes. Shore Protect Construction backs every Lakeshore (Houston) pier project with a workmanship warranty β€” we stand behind installation quality and address issues that arise within the warranty period.

  • Workmanship: covered by Shore Protect's installation warranty
  • Material durability: manufacturer-driven β€” reinforced concrete 50+ yrs, coated steel 30–50 yrs, marine-grade aluminum 30+ yrs, composite decking 25–30 yrs, CCA-treated wood 15–25 yrs in freshwater service on Harris County waterfront sites

Specific warranty terms and duration are confirmed in writing at quote review and contract signing for your Harris County waterfront property.

Pier & Dock projects

At Shore Protect Construction, we take pride in delivering high-quality, durable piers and docks tailored to meet the specific needs of each client. Our portfolio includes a wide range of completed projects, from residential wooden piers to large-scale commercial concrete and steel docks. Each project is crafted with precision, ensuring long-lasting performance in both freshwater and saltwater environments. Browse our gallery to see examples of our completed work and discover how we’ve helped clients create beautiful, functional waterfront structures.

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