Fire-Resistant Deck Building in Medford, Oregon
Wildfire Changed How Rogue Valley Homeowners Think About Property
In September 2020, the Almeda Fire moved north through Talent and Phoenix and destroyed more than 2,500 homes — the most destructive single fire in Oregon history. It stopped just short of Medford. Every homeowner here remembers it.
The aftermath is now financial. Insurers have raised premiums, tightened underwriting, and in some cases declined to renew policies across Southern Oregon, with Jackson County among the areas of highest concern. Oregon home insurance premiums have climbed more than 27% since 2020. Homeowners who can document fire-resistant construction and defensible space are in a stronger position with their carrier than those who can’t.
Your deck is part of that picture. An attached deck is a direct path for embers and flame to reach the house. The materials it’s built from, and how the area beneath it is detailed, affect both how the home performs in a fire and how an insurer views the property.
2,500+
Homes lost in Almeda Fire
Phoenix & Talent, Sept 2020
27%+
Rise in OR home insurance premiums
Since 2020, Consumer Federation of America
90%
Of structure ignitions from embers
Not direct flame contact
#1
Jackson County among highest-concern areas
For insurer underwriting scrutiny
Why Decking Material Matters for Wildfire
Not all decking performs the same in a wildfire. Traditional wood decking ignites readily, and untreated softwood offers no resistance to embers landing on the surface or collecting in gaps between boards. That’s the failure point: embers, not a wall of flame, start most structure fires.
Capped composite and mineral-based decking resist ignition far better than bare wood. The products that matter for fire performance are the ones a manufacturer has tested and listed as passing the two deck-specific wildfire tests — ASTM E2632 and ASTM E2726. A board that passes those is treated as a compliant walking surface under Oregon’s wildfire code, which is the same standard a hazard-zone build would have to meet. Major brands publish which of their products carry that listing.
The area under the deck matters as much as the surface. Embers collect in that cavity. Boxing in the underside with noncombustible material or fine metal mesh, and keeping firewood and other fuel out of it, removes one of the most common ignition points on an attached deck.
Luxury Decks of Southern Oregon selects materials with fire performance in mind and details the under-deck space to reduce ember accumulation — on every project, not just those in mapped hazard zones.
Building for Medford's Climate
Medford sits around 1,380 feet on the Rogue Valley floor, and the climate is harder on a deck than people expect. Summers are hot and dry with intense sun and regular stretches above 100°F. Dark composite boards get hot enough to be uncomfortable barefoot, and south-facing surfaces fade faster — lighter colors and capped composites with honest UV warranties hold up better here.
Winters are wet, summers are bone dry, and that swing is what damages decks over time. Natural wood swells and shrinks through that cycle and starts to check and cup. Stainless or properly coated fasteners are worth the upcharge — cheaper fasteners bleed rust within a season or two in this climate.
Snow load is light on the valley floor, so framing isn’t driven by snow the way it is at elevation. Frost still matters. In Jackson County below 2,500 feet, frost depth is 12 inches, so footings have to be set below that line to avoid heaving over time.
The Compliance Reality for Medford Lots
Oregon made its wildfire-hardening code (R327) locally adopted rather than statewide in 2025 (SB 83). Whether fire-resistant decking is code-required on your lot depends on whether your jurisdiction has adopted R327 and whether your specific parcel has been mapped into a hazard zone.
Most in-town Medford lots are not currently under a mandate. Foothill and rural-edge properties may be. If you’re not sure, confirm your parcel’s status with Medford Building Safety or Jackson County Development Services before assuming either way.
The practical reality: even where it’s not required, fire-resistant construction is increasingly a financial advantage. Carriers reward it. Future code adoption may require it. And the Rogue Valley fire history makes it a rational choice regardless of what the current rule says about your address.
Luxury Decks of Southern Oregon builds to the standard a hazard-zone project would require — on every Medford job. You get the protection whether or not your lot is mapped.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I have to use fire-resistant decking in Medford?
It depends on your lot. Oregon made its wildfire-hardening code (R327) locally adopted rather than statewide in 2025, so whether it’s required depends on whether your jurisdiction has adopted it and mapped your parcel. Most in-town Medford lots aren’t under a mandate, but foothill and rural-edge lots may be. Confirm with Medford Building Safety or Jackson County.
Is composite decking actually more fire-resistant than wood?
Yes, when it’s the right product. Capped composite and mineral-based boards resist ignition far better than bare wood. The ones that matter for fire are tested and listed as passing ASTM E2632 and E2726, the two deck-specific wildfire tests. A board that passes those meets the same standard a wildfire-zone build requires.
Why does my homeowners insurance care about my deck?
An attached deck is a direct ignition path to the house. Since the 2020 Almeda Fire, Southern Oregon carriers have tightened underwriting and raised premiums, with Jackson County among the highest-concern areas. Homeowners who can document fire-resistant materials and defensible space are in a better position with their carrier.
What about the wood deck I already have?
You don’t have to tear it out, but you can reduce risk. Replacing the surface with a listed composite, boxing in the area underneath with noncombustible material or metal mesh, and keeping fuel out of that cavity all lower the ignition risk an insurer evaluates.
Does Medford get enough snow to affect my deck?
Not on the valley floor. Medford’s snow load is light, so framing isn’t snow-driven the way it is in the surrounding hills. Frost is the structural concern. Footings need to go below the 12-inch frost depth for Jackson County below 2,500 feet to prevent heaving.
What decking holds up best in Medford’s climate?
Capped composite in a lighter color handles the heat and intense summer sun better than dark boards or natural wood, which fade, check, and cup through the wet-winter, dry-summer swing. Pair it with stainless fasteners to prevent rust bleed within the first couple of seasons.
Looking for general deck building services in Medford? See our full Medford deck builder page.