How to Build a Covered Batting Cage Structure for Under $25,000
A covered batting cage is the single upgrade that separates a good backyard setup from a great one. It extends your usable season to year-round. It protects your netting and equipment from UV and weather damage. And on CageList it unlocks a significantly higher hourly rate and a much larger pool of potential renters — including teams and coaches who will not book an uncovered cage.
The good news: you do not need to spend $60,000 to get there. Here is how to build a legitimate covered batting cage structure for under $25,000.
See how a covered structure fits into the complete $40K dream cage build
Why a Covered Structure Changes the Game
An uncovered cage is weather-dependent. Rain, wind, and direct summer sun in Florida or Texas make an uncovered cage unusable for significant portions of the year. For a rental cage that means lost bookings, frustrated renters, and a listing that sits idle during exactly the seasons when demand is highest.
A covered structure solves all of that. It also signals to renters — especially coaches and teams — that you have made a real investment in your setup. That signal alone commands higher rates and attracts higher-quality, longer-term booking relationships.
See how coaches and teams specifically look for covered cages on CageList
The Three Best Structure Options Under $25,000
Steel Carport or Building Kit — $8,000–$18,000
Pre-engineered steel building kits from brands like VersaTube, SteelMaster, and Arrow are the most popular option for covered batting cage builds. They are designed for DIY assembly, ship directly to your property, and require no special equipment to install beyond basic hand tools and a few helpers.
What you get: galvanized steel frame, roof panels, and end wall options. Sizes from 12x20 up to 20x100+ feet. For a single tunnel you want minimum 14 wide x 70 long x 12 tall. For a two-tunnel setup go 20 wide x 70 long x 14 tall.
DIY assembly time: 2–4 days for one tunnel, 4–7 days for two tunnels with a crew of 3–4 people.
Total with concrete anchoring and basic setup: $12,000–$20,000 for a single-tunnel structure.
Pole Barn Structure — $12,000–$22,000
A pole barn is the traditional agricultural building style — vertical posts set in concrete with a metal roof and optional side walls. Contractors who build pole barns are common in rural and suburban markets and the construction is fast and durable.
Advantages over a steel kit: easier to customize dimensions, handles wind and snow loads better in high-weather markets, more options for side wall configurations.
Disadvantages: requires a contractor rather than DIY, slightly higher cost, longer lead time.
Total installed for a single-tunnel pole barn structure: $15,000–$22,000 depending on market and specifications.
Shade Structure or Open-Sided Carport — $5,000–$12,000
For markets with mild weather — Florida, Arizona, Southern California — an open-sided carport or shade structure is a legitimate covered option at significantly lower cost. No walls means better airflow in heat, lower material cost, and faster installation.
This option does not work for northern markets with rain and wind. But for a Florida cage owner running bookings October through June it is a practical and cost-effective solution.
Total installed: $6,000–$12,000 for a quality carport-style structure over a single tunnel.
Why CageList exists — and why distributed backyard infrastructure is the future of baseball training
What to Budget Beyond the Structure
The structure itself is only part of the project. Budget for these additional costs to arrive at your true all-in number.
Concrete anchoring or foundation work: $1,500–$4,000 depending on soil conditions and local requirements. Most steel kit structures require concrete footings or a slab at anchor points.
Permits: $300–$1,500 depending on municipality. Check your local zoning before purchasing — most residential areas allow accessory structures under a certain square footage without a permit.
Electrical for lighting: $500–$1,200 for a licensed electrician to run a dedicated circuit to the structure.
Site prep and grading: $500–$2,000 if your ground is uneven or requires drainage work.
Run the ROI calculator to see how fast a covered structure pays for itself in additional bookings
The Return on Investment
Here is why the covered structure math works in your favor.
An uncovered cage on CageList in a typical suburban market commands $25–$40 per hour. A covered cage with a machine commands $50–$80 per hour. The upgrade alone — call it a $15,000 covered structure investment — generates an additional $25–$40 per hour in rental rate.
At 20 hours of weekly bookings that additional rate generates $26,000–$41,600 per year in incremental revenue. The structure pays for itself in 4–7 months of operation.
This is why the covered structure is the highest-ROI upgrade available to a CageList host. Not the pitching machine. Not the turf. The structure — because it unlocks year-round operation and premium pricing simultaneously.
The Bottom Line
A covered batting cage structure under $25,000 is achievable with a steel building kit or pole barn and basic site prep. It is the single upgrade that most dramatically increases your cage's earning potential on CageList.
Build it right, list it, and let the bookings pay for it.
List your cage free at cagelist.com and see what a covered setup earns in your market.
Need help building your covered structure? Find vetted batting cage builders in your area who specialize in covered cage construction — from carport kits to full pole barns.
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