Pole Barn & Post-Frame Builders in Nevada
TL;DR
There are 4 verified post-frame builders serving Nevada, with the most common specialties being Pole Barn, Post-Frame Garage, Farm Building. Average Google rating across rated builders: 4.7 / 5 (3 builders with reviews). Last updated June 2026.
Find qualified post-frame builders serving Nevada. Whether you need a pole barn, barndominium, horse barn, garage, or workshop, our directory helps you connect with experienced contractors in your area.
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4 builders serving Nevada
Cleary Building Corp
Fort Morgan, CO
Roper Buildings
Elko, NV
Tom Hoyle Construction Inc
Gardnerville, NV
Tom Hoyle Construction Inc is an NFBA-member post-frame builder based in Gardnerville Nevada. They serve Nevada.
Triple M Construction, Inc
Reno, NV
Post-frame construction in Nevada
Post-frame (sometimes called "pole barn") construction is the dominant building method for agricultural, storage, workshop, and rural-residential projects across Nevada. The system uses vertically embedded or bracketed laminated columns spaced 8 to 12 feet apart to carry roof loads directly to the ground, eliminating load-bearing interior walls and the need for a full perimeter foundation. That translates to faster construction, lower per-square-foot cost, and the clear-span interiors that make pole barns and barndominiums viable in the first place.
What Nevada's climate means for your build
Snow loads in the mountain West are among the highest in the country, which raises the bar on truss spec and roof pitch. Post-frame handles it well when designed correctly — clear-span trusses engineered for 70-plus psf snow loads are common in higher elevations, and reputable local builders will size them based on county snow-load maps rather than generic defaults.
What gets built
The most common project types among the 4 builders listed here are Pole Barn, Post-Frame Garage, and Farm Building, though most of them take on a mix — pole barns for equipment and livestock, barndominiums that combine living space with workshop square footage, horse barns with proper stall sizing and ventilation, detached garages with the tall door heights conventional framing can't match economically, and general-purpose workshops for automotive, woodworking, or hobbyist use. If you're early in the planning process, the builders below are the starting point for getting real pricing and timelines for your site.
Frequently asked questions
How much does a pole barn cost in Nevada?
Pole barn pricing in Nevada typically runs $25 to $50 per square foot for a basic enclosed structure, with most finished builds landing between $30 and $45 per square foot depending on size, door count, wall height, insulation, and concrete slab. A typical 30×40 (1,200 sq ft) enclosed pole barn in Nevada will generally fall in the $35,000 to $55,000 range turnkey. Barndominium builds with full interior finishes cost more — usually $100 to $180 per square foot. Get written quotes from at least three builders; prices in post-frame swing meaningfully on door openings, concrete, and site prep.
Do I need a permit to build a pole barn in Nevada?
In most Nevada counties, yes — a building permit is required for any post-frame structure above a small square-footage threshold (usually 200 sq ft for residential, sometimes lower for habitable or electrified buildings). Agricultural exemptions exist in many jurisdictions but are narrow and easily misunderstood. Your Nevada county building department is the authority for your specific parcel, and any reputable builder on this page will either pull permits on your behalf or tell you exactly what you need to pull yourself before construction starts.
How long does it take to build a pole barn in Nevada?
Typical build time for a pole barn in Nevada is 3 to 8 weeks from groundbreaking to substantial completion, assuming standard site conditions and no weather delays. Concrete cure time, door lead times, and truss fabrication queues are usually the bottlenecks — not the framing itself, which a crew of 3 to 4 can dry-in in under a week on a typical 30×40 to 40×60 building. Barndominium builds with interior finishes extend timelines to 4 to 6 months.
What's the best time of year to build in Nevada?
Late spring through early fall is the ideal window in Nevada — post-frame crews can pour concrete, set columns, and frame in cold weather, but concrete cure times slow dramatically below 50°F and frozen ground makes column embedding harder. If you want a completed build by year-end, have contracts signed by February or March, because established Nevada builders book heavily for the summer season.
Can I live in a barndominium in Nevada?
Yes, barndominiums are a legal primary residence in Nevada, but the structure must meet the same residential building code requirements as any other dwelling — full permit, certificate of occupancy, proper insulation, egress, septic/sewer, and so on. Some Nevada counties have zoning restrictions that limit where you can put one (agricultural-only zones, subdivision covenants, minimum-acreage rules), so the zoning conversation with your county planning department should happen before the design conversation with your builder.
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