
Rialto Deck & Fence is a licensed deck builder and fence contractor serving Ontario, CA with vinyl fence installation, composite decks, covered patios, and outdoor structures - and we have served Inland Empire homeowners since 2019, with a crew that understands Ontario's clay soils and triple-digit summer heat firsthand.

Ontario's Santa Ana winds push past 50 mph every fall, and wood fence panels are consistently the first to come down. Our vinyl fence installation uses panels engineered for wind flexibility and UV stability, so your fence holds up in high-wind events and stays looking clean without annual painting or staining.
Ontario temperatures regularly exceed 100 degrees from June through September, which is hard on untreated wood decks that swell, crack, and lose structural integrity over time. Composite boards engineered for UV resistance and thermal stability hold their shape and color through Ontario's heat cycles without the maintenance schedule wood requires.
In Ontario's long, hot summers, an uncovered back patio is usable for only a small window of the day before direct sun makes it uncomfortable. A solid or lattice patio cover drops the surface temperature significantly and extends your usable outdoor hours - particularly for the south- and west-facing lots that see the most afternoon glare.
Ontario's mix of owner-occupied homes and rental properties means privacy fencing is consistently in demand across all neighborhoods. Cedar and pressure-treated wood fences are a cost-effective option for Ontario homeowners who want a natural look, provided the posts are set deep enough to account for the clay soil movement common throughout the city.
Homes from the 1960s and 1970s near Euclid Avenue and downtown Ontario often have original deck framing that has never been assessed for ledger connection integrity or joist rot. If your deck has soft spots underfoot, loose railings, or visible wood decay at the beam-to-post connection, a structural assessment will determine what can be safely repaired versus replaced.
Ontario homeowners with mid-century ranch homes and newer south-side subdivisions both benefit from a pergola that defines the outdoor space and provides partial shade without fully blocking airflow. A freestanding pergola can be installed without structural attachment to the home, making it a flexible option for Ontario properties with different setback requirements across neighborhoods.
Ontario is a city of roughly 185,000 people in San Bernardino County with a housing stock that spans several distinct eras. The oldest neighborhoods near Euclid Avenue and the historic downtown core have homes from the 1920s through the 1950s, many built with original wood siding and stucco that has never been refinished. Moving outward, mid-century ranch homes from the 1960s and 1970s dominate a wide band of the city, and the southern and eastern edges contain newer tract subdivisions built in the 1990s and early 2000s - now 20 to 30 years old and entering the stage where outdoor structures need attention.
The local climate adds meaningful pressure to outdoor structures. Ontario sits in the Inland Empire and regularly records highs above 100 degrees in summer, with the kind of sustained UV exposure that bleaches and cracks finishes faster than coastal conditions. Clay-heavy soils throughout the city expand during winter rains and contract in the dry season, putting ongoing stress on footings and fence posts. Fall brings Santa Ana wind events that can exceed 60 mph, damaging fences and patio cover attachments across the city every season.
Our crew works throughout Ontario regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect deck and fence work here. We coordinate permits through the City of Ontario Building and Safety division and are familiar with which project types require plan check versus over-the-counter approval - which keeps your project from stalling over a procedural delay.
Ontario is a city with a lot of range. The historic Euclid Avenue corridor, with its double row of pepper trees listed on the National Register of Historic Places, runs through the center of older neighborhoods with Craftsman bungalows and Spanish Colonial homes. A few miles south, the streets around Ontario International Airport and Ontario Mills are surrounded by mid-century and newer ranch homes on standard suburban lots. Each area has different foundation conditions, HOA rules, and access constraints, and we have worked on homes in all of them.
We also serve the surrounding communities. Our team regularly works in Montclair to the north, where many homeowners share Ontario's same housing age and soil conditions. If your neighbors in Rancho Cucamonga have already worked with us, they can give you a firsthand account of how we handle permits and scheduling.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form and we will respond within one business day. You can share photos or describe the project in general terms - we will ask follow-up questions before the site visit.
We visit your Ontario property, assess the site conditions, soil type, and any HOA or setback requirements, then provide a written itemized estimate. No pressure and no surprise line items - the number you approve is the number we build to.
We handle the permit application with the Ontario Building and Safety Department and schedule your project once approval is confirmed. Most Ontario permits process within one to four weeks depending on project scope.
Our crew completes the work and coordinates the required city inspection before we do the final walkthrough with you. We do not close out a project until the inspector has signed off and you are satisfied with the result.
Ontario homeowners reach us by phone or form. We respond within one business day, visit your property at no charge, and provide a written estimate with no obligation.
(909) 546-5562Ontario is one of the larger cities in San Bernardino County, with a population of around 185,000 and a geographic footprint that spans from older, established neighborhoods near historic Euclid Avenue - listed on the National Register of Historic Places - to newer subdivision tracts built in the 1990s and 2000s near the southern and eastern city limits. The city is home to Ontario International Airport, one of the busiest cargo airports in the western United States, and Ontario Mills, a major regional shopping destination off the I-10. Roughly half of Ontario's housing units are owner-occupied, and the city has a mix of single-family homes, multi-family rentals, and a growing number of newer attached townhome communities.
The housing stock reflects Ontario's growth history: Craftsman bungalows and Spanish Colonial Revival homes from the 1920s through 1940s sit near downtown, mid-century ranch homes from the 1960s and 1970s cover the middle rings of the city, and stucco-and-tile tract homes from the 1990s and 2000s spread outward toward the freeway corridors. Each era brings its own maintenance profile, and deck, fence, and patio structures on homes from any of these periods are typically showing their age by now. Our team also regularly serves homeowners in neighboring Montclair to the north, which shares much of Ontario's same housing character and soil conditions.
Low-maintenance composite boards that stay beautiful year after year.
Learn MoreAffordable, durable pressure-treated lumber decks built to last.
Learn MoreNatural cedar decks with rich color and built-in weather resistance.
Learn MoreProtect and refresh your deck with professional staining and sealing.
Learn MoreClassic wood privacy fences crafted for security and style.
Learn MoreEnjoy the outdoors bug-free with a custom screened enclosure.
Learn MoreStay shaded year-round with a beautifully built patio cover.
Learn MoreReach us by phone or form and we will schedule your site visit within one business day - no deposit required to get a written estimate.