Metal vs Wood Garden Trellis: Which Should You Buy?
By The DIYPicks Team ยท Updated July 2026
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Amagabeli 71" x 21" Metal Grid Panel Trellis (2-Pack)
A tall, rustproof metal grid panel that is the low-cost workhorse for training roses, clematis and edible vines up a wall or fence line.
| Type | Metal grid panel trellis (spiked, freestanding or wall-leaning) |
|---|---|
| Material | Powder-coated welded iron/steel |
| Height | 71 in (21 in wide) |
| Install | Push spiked legs into soil; no tools |
| Best for | Climbing roses, clematis, cucumbers & tall vines |
Greenes Fence CritterGuard Cedar Trellis 46.5" (2-Pack)
An affordable natural-cedar lattice trellis built for raised beds and edibles, trading long-term durability for looks and food-safe simplicity.
| Type | Wood lattice/fan trellis (raised-bed friendly) |
|---|---|
| Material | Natural North American cedar |
| Height | 46.5 in (39.5 in above soil after 7 in stakes) |
| Install | Push stakes into soft soil; fits 2 ft beds |
| Best for | Cucumbers, peas & light vines in raised beds |
Our verdict
Buy the powder-coated metal panel if you are growing heavy woody climbers like roses or grapes, want maximum height, and value a trellis that lasts a decade without maintenance. Choose the natural cedar lattice if you are training lighter peas and cucumbers in a raised bed and want a warm, food-safe look right beside edibles. Metal wins on strength and lifespan; cedar wins on appearance and cost but will gray and rot over a few seasons. For most edible gardeners the cedar is enough, while rose growers should size up to metal.