Fence & deck restoration in Yuma.
Wash, sand, repair the rot, then seal, stain or paint — for a fraction of replacement. We fix what's failing instead of slapping color over it. Wood fences, gates, decks, ramadas and block walls. Custom quotes, no surprise invoices.

Restore it now, or replace it later.
Yuma's sun and dryness are hard on wood. Fences and decks go silver-gray, splinter, and dry-rot at the posts and rails long before the structure is actually finished. Most people assume that means replacement — and a contractor quoting a tear-out is happy to let them. Usually it doesn't. Caught in time, the same fence can be restored for a fraction of the cost and bought several more good years.
The honest part matters here, because the wrong move is to paint or stain over rot and hide it. Brennan's does it in the right order: wash off the gray and grime, sand back to sound wood, repair or replace the genuinely rotted boards, posts and rails, then seal, stain or paint with a desert-grade finish that handles the UV. The fence ends up structurally sound and looking new, not just camouflaged.
Wood fences, gates, decks, pergolas and ramadas are all in scope, and Chris paints tired block and masonry walls too. Because every fence is a different size and condition, these are custom-quoted on site — and if it genuinely is past saving, Chris will tell you that instead of taking your money to restore something that needs replacing.
Done in the right order.
🚿 Wash & strip
Pressure-wash off the gray weathering, grime and old flaking finish to reveal the real wood.
🪚 Sand back to sound
Sanded smooth to remove splinters and oxidation and give the new finish something to grip.
🔨 Repair the rot
Rotted or cracked boards, posts, rails and pickets repaired or replaced — not painted over.
🎨 Seal, stain or paint
Your choice of a desert-grade sealer, semi-transparent stain, or solid paint built for UV.
🚪 Gates & hardware
Sagging gates re-squared, hinges and latches sorted so they actually close.
🧱 Block walls too
Tired perimeter block and masonry walls cleaned and repainted to match.
Three steps. No runaround.
Chris answers.
Describe the fence or deck and its condition. He sets a time to come assess it in person.
Restore or replace.
He tells you straight whether it's worth restoring, then gives a firm custom quote. No upsell to replace what's fine.
Sound and looking new.
Washed, repaired, finished and cleaned up — years added back to the wood.
What restoration runs in Yuma.
Every fence and deck is different, so these are quoted on-site — but here's the ballpark. The firm number is what you approve before any work.
Fence & deck
No surprise invoicesBefore you book.
It's custom because every fence differs, but small sections and gates start around $180, an average backyard fence runs $300–$500, and full perimeters or decks $500 and up. Rot and board replacement add materials. Chris quotes it firm on-site — no surprise invoices.
Almost always, if it's caught in time. Restoration is typically a fraction of replacement cost and buys several more good years. If a fence is genuinely past saving, Chris will tell you that honestly rather than restore something that needs to come down.
No — that's exactly the wrong move. Brennan's repairs or replaces rotted boards, posts and rails first, then finishes. Painting over rot hides a problem that keeps spreading; doing it in order is the whole point.
Both can work with the right product. Solid paint and quality semi-transparent stains made for UV both hold up; the better predictor of longevity is the prep underneath. Chris will recommend based on your wood and the look you want.
Yes — decks, pergolas, ramadas, gates and wood patio covers are all in scope, plus repainting tired block walls to match. If it's wood and it's weathered, Chris can usually bring it back.
Bring the wood back to life.
Free on-site assessment — and a straight answer on whether to restore or replace. Call (928) 446-0252.