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Trex fencing installation · McKinney, TX

Trex Fencing Installation

Trex composite fencing creates a full-privacy surface without the staining cycle of wood. We plan the product system, posts, gates and transitions as one installation.

Composite fencing trades upkeep for upfront cost

Trex fencing is a deliberate material choice. It suits owners who value consistent privacy and lower finish maintenance enough to accept a higher initial investment.

01

Low-maintenance privacy

The interlocking board system creates a consistent screen without a recurring stain or seal schedule.

02

Finished on both sides

The fence presents a planned appearance from each side, which can help on shared or highly visible boundaries.

03

Long-term material planning

Composite makes the most sense when the ownership horizon and maintenance preference justify the initial cost.

Compare the scope

Treat Trex as a system, not a substitute board

Composite fencing uses coordinated posts, rails, boards and gate details. Mixing assumptions from wood-fence construction leads to weak comparisons.

01

Color and neighborhood fit

Select a finish that works with the home, adjacent fences and any HOA material or color restrictions.

02

Panel rhythm and grade

Changes in elevation affect how sections step and how the lower edge meets the yard.

03

Gate engineering

Composite gates need a supported frame and hardware appropriate for the size and daily use of the opening.

04

Transitions

Connections to masonry, wood, iron or existing boundaries should be shown in the scope before ordering material.

On-site estimate

What affects composite fence installation

Product availability is only one part of the job. Layout, removal and site access still shape labor and scheduling.

Compare total ownership, not only the installation price

Trex composite typically carries a higher upfront cost than a basic wood fence. Its value is the combination of full privacy, consistent appearance and reduced finish maintenance.

Wood remains the more flexible choice for custom profiles and lower initial cost. Ask for comparable scopes—height, gates, removal and site conditions—before deciding which material offers the better long-term fit.

Before you decide

Trex Fencing FAQs.

01 Does Trex fencing need staining?

No routine staining or sealing is part of the composite system. It still needs normal cleaning and inspection, particularly around gates and areas with soil or irrigation contact.

02 Is Trex fencing always more expensive than wood?

It commonly has a higher initial material cost. The exact difference depends on height, layout, gates, removal and the wood specification being compared.

03 Can Trex fencing follow a sloped yard?

It can be planned across changing grade, usually through stepped sections. The site visit determines the section rhythm and lower-edge gaps.

04 Are you affiliated with Trex Company?

No. McKinney Fence is not affiliated with or endorsed by Trex Company, Inc. Trex product names are used to identify the requested fencing material.

Related fence work

Compare another option.

01

Wood Fence

Privacy, board-on-board and decorative wood fences planned around your lot, style and upkeep goals.

Explore wood fence

02

Iron Fence

Open-view ornamental iron fencing for entries, yards, pools and commercial perimeters.

Explore iron fence

03

Chain Link

Practical residential and commercial enclosures with galvanized, coated and privacy options.

Explore chain link

Free estimate

Plan your trex fencing scope.

Send the property type, approximate fence line and the result you want. We’ll confirm the details needed for a free estimate.

Get a quick quote