Discover all of VEVOR's siding options, including vinyl, wood, stone veneer, metal, aluminum, fiber cement, composite, lap, board and batten, and siding trim pieces designed for homeowners, builders, and contractors finishing new construction, complete residing projects, and individual siding repairs. VEVOR offers high-quality siding options for every home type and climate, whether you are replacing damaged siding on a single wall, choosing a full exterior cladding material for new construction, or adding board-and-batten accent elements to an existing exterior.
Are you searching for siding options that cover many common exterior cladding materials in a single, well-organized product line, from low-maintenance vinyl and fiber cement to natural wood character and stone veneer aesthetics? For residential and light commercial exteriors, VEVOR offers vinyl siding, wood siding, stone veneer siding, aluminum siding, fiber cement siding, composite siding, lap siding, board-and-batten siding, and siding trim components. For your siding project, choose the appropriate material, style, and installation method right now.
The most important choice in any external cladding project is the siding material, which affects the home's care needs, weather resilience, aesthetic appeal, and overall cost of ownership over the cladding's service life. Every key material for both full and partial exterior cladding projects is available in VEVOR's siding portfolio.
With its exceptionally low maintenance requirements, resistance to rot, insect damage, and moisture infiltration, competitive material cost, and availability in a wide range of profiles, colors, and textures that suit almost every residential architectural style from traditional colonial to modern farmhouse designs, vinyl siding is one of the most commonly used residential exterior cladding materials in North America. With co-extruded PVC construction and UV stabilizers and impact modifiers integrated throughout the material thickness, VEVOR vinyl siding offers color retention, surface hardness, and cold-temperature impact resistance that preserve the siding's appearance and structural integrity over many years of outdoor exposure without the need for regular painting, sealing, and treatment that wood and fiber cement substitutes necessitate.
To improve the wall assembly's R-value at the siding level, insulated vinyl siding options from VEVOR include a rigid foam backer bonded to the panel interior. This feature reduces thermal bridging through the stud framing, which standard uninsulated siding cannot address, and provides a continuous insulation layer that building energy codes increasingly require for new construction and residential projects in colder climate zones. The VEVOR vinyl siding panels' interlocking lap joint and nail hem installation system produces a positively retained, weather-resistant cladding installation that allows for the thermal expansion and contraction that vinyl undergoes throughout seasonal temperature ranges without the buckling and warping that over-nailed or improperly installed vinyl siding develops when the panel is unable to move freely within the installation fastening system.
Wood siding is the preferred cladding material for historic restoration projects, high-end custom homes, and any exterior where the true material quality and aging character of wood specifically contribute to the intended architectural aesthetic because it offers the natural material warmth, grain texture, and authentic architectural character that synthetic alternatives may not fully replicate. Cedar, pine, and engineered wood substrates are used in VEVOR wood siding products to provide the natural surface character of traditional wood siding in clear and knotty grade options that suit various architectural applications, from formal painted finishes that need a smooth, clear grade surface to the rustic, informal aesthetic that knotty grade wood with visible character marks offers in farmhouse and cottage-style exterior designs.
In contrast to solid wood alternatives, which are more susceptible to cupping, splitting, and end-grain moisture infiltration that untreated wood develops under the wet-dry cycling of exterior exposure, engineered wood siding in the VEVOR range uses wood strand or fiber composite substrates with a factory-applied primer that offers improved dimensional stability and moisture resistance. On VEVOR engineered wood siding, the factory primer lays the foundation for the field-applied finish coat, which produces the final exterior color. Unprimed wood requires careful surface preparation before painting to achieve comparable finish-coat performance and longevity, whereas primed surfaces provide more consistent and durable paint adhesion.
For commercial buildings, industrial facilities, and residential properties in fire-prone areas where non-combustible exterior cladding is required by local building codes or insurance underwriting requirements, metal aluminum siding offers strong durability and fire resistance in a lightweight, factory-finished panel that installs quickly and requires no painting after installation for the life of the original factory finish. In contrast to wood alternatives that need to be painted every five to ten years to maintain their protective and aesthetic performance, VEVOR metal aluminum siding uses pre-painted aluminum coil stock formed into horizontal lap panel profiles that replicate the visual appearance of traditional wood lap siding at a significantly lower maintenance cost and longer service life.
The Portland cement, sand, and cellulose fiber composite used in VEVOR's fiber cement siding combines the workability of wood, the dimensional stability of masonry, and resistance to rot, insects, fire, and moisture, making it a highly resilient residential siding material. Compared with field-applied paint on pre-primed fiber cement alternatives, the factory-applied ColorPlus finish technology on VEVOR fiber cement siding products uses a kiln-baked paint process that creates a harder, more durable factory finish. It offers a finish warranty that field painting cannot match in terms of coating adhesion strength, fade resistance, and surface hardness against the regular mechanical contact that exterior siding endures from landscaping equipment, sporting activity, and incidental impact.
In the temperature extremes of northern continental climates, where wide seasonal temperature ranges challenge the expansion coefficients of single-material siding products, composite siding offers greater moisture resistance than wood, lower weight than fiber cement, and better dimensional stability than vinyl by combining polymer, wood fiber, and mineral components into engineered panel products that improve on the individual weaknesses of their constituent materials. Compared to flat-surface vinyl and aluminum substitutes, VEVOR composite siding products provide factory-finished exterior surfaces with deep wood grain embossing that more convincingly mimics the shadow and texture depth of real wood grain, offering the natural material visual quality that premium residential exteriors often call for at a lower maintenance commitment than natural wood demands over the same service period.
For accent cladding applications, such as gable accents, chimney cladding, porch columns, and foundation exposures, where full stone construction is prohibitively expensive, but the stone aesthetic significantly contributes to the intended exterior design character, VEVOR offers stone veneer siding. Because VEVOR stone veneer siding products are made of lightweight panels, they can be installed on standard wood-frame wall systems without the structural reinforcement required for full natural stone veneer. This feature means that stone accent cladding can be used in many types of residential construction, not just masonry and heavy timber structures that can support the weight load of natural stone.
The final exterior appearance and long-term weather resistance of the entire wall assembly during the cladding's service life are strongly influenced by the siding profile style and proper installation technique.
To create a weather-shedding cascade that directs rainwater down the wall face without penetrating behind the siding at any horizontal course joint, lap siding, the most conventional and popular residential siding profile, uses horizontal panels with each upper course overlapping the top edge of the course below. VEVOR lap siding products come in a range of exposure widths, from wide 8-inch and 10-inch exposures that produce the horizontal shadow line emphasis associated with modern ranch and craftsman exterior designs, where fewer, bolder horizontal lines define the exterior's visual rhythm, to narrow 4-inch profiles that complement colonial and cottage architectural styles.
Board-and-batten siding creates a strong vertical emphasis, serving as a defining exterior character element in farmhouse, contemporary barn-style, and modern rustic architectural designs. It does this by installing wide flat boards vertically and covering the joints between adjacent boards with narrow batten strips. This traditionally wood-only profile style now features low-maintenance alternatives from VEVOR, including vinyl, fiber cement, and engineered wood board-and-batten siding products. These alternatives provide the visual character of board-and-batten without the regular maintenance required by traditional solid-wood board-and-batten installations to remain weathertight and visually consistent over years of outdoor exposure.
By offering completed transitions at all wall edges, corners, window and door openings, and material transitions where the siding field panels need termination and transition elements that exposed raw panel edges cannot provide, siding trim pieces complete the expert installation. In contrast to the mismatched trim and panel combination that results from using non-coordinated trim with siding field panels in the finished installation, VEVOR siding trim pieces, such as J-channels, corner posts, window and door casing trim, starter strips, and undersill trim, are made in coordinating materials and colors that match the siding panel products they accompany, creating a cohesive, complete exterior appearance at every detail location.
To properly install VEVOR siding products, a weather-resistive barrier must be installed behind the siding panels. This barrier controls water infiltration at joints, fasteners, and penetrations before it reaches the structural wall sheathing. Without the WRB layer, which is required by modern building science and building codes as the primary water-control layer in every residential wall assembly, regardless of the siding material installed over it, the siding panels cannot provide a moisture-management foundation.
For homeowners, builders, and contractors finishing residential and commercial exterior cladding projects, VEVOR offers a full range of siding, including vinyl, wood, stone veneer, aluminum, fiber cement, composite, lap siding, board-and-batten, and trim pieces. Each siding type offers low prices, easy installation, and long-lasting materials, making high-quality exterior cladding affordable for projects of all sizes. Your siding is designed for every season and backed by VEVOR's dependable post-purchase assistance. Look over the entire selection now.
For the duration of its installed service life, vinyl siding requires the least amount of maintenance of any home siding material. It only needs to be cleaned periodically with a garden hose to remove surface dirt; it does not require painting, sealing, or treatment. Without the coating maintenance that wood, fiber cement, and metal siding products need regularly.
Conventional board-and-batten siding is installed vertically, with battens covering the vertical joints and boards extending from the bottom plate to the top plate. Although they employ a different panel geometry than the actual vertical board-and-batten, horizontal board-and-batten-inspired profiles are available in several VEVOR siding product configurations.
Indeed. Regardless of siding style, modern construction rules and best-practice moisture-management recommendations require a weather-resistant barrier beneath the siding. Before water reaches the wall sheathing, the WRB controls infiltration at joints and penetrations.