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Aluminum vs. Wrought Iron: the SoCal Verdict

Aluminum and wrought iron look alike — they don't age alike. Rust, cost, maintenance, coastal performance and lifespan compared for LA & Orange County homes (2026).

Updated July 2026By SoCal Fence Pros

They look like siblings from the street — dark metal pickets, clean lines, classic curb appeal. But aluminum and wrought iron age completely differently in Southern California, and the difference is measured in rust, weekends, and money. Here's the honest comparison we give homeowners every week.

Side-by-side comparison

FactorAluminumWrought iron / steel
RustCannot rustWill rust without upkeep
MaintenanceRinse with a hoseSand, prime & repaint every 2–5 yrs
Coastal & pool fitExcellent — salt & splash proofPoor near salt air
StrengthStrong for residential useStrongest — security grade
Upfront cost / lf$180–$200$100–$250 by design
Lifetime costLow — no refinishingHigh — decades of repainting
Lifespan30+ years30+ years if maintained

The rust math

Iron oxidizes — that's chemistry, not craftsmanship. Within a mile or two of the coast (Long Beach, Huntington Beach, Torrance, Costa Mesa), unmaintained iron shows rust bloom in a couple of seasons. Powder-coated aluminum simply has no iron to oxidize: scratch it and it still won't corrode. That's why nearly every pool enclosure and coastal fence we install is aluminum.

Where iron (really, steel) still wins

Raw strength. For anti-climb security perimeters and grand automated driveway gates that take daily vehicle-adjacent abuse, modern galvanized, powder-coated steel — today's practical version of "wrought iron" — is the right spec. It costs more and wants a bit of care, but nothing matches its rigidity.

Still torn between the two?

Send us a photo of your fence line and we'll tell you straight which material fits your block, your budget, and your salt-air exposure — free.

Our verdict for LA & Orange County

For roughly nine out of ten residential projects — front yards, pools, hillsides, HOA communities — aluminum wins: the iron look, none of the iron labor, and a lower lifetime bill. Go steel when security or a monumental gate is the mission.

Related reading: Aluminum fence installation · Steel fences & gates · 2026 fence cost guide

Good to know

Frequently asked questions

Does aluminum fencing look cheaper than wrought iron?

From the curb, quality powder-coated aluminum is nearly indistinguishable from iron — same pickets, finials, and profiles. Iron only reads differently up close in heavy ornamental scrollwork, which most modern SoCal homes skip anyway.

How long does each material last?

Aluminum routinely lasts 30+ years with nothing but an occasional rinse. Iron can last as long structurally, but only with sanding, priming, and repainting every few years — skip the upkeep and rust takes over, fast near the coast.

If they're priced so similarly, why choose one over the other?

Exactly the right question — both sit in the premium tier (aluminum around $180–$200 per linear foot, steel $100–$250 by design), so it's mostly a performance-and-look decision. Modern slat systems, pools, and coastal homes favor aluminum; maximum-security perimeters and monumental estate gates favor steel.

When is iron or steel actually the better choice?

When maximum impact strength matters — high-security perimeters, large estate driveway gates, or commercial settings. For those we typically spec galvanized, powder-coated steel rather than traditional wrought iron.

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