Patio Cushions And Accessories

Where to Buy Patio Blinds: Best Stores, Prices, Tips & Deals

Modern covered patio with different patio blinds (solar mesh, bamboo, PVC) partially lowered.

You can buy patio blinds at Home Depot, Lowe's, Walmart, Amazon, Wayfair, Costco, and specialty online retailers like Blinds.com, with local window-treatment shops and authorized dealers rounding out the options for custom or motorized installs. The best place depends on whether you want a quick off-the-shelf fix, a budget-friendly DIY roller shade, or a fully measured and installed custom setup. I've bought patio shades through several of these channels and the short version is: big-box stores win on convenience and price transparency, online marketplaces win on selection, and local or specialty dealers win when you want someone to handle everything from measurement to motor.

What this guide covers and who it's for

This guide is for anyone who has typed something like 'patio blinds near me' or 'outdoor roller shades' into a search bar and ended up drowning in options with no idea where to actually buy. If you need a quick answer on where to buy patio sun shades, see our guide on where to buy patio sun shades for channel-by-channel recommendations. Whether you're outfitting a covered patio, a pergola, or a screened-in porch, this article walks you through every realistic shopping channel, what you can actually expect to pay, and when each option makes sense. I'll cover big-box stores like Home Depot and Lowe's, online marketplaces like Amazon and Wayfair, warehouse clubs like Costco and Sam's Club, specialty dealers and brands like Hunter Douglas and Blinds.com, and local installers. I'll also explain the main types of patio blinds so you're not guessing at product listings, and I'll flag the best times of year to buy to get a deal.

Where to buy patio blinds: all the channels at a glance

Before diving into each channel in detail, here's a fast-reference breakdown of where patio blinds are sold and the rough experience you can expect at each.

ChannelBest ForTypical Price RangeInstall Option
Home DepotOff-the-shelf + pro install matching$30–$300+Yes, via authorized local installers
Lowe'sIn-home measurement + bundled install$30–$400+Yes, scheduled in-home service
WalmartBudget outdoor roller/bamboo shades$15–$80DIY only
Big LotsClearance deals on basic blinds$10–$60DIY only
AmazonWidest selection, fast shipping$20–$250+DIY; some third-party install listings
WayfairMid-range to high-end outdoor shades$40–$500+DIY; white-glove delivery on larger items
Costco (seasonal)Value bulk/oversized shades when available$80–$250DIY
Sam's ClubBudget to mid-range, members only$30–$150DIY
Blinds.comCustom cut-to-size, nationwide installer network$50–$600+Yes, vetted installer network
Local showrooms/dealersCustom motorized or specialty installs$200–$1,500+Full-service measurement and install

Big-box stores: Home Depot, Lowe's, Walmart, and Big Lots

Home Depot

Home Depot is probably the first place most people walk into when they want patio blinds, and it earns that instinct. In-store you'll find a solid mix of exterior solar shades, bamboo roll-up blinds, and PVC-strip curtains in standard widths, generally priced from around $30 for a basic roller shade up to $250 or more for wider solar shades. What really separates Home Depot from the others is its Outdoor Shade Installation service: you enter your ZIP code on their site and get connected to local authorized installers who can handle measurement, fabrication, delivery, and install. Their published measurement guide recommends at least a 2.25-inch overlap per side for roller and solar shades on outside mounts, which is worth knowing before you order anything. If you're going motorized or dealing with an awkward pergola opening, their licensed and insured installer network takes the guesswork out of it. The downside is that custom or made-to-order items through Home Depot's service can take a few weeks, and in-store staff knowledge on outdoor shades varies by location.

Lowe's

Lowe's competes directly with Home Depot in this category and has a few edges worth knowing about. They offer an in-home measurement service that you can schedule online, and they've run promotions that include free or discounted professional measurement when you buy installation through them. Lowe's also publishes step-by-step printable measurement PDFs that walk you through inside versus outside mount tolerances, which is genuinely useful if you're a first-timer. Their in-store selection is comparable to Home Depot, and pricing is similarly competitive, though specific SKU availability varies by region. If you're the type who wants a single vendor to handle the whole job from measuring to hanging, Lowe's Window Treatment Installation service is worth a look, especially when the promotional bundle discounts are running.

Walmart

Walmart is the budget play. You'll find outdoor roller shades, bamboo blinds, and basic vinyl options at prices that often undercut everyone else, typically $15 to $80 for standard sizes. Walmart.com has a broader online selection than what's in-store, and you can ship to store for free. Don't expect custom sizing or installation services here, it's strictly off-the-shelf DIY. For a basic covered-porch setup where the openings are a standard size, Walmart can save you real money. Just check the product dimensions carefully because listings sometimes show measurements in unusual formats.

Big Lots

Big Lots works best as a clearance-hunting destination. Their regular inventory of patio blinds is limited, but end-of-season markdowns, especially from late August through October, can bring prices down to $10 to $40 on basic bamboo or roll-up shades. If you have flexibility on timing and just need a simple seasonal shade, it's worth checking Big Lots in late summer. Don't count on finding specific sizes or styles on any given visit, though.

Online marketplaces: Amazon, Wayfair, Overstock, and Etsy

Amazon

Amazon has the largest raw selection of patio blinds available anywhere, with hundreds of listings spanning solar mesh shades, outdoor bamboo rolls, PVC strip curtains, and motorized roller shades. Prices range from under $25 for basic roll-up bamboo to well over $200 for wider solar shades with UV-rated fabrics. The biggest advantage is Prime shipping, in many cases you can get a shade in two days, which is hard to beat. The catch is that quality varies significantly between sellers. Look for listings with at least a few hundred reviews, pay attention to the actual fabric openness factor (listed as a percentage on solar shades), and read the return policy before buying custom-sized items. Returns on standard-size shades are generally easy, but some sellers treat oversized items as non-returnable.

Wayfair

Wayfair is where I'd send someone who wants more than Walmart quality but isn't ready to commit to a local showroom. Their outdoor blind and shade category is extensive, covering solar shades, outdoor roller shades, and retractable awning-style products from brands like SunSetter (which lists fabric warranties of up to five years on some models). Prices on Wayfair typically run $40 to $500 or more, and they run sitewide sales fairly often, especially around Memorial Day, Labor Day, and Way Day in late April. White-glove delivery is available on larger items. Returns can be complicated on big or custom items, so read the product-specific return window before ordering.

Overstock and Etsy

Overstock (now Bed Bath & Beyond's online platform) occasionally has competitive pricing on outdoor roller and bamboo shades, particularly on clearance. Etsy is a different story: it's the right place if you want handmade bamboo or woven grass blinds in custom sizes, and some small-shop sellers offer genuinely good craftsmanship at prices that beat big-brand custom options. Lead times on Etsy vary widely, so check each shop's processing time before ordering if you need something by a specific date.

Warehouse clubs: Costco and Sam's Club

If you're a Costco or Sam's Club member, it's worth checking their outdoor shade inventory before going anywhere else, but timing matters a lot here. Both clubs carry seasonal patio items, and patio blinds or outdoor roller shades show up in spring (typically March through June) and sometimes again in late summer. Costco has listed products like the Yardistry Outdoor Roller Shade on Costco.com and in-warehouse, priced generally in the $80 to $250 range for quality that competes with mid-tier specialty options. Sam's Club carries similar products at comparable prices.

The reason warehouse clubs can be a great deal isn't just the price, it's the return policy. Costco's 100% satisfaction guarantee means you can return most merchandise at any time if you're not happy, with no time limit on most items. blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Sam's Club has a similar satisfaction guarantee with some category exceptions. That kind of backstop makes it easier to take a chance on an outdoor shade you haven't seen in person. The downside: once a seasonal SKU sells out, it's gone until next year, and you can't custom-order specific sizes.

Specialty retailers and branded dealers

If you want a custom-fitted outdoor blind, particularly one that's motorized, zippered, or made for a specific architectural opening, specialty retailers and authorized brand dealers are where it gets done right. Brands like Hunter Douglas, Bali, and Smith & Noble sell through authorized local showrooms and dealer networks. These channels typically involve an in-home or on-site consultation, professional measurement, and full installation. Custom lead times from measurement to installation run about four to six weeks for motorized or fabricated shades, which is consistent with what local Hunter Douglas dealers quote.

Blinds.com is the largest direct-to-consumer specialty option online. Most of their products carry a standard three-year warranty, and they offer a SureFit guarantee that covers remakes or exchanges if you measured incorrectly (limits apply). Blinds.com documents brand-specific pledge/policies (for example, an archived Levolor pledge) and advertises remakes/exchange protections on select products; custom products and motorization have specific warranty/return terms Blinds.com documents brand-specific pledges like the Levolor pledge. They also have a nationwide vetted installer network, so you can buy online and still get professional installation. Their Trustpilot reviews are mixed: plenty of satisfied customers who appreciate the service, alongside complaints about shipping delays and measurement errors, so their remake guarantee matters. For motorized custom shades, Blinds.com sits in a useful middle ground between DIY-online and full local-showroom pricing.

Local window-treatment shops and installers

Local shops and independent installers make the most sense when you have a complex patio setup: uneven openings, a pergola with non-standard spacing, or motorization that needs to be wired properly. Many local businesses combine product sales and installation into a single service, so you're paying for one person who handles everything. According to Angi's 2026 cost data, typical installation labor runs $15 to $50 per window or opening, with a combined materials-plus-labor cost of about $55 to $170 per opening for standard installs. More complex or motorized setups will run higher.

To find local installers, Angi and similar platforms let you enter your ZIP and get matched to vetted pros with regional pricing examples. Home Depot's installer-matching tool is another option. When you contact a local shop, ask specifically whether they carry outdoor-rated fabrics (UV-stabilized, mildew-resistant) versus interior-only products, because some smaller shops are primarily interior window-treatment dealers who carry limited true outdoor inventory. If you need help finding where to buy aluminum patio cover, check local dealers and national retailers that sell and install aluminum patio covers for comparisons on price and installation options. If you're shopping for related items like patio awnings or aluminum patio covers, local installers who handle blinds often bundle or can refer you within the same trade.

Types of patio blinds and which one is right for your space

Knowing the product type before you start shopping saves a lot of frustrating back-and-forth. Here's a plain-English breakdown of the main categories and what each is best suited for.

Roller shades

Roller shades are the most versatile and widely available type. They operate on a spring or motorized tube mechanism and roll up out of the way when not in use. For patios, look for outdoor-rated roller shades made with UV-resistant and moisture-tolerant fabrics rather than standard interior roller materials. These work well on covered patios, pergolas, and carports. Motorized versions add convenience but also add cost and require either hardwiring or battery/solar-powered motors.

Solar and mesh shades

Solar shades use an open-weave mesh fabric that blocks UV rays and glare while maintaining an outward view. The key spec is the openness factor, expressed as a percentage: a 3% openness factor blocks more light and provides more privacy than a 10% openness factor. These are excellent for sunny west- or south-facing patios where you want to cut heat and glare without completely blocking the view. They're widely available at all the major retailers covered in this guide.

Bamboo and woven wood shades

Bamboo and woven grass roll-up blinds are the budget-friendly, natural-look option. They're everywhere at Walmart, Amazon, and Big Lots, and Etsy sellers offer custom sizes in natural materials. The trade-off is durability: standard bamboo blinds are not rated for heavy rain exposure and will deteriorate faster in wet climates than PVC or solar mesh. They're best on covered patios where they're sheltered from direct rain.

PVC and vinyl blinds

PVC strip curtains and solid vinyl roll-up blinds are the toughest option for outdoor use. They're fully waterproof, easy to wipe down, and hold up in wet or humid climates. PVC strip curtains specifically are a common choice for covered commercial patios and home outdoor kitchens. They don't look as refined as woven or solar fabrics, but nothing else beats them for pure weather resistance.

Panel track shades

Panel track systems use wide fabric panels that slide along a track, similar to sliding glass door treatments. They're a good fit for very wide patio openings or screened-porch entrances where a standard roller shade tube would sag. Panel track systems are more often a specialty or custom-order product, found through Blinds.com, local dealers, or Home Depot's custom ordering program.

Zippered and screen systems

Zippered outdoor screens use a side-channel zip track that locks the shade edge against a frame, preventing wind billowing and creating a near-sealed enclosure. These are the premium option for full patio enclosure, popular with restaurants and high-end residential pergola enclosures. They're almost exclusively a custom or specialty-install product: think local dealers, specialty outdoor-living contractors, or direct-to-consumer brands who ship and provide install support. Lead times and prices are highest in this category, but so is the functionality.

Blind TypeBest SettingTypical Price RangeWhere to Buy
Roller (outdoor-rated)Covered patio, pergola$40–$300+Home Depot, Lowe's, Amazon, Wayfair
Solar/MeshSunny patio, UV/glare control$50–$350+All major retailers, Blinds.com
Bamboo/WovenCovered patio, budget decor$15–$100Walmart, Amazon, Big Lots, Etsy
PVC/VinylWet/humid climates, kitchens$30–$200+Amazon, Home Depot, specialty suppliers
Panel TrackWide openings, screened porches$100–$600+Blinds.com, Home Depot custom, local dealers
Zippered ScreenFull enclosure, wind protection$300–$1,500+Local dealers, specialty contractors

When to buy for the best price

Patio blinds follow the same seasonal pricing cycle as most outdoor items. The best window for deals is late summer through early fall, roughly August through October, when retailers start clearing spring and summer outdoor inventory. Big Lots and Walmart typically mark down their outdoor shade stock significantly in this window. Wayfair runs its Way Day sale in late April each year, which covers outdoor shades, and major holiday weekends (Memorial Day, Labor Day, and Fourth of July) consistently bring sitewide discounts at Amazon and Wayfair of 20 to 40 percent on outdoor shade products.

For Costco and Sam's Club, the trick is to shop in late spring (April through early June) when seasonal patio inventory is on the floor. Once it's gone, it's gone. If you're buying custom from a local dealer or Blinds.com, pricing doesn't move as dramatically with seasons, but dealers occasionally run promotions around the same holiday windows. It's always worth asking a local showroom whether they have any current promotions before signing a custom order.

Measuring, installation, and what to watch for

Getting the measurement right is the single most common way a patio blind purchase goes wrong. For outside-mount roller or solar shades, Home Depot's published guidance recommends at least a 2.25-inch overlap per side beyond the opening, meaning you add at least 4.5 inches to your opening width for proper coverage. Measure width and height at multiple points since outdoor structures are rarely perfectly square. Measure to the nearest 1/8 inch when ordering custom sizes.

For installation labor, expect to pay roughly $15 to $50 per opening for a professional installer, or a combined materials-plus-labor cost of about $55 to $170 per opening for standard roller or solar shades, based on Angi's 2026 aggregated quote data. Complex installs involving motorization, zip tracks, or structural mounting will run considerably higher. If you're bundling patio blind installation with related projects like patio awnings or an aluminum patio cover, ask your installer about combining the work for a single mobilization cost.

On returns and warranties: Costco and Sam's Club's satisfaction guarantees are the most generous backstop for off-the-shelf items. Blinds.com's SureFit remake guarantee is valuable specifically for custom orders if you measure wrong. For branded specialty shades, check the fabric warranty separately from the motor warranty, retractable awning brands on Wayfair, for example, often list five-year limited fabric warranties but shorter warranty periods for motors. Always confirm whether a product is rated for outdoor (exterior) use or only covered/interior use before you buy.

Patio blinds are one piece of an outdoor shade setup. Depending on your space, you might also be looking at patio awnings or a retractable awning for overhead coverage, an aluminum patio cover for a permanent structural solution, or patio sun shades designed for horizontal or angled mounting above a seating area. If you're also shopping for seating, check our guide on where to buy a patio swing for options and retailers. Patio rugs can anchor the space visually once your shade solution is in place, and if you're outfitting a full outdoor living room you'll likely also be looking at furniture covers to protect everything when the shades are rolled up. All of these categories follow similar seasonal sale cycles and are available through the same retailers covered in this guide. If you also need floor coverings, see our guide on where to buy patio rugs for options that match different budgets and outdoor conditions.

Which channel is right for you: a quick recommendation

If you want the fastest and most hands-off experience with professional installation, go with Home Depot or Lowe's and use their in-home measurement and install services. If you want the best selection and are comfortable measuring yourself, Wayfair or Amazon will give you the widest range of styles and prices, with Wayfair pulling ahead on mid-range to premium outdoor shades. If price is the primary driver and your openings are standard sizes, check Costco first during spring season, then Walmart and Amazon. If you're also outfitting meals for your outdoor space, check our quick guide on where to buy patio TV dinners for easy, no‑fuss patio meal options. For custom sizing, motorization, or zippered systems, Blinds.com or a local dealer are your realistic options, with local dealers winning on service and Blinds.com winning on price for straightforward custom cuts.

FAQ

Where should I start when deciding where to buy patio blinds?

Begin by deciding three things: (1) type and features you want (roller, solar, bamboo, PVC, motorized), (2) whether you need custom measurements/installation or a ready‑made DIY product, and (3) your budget. Use big‑box and club stores for value and in‑person inspection (Home Depot, Lowe’s, Costco, Sam’s Club, Walmart, Big Lots), online marketplaces for selection and price comparison (Amazon, Wayfair, Blinds.com), and local specialty dealers or installers for custom, motorized or premium fabric options.

What are the pros and cons of buying from big‑box stores (Home Depot, Lowe’s, Walmart)?

Pros: consistent stock of popular sizes, in‑store viewing, measurement/installation services (Home Depot and Lowe’s connect you with local installers), store returns and pickup options, frequent sales. Cons: limited high‑end/custom options and fabrics, longer lead times for custom orders, less specialized design advice compared with local dealers.

When should I buy from warehouse clubs (Costco, Sam’s Club)?

Buy from warehouse clubs when you want good value on popular ready‑made or brandized patio shades and a strong return policy. Costco and Sam’s Club stock seasonal outdoor shades and often price them competitively. Expect fewer custom options; clubs are best for standard sizes or premade roller/outdoor shades during spring and summer.

Are online marketplaces (Amazon, Wayfair, Blinds.com) a good choice?

Yes for wide selection, competitive pricing, and customer reviews. Use Amazon/Wayfair for fast shipping and many brands; use Blinds.com for custom blinds and measurement/installation programs backed by warranties and remake guarantees. Watch shipping times and read return policies—custom items and motorized units often have stricter terms.

Why should I consider specialty local dealers or installers?

Local dealers excel at custom sizing, premium fabrics, built‑in motorization, professional on‑site measurement, and full installation. They also provide local warranties, quicker post‑sale service, and tailored advice for wind, drainage and mounting on patios or pergolas. Expect higher upfront cost and a typical lead time of ~4–6 weeks for custom motorized products.

How do prices typically compare across channels?

Expect this rough guidance: ready‑made standard outdoor roller/sun shades: $30–$150 per window/side depending on size and material. Custom non‑motorized shades: $150–$700+. Motorized or heavy fabric/awnings: $700–$3,000+ depending on width, motor, and fabric. Big‑box and online mass retailers trend lower on basic items; specialty dealers charge more for customization and installation.