Professional Installation
Here’s where the rubber meets the road – you can buy the best treated pine money can buy, but if the installation’s dodgy, your deck won’t last. We’ve been called out to fix too many DIY disasters and cowboy builder jobs to count. Proper Substructure Design The frame is everything. Your joists need to be spaced correctly – typically 450mm centres for treated pine decking. Go wider and you’ll get bounce. Bearers need adequate support, and everything needs to be level and square. Shortcuts here mean problems in two years when boards start cupping or the whole structure feels unstable. Letting Timber Stabilise Fresh treated pine is wet – really wet. The treatment process saturates the timber, and it needs time to dry out and reach equilibrium with the environment. We typically let framing timber sit for a few weeks after installation before adding decking boards. Rush this and you’ll get crazy shrinkage, gaps appearing, and boards warping as they dry. Fastening Methods Matter Use galvanised or stainless steel fasteners only. Standard nails or screws will corrode fast with ACQ-treated timber and our salt air. We prefer 304 stainless deck screws for visible surfaces and hot-dipped galvanised bolts for structural connections. Pre-drill everything to prevent splitting – treated pine’s harder than you think when it’s fresh. Spacing and Drainage Leave 5mm gaps between boards for drainage and expansion. Treated pine moves more than hardwood as it dries and swells with moisture. Without proper gaps, boards will cup and push against each other. And make sure water can escape – no trapped moisture pockets anywhere. Cut Ends and Exposed Grain Every time you cut treated pine, you expose untreated timber inside. Those cut ends need sealing with cut-end treatment solution before installation. Skip this step and you’re creating entry points for moisture and rot. Takes five minutes per cut, saves years of lifespan.

Professional Installation
Here’s where the rubber meets the road – you can buy the best treated pine money can buy, but if the installation’s dodgy, your deck won’t last. We’ve been called out to fix too many DIY disasters and cowboy builder jobs to count. Proper Substructure Design The frame is everything. Your joists need to be spaced correctly – typically 450mm centres for treated pine decking. Go wider and you’ll get bounce. Bearers need adequate support, and everything needs to be level and square. Shortcuts here mean problems in two years when boards start cupping or the whole structure feels unstable. Letting Timber Stabilise Fresh treated pine is wet – really wet. The treatment process saturates the timber, and it needs time to dry out and reach equilibrium with the environment. We typically let framing timber sit for a few weeks after installation before adding decking boards. Rush this and you’ll get crazy shrinkage, gaps appearing, and boards warping as they dry. Fastening Methods Matter Use galvanised or stainless steel fasteners only. Standard nails or screws will corrode fast with ACQ-treated timber and our salt air. We prefer 304 stainless deck screws for visible surfaces and hot-dipped galvanised bolts for structural connections. Pre-drill everything to prevent splitting – treated pine’s harder than you think when it’s fresh. Spacing and Drainage Leave 5mm gaps between boards for drainage and expansion. Treated pine moves more than hardwood as it dries and swells with moisture. Without proper gaps, boards will cup and push against each other. And make sure water can escape – no trapped moisture pockets anywhere. Cut Ends and Exposed Grain Every time you cut treated pine, you expose untreated timber inside. Those cut ends need sealing with cut-end treatment solution before installation. Skip this step and you’re creating entry points for moisture and rot. Takes five minutes per cut, saves years of lifespan.
Finishing & Maintenance
So your deck’s built and looks great. Now comes the part that keeps it looking great – and this is where treated pine needs more attention than hardwood, no point pretending otherwise. The Waiting Game Don’t touch that timber with stain or oil for at least six months, preferably twelve. The treatment chemicals need to cure, and the timber needs to dry out properly. Try to stain wet-treated pine and you’re wasting your money – it won’t penetrate, won’t last, and you’ll be doing it again in six months anyway. We know it looks a bit rough when it’s fresh, but patience pays off here. Stain and Oil Options Once it’s ready, you’ve got choices. Oil-based stains penetrate best and give good protection against moisture and UV. Water-based stains are easier to apply and clean up. We typically recommend a quality decking oil with UV inhibitors for Central Coast conditions – reapply every 12-18 months depending on sun exposure. Don’t cheap out on the product; good oil costs more but lasts twice as long. Can You Paint It? Yeah, you can paint treated pine, and it actually works well if you want a specific colour scheme. Use exterior-grade acrylic paint designed for timber. The surface needs to be completely dry and lightly sanded first. Painted decks need repainting every few years, but they hide the timber grain if that’s not your thing. Maintenance Reality Check Treated pine needs more maintenance than hardwood – that’s just facts. Plan on cleaning and re-oiling annually or every 18 months. Sweep off leaves and debris regularly because trapped organic matter holds moisture. Check for any split boards or loose fasteners during your annual maintenance. Catch small problems early and they stay small problems. Preventing Problems Keep pot plants on feet so water drains away. Trim back vegetation that touches the deck. Make sure your gutters aren’t overflowing onto the deck. These small things make a massive difference to how long your deck lasts.

Frequently Asked Questions About Treated Pine Decking
With proper maintenance, you’re looking at 15-25 years easily. The key is keeping up with annual cleaning and oiling. We’ve got treated pine decks around Terrigal that are pushing 20 years and still solid. The coastal environment’s tough, but the chemical treatment handles it if you do your part with maintenance.
Wait at least six months, ideally a full year. Fresh treated pine is saturated with chemicals and moisture. Stain it too early and it won’t penetrate properly, won’t last, and you’ll waste your money. Do the water test – splash some water on the timber. If it beads up, it’s not ready. If it soaks in, you’re good to go.
Treated pine costs roughly half what hardwood does – that’s $4,000-$6,000 in your pocket for a typical deck. Hardwood lasts 25-40 years with oiling every 2-3 years. Treated pine gives 15-25 years with annual maintenance. Hardwood has that premium look immediately, treated pine develops rustic character once weathered. Long-term stay with minimal fuss? Hardwood. First home or investment property? Treated pine delivers real value.
Modern ACQ-treated pine is safe once it’s dried and cured. The chemicals are locked into the timber. We don’t recommend it for veggie garden beds or playground sandpits, but for decking it’s fine. Wash hands after handling fresh-cut treated timber, same as you would with any building material.
Decking boards and anything above ground with good airflow – H3. Posts, bearers near the ground, or anywhere moisture accumulates – H4. When in doubt, go H4. It costs a bit more but gives you better protection in our coastal climate.
Yeah, that’s literally what it’s designed for. The treatment protects against rot, decay, and termites – all the things our climate throws at timber. Salt air, humidity, UV exposure – treated pine handles it. You just need proper installation and regular maintenance to keep it performing.
Some movement’s normal as the timber dries out and stabilises. Proper installation with correct spacing, good fasteners, and allowing the timber to acclimatise minimises this. You might get minor surface checking (small cracks), but that doesn’t affect structural integrity. Major warping usually means installation issues or poor-quality timber.
Ready for Your Treated Pine Deck? Let's Talk
You’ve done your research, you know what you want, and you’re ready for a deck that delivers quality without breaking the bank. That’s exactly what we do. We’ll come out to your Central Coast property, have a proper look at your space, and give you an honest quote – no games, no hidden extras. Whether you’re in Terrigal, Avoca Beach, Gosford, or anywhere around the Coast, we’ve built decks on blocks just like yours. Get your free treated pine decking quote today. Call us on 0240036404 or fill out the contact form below. We’ll usually get back to you within 24 hours, and we can have someone out for a site visit within the week. Let’s build you a deck that works for your budget and lasts for years.