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Pergola Attached to House: What to Know Before You Buy

Pergola Attached to House: What to Know Before You Buy

Key Takeaways

  • An attached pergola connects to your house on one side, creating a more integrated outdoor living area than a freestanding structure.
  • Attached pergolas can work with 2, 3, 4, or 6 posts, depending on the size, projection, style, and roof type you choose.
  • Slatted attached pergolas provide shade, not rain protection; choose a solid polycarbonate patio cover if you want a rainproof outdoor space.
  • The biggest pre-purchase questions are attachment point, footings, roof type, post layout, permits, and HOA rules.
  • Traditional and modern attached pergolas create very different looks, so the best choice depends on your home’s architecture and patio layout.

A pergola attached to house walls can turn a plain patio, deck, or backyard seating area into a more comfortable and finished outdoor living space. Because one side connects to the home, an attached pergola often feels like a natural extension of the house rather than a separate structure placed in the yard.

This guide explains what an attached pergola is, when it makes sense, how post layouts work, which roof type to choose, and what homeowners should consider before ordering.

What Is a Pergola Attached to a House?

Pergola Attached to a house over a back patio

A pergola attached to a house is an outdoor structure that connects to the home or another permanent structure on one side. Instead of standing independently on posts on all sides, an attached pergola typically uses the house-side connection for support and posts on the outer edge of the patio or deck.

How an attached pergola is different from a freestanding pergola

A freestanding pergola stands on its own and can be placed away from the house, near a pool, in a garden, or over a detached seating area. An attached pergola is designed to extend directly from the home, which makes it especially useful for patios, decks, outdoor kitchens, and back-of-house entertaining areas.

Why homeowners choose attached pergolas for patios and decks

Many homeowners choose attached pergolas because they create a more seamless transition between indoor and outdoor living. They can also reduce the number of posts near the house, which helps keep the patio more open for furniture, walking paths, and views.


When Is an Attached Pergola Better Than a Freestanding Pergola?

An attached pergola is often the better choice when the area you want to cover is directly beside the home. If your patio, deck, or outdoor kitchen sits right outside a back door, attaching the pergola to the house can make the space feel more intentional and easier to use.

Attached pergolas work well for back patios

If your main outdoor living area is a concrete patio, paver patio, or deck immediately behind the house, an attached pergola usually makes more sense than placing a freestanding structure a few feet away. It helps define the patio as an extension of the home.

Attached pergolas can preserve a cleaner furniture layout

Because attached designs can use fewer posts near the house, they can make it easier to place dining tables, lounge furniture, grills, and walkways. This is especially helpful on patios where every foot of usable space matters.

Freestanding pergolas are better for detached outdoor areas

A freestanding pergola may be better if your seating area is away from the home, near a pool, in a garden, or in a detached outdoor kitchen zone. In those cases, compare attached options with freestanding pergolas before deciding.

How Many Posts Does an Attached Pergola Need?

Attached pergolas can be built with different post layouts depending on the size, style, roof type, and projection from the house. The right number of posts is not just a visual choice; it also affects span, support, traffic flow, and how open the patio feels.

Post Layout Best For Typical Benefit
2 posts Smaller or medium attached layouts Cleanest open patio feel
3 posts Wider attached spans More support across the house-facing width
4 posts Deeper projections from the house Supports larger out-from-house layouts
6 posts Large attached pergola layouts Supports both wider and deeper coverage areas

Two-post attached pergolas create the most open patio feel

A 2-post attached pergola is popular because it keeps the patio visually open. It is often the best choice when you want shade over a dining table, lounge set, or outdoor kitchen without adding extra posts near the house.

For homeowners focused on a cleaner layout, two-post pergolas are often the first category to compare.


Larger attached pergolas may need 3, 4, or 6 posts

As the pergola gets wider or projects farther out from the house, additional posts may be needed. Traditional attached pergolas can scale to larger layouts, while modern attached pergolas use a more squared-off design with posts in the corners.

Should You Choose a Slatted Attached Pergola or a Rainproof Patio Cover?

The roof type is one of the most important decisions when buying a house attached pergola. Sunset Pergola Kits offers two main roof categories: slatted shade pergolas and solid polycarbonate patio covers.

A large white pergola attached to the back of a house over a patio

Slatted attached pergolas are for shade and airflow

Slatted pergolas use fixed angled shade purlins. They are designed to provide shade and visual structure while still keeping an open-air feel, but they are not rainproof.

Available shade coverage options include 50%, 75%, and 90%, depending on purlin spacing. If your main goal is shade, airflow, and a classic pergola look, browse pergolas with slatted roofs.

Rainproof patio covers are for covered outdoor living

If you want rain protection, choose a solid polycarbonate patio cover instead of a slatted pergola. These attached patio covers use a solid roof and are designed for homeowners who want a more covered outdoor living space.

For a patio that needs more weather coverage, a drier seating area, and 100% UV protection from the roof panels, rainproof patio covers are the more appropriate option.

 

Which Attached Pergola Style Fits Your Home Best?

Attached pergolas can look traditional, modern, or somewhere in between depending on the structure, post style, overhangs, and end caps. The best style is usually the one that looks like it belongs with the home rather than something added as an afterthought.

Traditional attached pergolas offer more decorative detail

Pergola that attaches to the back of a house

Traditional pergolas can include beam and rafter overhangs, decorative end caps, inset post placement, and multiple post style options. They work well with classic homes, traditional patios, and landscapes where a more detailed structure feels appropriate.

Modern attached pergolas create a cleaner architectural look

Modern attached pergolas use square, flush corners with no beam or rafter overhangs. Posts are placed in the corners, creating a cleaner contemporary look that pairs well with modern homes, simple rooflines, and minimalist backyard designs.

Vinyl exterior with aluminum-reinforced structural components

Sunset Pergola Kits use aluminum-reinforced structural components with a premium extruded vinyl exterior. That means the structure is designed for strength while the visible exterior remains low-maintenance and does not require painting or staining.

How to Think About Attached Pergola Size and Projection

For attached pergolas, size is usually described in two directions: the width along the house and the projection out from the house. Understanding both dimensions will help you choose a pergola that fits the patio instead of overpowering it.

Width along the house determines how much wall or patio area is covered

The attached width determines how much of the patio, wall, door area, or window area the pergola spans. Wider attached pergolas may require additional posts depending on the product type and layout.

Projection from the house determines how deep the covered area feels

The projection determines how far the pergola extends into the patio or yard. A deeper projection can cover more furniture, but it also affects post layout, shade coverage, and overall scale.

Match the pergola size to the way you actually use the patio

Before choosing a size, map the actual patio use: dining table, lounge chairs, grill, walkway, doors, stairs, and traffic flow. A pergola should frame the outdoor living area without making the space feel crowded.

What Should Homeowners Check Before Installing an Attached Pergola?

Before ordering an attached pergola, confirm the practical details that affect fit, installation, and long-term performance. These checks are especially important because the pergola interacts directly with the house.

Confirm the house attachment point

Picture of a tan vinyl traditional pergola with overhangs mounted to the outside wall of a home, with an outdoor patio table and chairs underneath the pergola

Confirm that the intended wall area can support the attachment method. Siding, fascia, brick, stucco, rooflines, windows, doors, and trim can all affect placement.

Review footings, anchoring, and surface conditions

Attached pergolas still need proper support on the post side. Depending on your patio or deck, that may involve footings, anchoring, or contractor review.

Check permits, HOA rules, and local code requirements

Requirements vary by location. Before installation, check local building rules, HOA guidelines, setback requirements, and any engineering or permit requirements that may apply.

Consider wind exposure before choosing options

If your area experiences high winds, consider whether hurricane brackets are appropriate for eligible traditional pergolas or patio covers. Modern pergolas do not offer hurricane brackets.

Final Thoughts: Is an Attached Pergola Right for Your Home?

A pergola attached to house walls can be an excellent choice when you want a permanent, integrated outdoor structure over a patio, deck, or backyard living area. Choose a slatted attached pergola if shade is your main goal, or choose a rainproof patio cover if you want a solid roof.

If you are comparing layouts, start with the full collection of attached pergolas and narrow from there by size, style, post layout, and roof type.