Skip to main content
Covered Decks & Pergolas in Kansas City — Limestone Remodeling

Covered Decks & Pergolas in Kansas City

Kansas City summers bring strong sun, pop-up thunderstorms, and plenty of mosquitoes — which is why so many homeowners want their outdoor space covered. Our team builds covered decks, pergolas, and screened porches that add shade, keep the rain off, and turn a deck you use a few weeks a year into one you enjoy all season.

Covered Decks & Pergolas in the Kansas City metro

What We Deliver

  • Roofed and covered deck structures
  • Open and louvered pergolas
  • Screened porches for mosquito-free evenings
  • Roofline integration with the existing home
  • Cedar, composite, and low-maintenance materials
  • Ceiling fans, lighting, and outlets under cover
  • Posts and footings engineered for clay soil
  • Gutter and drainage tie-ins on covered structures
  • Privacy screens and shade panels
  • Prep for TV, heaters, and outdoor kitchens

Typical Timeline

Typically 1 – 4 weeks

Our Process

1

Design Consultation

We look at your existing or planned deck, your sun and rain exposure, and how you want to use the space — shade, full cover, or screened — and design a structure that ties into the home.

2

Engineering & Permitting

Covered structures add roof load and often attach to the house, so they require engineering and permits. We prepare the drawings and handle approvals for your jurisdiction.

3

Footings & Framing

Posts are set on footings below the frost line and sized for clay soils, then the frame and roof or pergola structure are built and integrated with the existing roofline and drainage.

4

Cover, Screen & Finish

Roofing, screen, or louvers are installed along with any lighting, fans, and outlets. We finish the ceiling and details, then complete a final inspection.

Free · Plan Your Project

Plan Your Remodel With Confidence.

Tell us about your kitchen, bathroom, siding, or deck project and we'll help you plan the scope, materials, and budget that fit your home — free, no obligation, in a single conversation. Then book a consultation with our licensed Kansas City crew.

Free consultation · No obligation · Licensed & insured

Homeowner reviewing remodel plans with a Kansas City contractor in her kitchen

Frequently Asked Questions

Will a screened porch really keep the mosquitoes out?

A properly built screened porch makes a big difference during KC's peak mosquito months, letting you enjoy summer evenings outdoors without the bites. We seal the screen system carefully at seams and the door so there are no easy gaps for insects.

What's the difference between a pergola and a covered deck?

A pergola is an open or louvered structure that provides shade and definition but not full weather protection — great for filtered sun. A covered deck has a solid roof that keeps rain off, so you can use the space through a summer thunderstorm. Louvered pergolas split the difference with adjustable slats.

Can you cover my existing deck?

Often yes, if the deck's structure and footings can carry the added roof load. We evaluate the existing deck first, and if it needs reinforcement to support a cover, we include that in the plan.

Covered Decks & Pergolas Across the Kansas City Metro

We provide covered decks & pergolas to homeowners throughout the Kansas City metro on both sides of the state line. Each community has its own page with local permitting and housing detail.

Related Resources

Plan your covered decks & pergolas project with our in-depth guides.

Talk to a real project manager

Have Questions? Call Now for a Free In-Home Consultation.

Mon–Fri 7 AM–6 PM · Licensed & insured · No obligation

George S, project manager at Limestone Remodeling

George S · Your Project Manager

Ready to Start Your Remodeling Project?

Get a free, no-obligation estimate from Kansas City's remodeling and exterior specialists. Licensed, insured, and ready to build.

Making an Outdoor Space You Actually Use

Kansas City summers bring strong sun, pop-up thunderstorms, and plenty of mosquitoes — the reasons a bare deck often sits empty for weeks at a time. Adding shade, a roof, or screen turns a deck you use a handful of evenings a year into one you enjoy all season. A covered structure keeps the rain and afternoon glare off, and a screened porch buys back the summer nights the mosquitoes would otherwise take.

A cover is most often added to a new or existing deck or patio, so the two projects are closely linked — and both are priced in our Kansas City deck cost guide. When you want to add a kitchen or fire feature under the cover, that's where outdoor living comes in.

Choosing the Right Structure

How much cover you want — filtered shade, full weather protection, or a bug-free room — points to a different structure. Here is how they compare.

StructureSunRainBugs
Open PergolaFiltered shadeNo coverNo barrier
Louvered PergolaAdjustableCloses against light rainNo barrier
Covered Deck (solid roof)Full shadeFull coverNo barrier
Screened PorchFull shadeFull coverSealed out

Built to Carry the Load and Tie Into the Home

A cover is heavier and more involved than the deck beneath it. It adds roof load, usually attaches to the house, and has to shed KC's heavy rains without dumping water where it doesn't belong. We build it to last.

  • Posts set on footings below the frost line and sized for expansive clay, so the added roof load doesn't heave or settle.
  • Roofline integration and flashing where the cover meets the house, keeping water out of the wall.
  • Gutter and drainage tie-ins so runoff from the new roof is carried away from the foundation.
  • Cedar, composite, and low-maintenance materials chosen for our humidity and sun.
  • Wiring for ceiling fans, lighting, and outlets under cover — the difference between a shade structure and an outdoor room.
  • Engineering and permits handled for your Missouri or Kansas jurisdiction.

Covered Structures We Build

"Covered deck" covers a lot of ground in the metro — from a roof tied into the house to a freestanding pavilion out in the yard. The right one depends on where the structure sits, how much of the sky you want to keep, and whether you're sheltering an existing deck or patio or building fresh. These are the structures we build most across Kansas City.

  • Attached roof-over patios and decks — a solid roof that ties into the home's existing roofline and extends the shelter of the house out over the deck, so the covered space reads as part of the home rather than an add-on.
  • Freestanding pavilions — a self-supporting covered structure on its own posts and footings that can sit anywhere in the yard without touching the house, ideal when the deck is set away from the home or the roofline won't accommodate an attachment.
  • Open-top pergolas — rafters and slats that cast filtered shade and frame the space while leaving the sky open, a clean way to define a seating or dining area without a full roof.
  • Louvered pergolas — adjustable slats you can angle for more or less sun, or close against a passing KC shower, then reopen when the weather clears.
  • Screened enclosures — a covered structure wrapped in insect screen and sealed carefully at the seams and door, so you keep the metro's summer mosquitoes out while still living outside. This pairs naturally with a full outdoor room when you add a kitchen or fire feature through our outdoor living work.

Want the space wired for a kitchen, TV, or heaters under the roof? That crosses into outdoor living, and we plan the two together so the structure and the features it holds are designed as one project.

Sizing, Permits & Inspections in the KC Metro

A covered structure is more than a shade sail. It adds roof load and usually attaches to the house, so most metro jurisdictions treat it as permitted construction rather than a casual backyard project. Any electrical you run under the cover — ceiling fans, recessed lighting, outlets, or a heater circuit — typically brings its own permit and inspection on top of the structural one. Because the Kansas City area straddles a state line, the specifics are not uniform from one address to the next.

  • Requirements differ between Missouri and Kansas, and from one city or county to the next — a detached pavilion that's exempt in one jurisdiction can need a full permit right across the line.
  • Setback and lot-coverage rules govern how close the structure can sit to property lines and how much of the yard it can occupy, which can shape the footprint before design even starts.
  • Electrical work for fans, lighting, and outlets is generally permitted and inspected separately from the structure itself.
  • Structural review confirms the footings, posts, and the connection to the house are sized for the added roof load rather than assumed.

Rather than leaving that maze to you, we confirm the specific rules for your city and county, prepare the drawings, pull the permits, and schedule the inspections as part of the job. It's the difference between a structure that's built right and signed off, and one that becomes a problem the day you sell the home.

Decking & Structure Manufacturer Resources

The following government agencies, industry organizations, and official resources provide additional information relevant to your remodeling project.

Covered Decks & Pergolas Across the Kansas City Metro

We provide covered decks & pergolas to homeowners across the Kansas City metro on both sides of the state line. Each community has its own dedicated page with local permitting, climate, and project detail — and each metro hub covers the surrounding areas we also serve.

Ready to Start Your Remodeling Project?

Get a free, no-obligation estimate from Kansas City's remodeling and exterior specialists. Licensed, insured, and ready to build.