Your patio or lanai sits empty half the year because of heat and rain. A properly built sunroom addition gives you back that space - cooled, storm-rated, and permitted.

Sunroom additions in Palm Beach Gardens are fully enclosed rooms attached to your home, with impact-rated glass walls, a solid roof, and a doorway connecting to your existing living space. Most jobs run eight to fourteen weeks from contract to completion, including the two-to-four-week Palm Beach County permit review.
Many homeowners reach us after their screened porch or lanai stops working for them - too hot in summer, too exposed during storm season, or simply not a comfortable room. A sunroom addition changes that. If you already know you want year-round use, a four season sunroom with dedicated cooling is usually the right direction in this climate.
The process covers everything from foundation work and framing to impact-rated glazing, roofing, electrical, and HOA submission if your community requires it. We pull the permits and manage the inspections so you do not have to chase paperwork.
If your screened porch or lanai is empty from May through October because the heat and humidity make it unbearable, a screened enclosure is no longer meeting your needs. A properly built sunroom with air conditioning gives you that same outdoor connection - without the weather forcing you back inside.
If your family has grown, you are working from home more often, or you simply feel cramped, a sunroom addition adds a comfortable, light-filled room without the disruption of a full interior renovation. Many homeowners use the new space as a home office, a playroom, or a casual sitting area.
If you have watched outdoor furniture, screens, or patio covers take damage year after year during hurricane season, a permanent sunroom built with impact-rated glass gives you a protected space designed to handle what South Florida weather brings. Instead of scrambling before every storm, you have a room built to stay put.
Palm Beach Gardens is beautiful, and many homeowners chose their property for the outdoor setting. If mosquitoes, no-see-ums, or the daily summer downpours are keeping you from enjoying that view, a sunroom lets you sit in natural light and look out at your yard in comfort - without the screens slamming and bugs finding their way in.
Every sunroom addition we build starts with an on-site assessment and a written proposal that covers the full scope - foundation, framing, glazing, roofing, electrical, and HVAC connection if the project calls for it. For homeowners who want a room they can use in July, we recommend a four season sunroom with dedicated cooling built in from the start. For those looking to formalize the structure of an existing project or build from the ground up, our sunroom construction service covers the full build process from permitted plans to final inspection.
We work with both prefabricated systems and fully custom builds depending on your budget and site conditions. Impact-rated glass is standard on every project - not an upgrade - because it is required by Florida building code for additions in Palm Beach County.
Best for homeowners who want year-round use - fully insulated, HVAC-connected, and built to Florida hurricane standards.
Learn MoreFull ground-up builds with permitted plans, foundation work, and county inspections at every stage.
Learn MorePalm Beach Gardens averages over 60 inches of rain per year, and summer temperatures regularly exceed 90 degrees with high humidity. A sunroom built without proper air conditioning or without impact-rated glass is not just uncomfortable - it will be genuinely unusable for months at a time. The local climate is the single biggest factor shaping how sunroom additions are designed and built here. Homeowners in communities like Jupiter and West Palm Beach face identical conditions, and our crews work across all of Palm Beach County.
Sandy soil, a high water table in low-lying areas, and widespread HOA-governed communities are all conditions that contractors from outside the region sometimes underestimate. A foundation approach that works fine in Georgia or the Carolinas may not perform the same way in Palm Beach Gardens. Our experience is specific to South Florida construction, including the Palm Beach County permit process and the architectural review requirements of communities like PGA National, Mirasol, and BallenIsles.
We ask where on your home you are thinking of adding the room, roughly how large, and how you plan to use it. You do not need all the answers - just a general sense of what you are hoping for. We respond to all new inquiries within one business day.
We visit your home to measure, check foundation and wall conditions, look for any HOA restrictions, and assess site-specific factors like proximity to a pool cage or a utility easement. After the visit, we provide a detailed written proposal with a fixed price.
Once you sign a contract, we submit the permit application to Palm Beach County on your behalf - and handle the HOA submission in parallel if your community requires it. Permit review typically takes two to four weeks. You do not have to chase any paperwork.
Work starts on the foundation and framing once the permit is approved. County inspectors visit at key stages - this is a normal, required part of the process. When the room is finished, we walk through it with you, explain how every system works, and hand over all permit and inspection records.
We come to your home, review your HOA requirements, and give you a fixed price in writing before any work begins. No obligation, no sales pressure.
(561) 954-0674We pull permits for every sunroom addition we build - no exceptions. A permitted project means county inspectors check the work at every key stage, and you have documented proof of compliance when you sell or file an insurance claim.
A large share of Palm Beach Gardens homes sit inside HOA-governed communities. We prepare and submit the architectural review package on your behalf, and we know what documentation boards in communities like PGA National and Mirasol expect to see the first time.
Florida building code requires impact-resistant glazing in every new addition in Palm Beach County. We build to that standard on every project - not because it is required, but because it is the only glass worth installing on a home in this climate. The same glass that meets storm requirements also blocks UV and reduces heat gain.
We provide a fully itemized proposal before the permit is filed, and that number does not change unless you change the scope of work. Verify contractor licensing at any time through the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation - a legitimate contractor has nothing to hide.
These are not marketing points - they are the specific things that protect you when a sunroom addition goes well and when it does not. A permitted, inspected, properly documented addition is a fundamentally different asset than one that was rushed through or skipped the process.
The fully conditioned version - insulated walls, dedicated cooling, and impact glass, so you can use the room every month of the year in South Florida's climate.
Learn MoreGround-up builds with permitted plans, foundation work, and county-inspected construction at every stage from slab pour to final walkthrough.
Learn MorePermit timelines in Palm Beach Gardens mean the sooner you reach out, the sooner your project gets in the queue - call today or request a free written estimate.