
From the first permit to the final walkthrough - sunroom construction in Palm Beach Gardens handled the way it should be, with the right glass for Florida's heat and a build that passes inspection.
From the first permit to the final walkthrough - sunroom construction in Palm Beach Gardens handled the way it should be, with the right glass for Florida's heat and a build that passes inspection.

Sunroom construction in Palm Beach Gardens covers the full build - from concrete footings poured to anchor the structure through to the final building inspection, most projects run three to five months total once the permit is approved and all materials are on site.
The process is more involved than most homeowners expect - not because the work is difficult, but because permits, HOA approvals, and inspections all have their own timelines that run parallel to the construction itself. If you are in the planning phase and still deciding what kind of room to build, our sunroom additions page covers the broader decision around adding a room to your home, and our sunroom remodeling page is worth reading if you have an existing structure that needs significant updating rather than a ground-up build.
In Palm Beach Gardens, sunroom construction requires specific attention to heat management - because a room that is not designed for South Florida's climate will be uncomfortable for half the year. The glass type, roof panel, and cooling setup are not afterthoughts here. They are the decisions that determine whether the room earns its place in your home.
If your existing outdoor space becomes too hot, too buggy, or too rainy to use from May through October, a sunroom solves that problem permanently. Palm Beach Gardens summers bring intense heat and afternoon downpours that make a screened porch genuinely uncomfortable for months at a time. A properly built sunroom with climate control gives you that outdoor feeling without the seasonal shutdown.
If the main living areas feel dim even on a bright day, a sunroom addition can change how light moves through your home. This is common in older Palm Beach Gardens homes built in the 1980s and 1990s with smaller windows and more closed floor plans. A sunroom positioned on the south or east side of the house can bring natural light into adjacent rooms.
Palm Beach Gardens gets frequent, fast-moving thunderstorms from June through September that can end a backyard gathering with almost no warning. If you find yourself constantly moving inside when the sky turns or canceling plans because of weather, a sunroom gives you a fully protected space that keeps you connected to the outdoors regardless of what is happening outside.
Many Palm Beach Gardens homes have a pool or landscaped backyard but no comfortable middle ground between the air-conditioned interior and the full Florida heat. A sunroom creates that transition - a place for morning coffee, a casual dining space, or a spot for kids to play without being fully exposed to the elements. If you keep wishing for that kind of space, that is a clear signal a sunroom would get regular use.
We handle sunroom construction end to end - from the on-site assessment and design consultation through permitting, foundation work, framing, glass installation, and the final building inspection. Every project starts with a site visit rather than a catalog quote, because the right foundation depth, glass specification, and roof connection all depend on your specific property and local code requirements. For homeowners who want to add square footage to a home where nothing currently exists, a ground-up sunroom addition is the most common path, and we handle those builds the same way - fully permitted, inspected, and built to Palm Beach County's wind standards.
For homeowners who have an existing sunroom or enclosed porch that needs significant structural or cosmetic work, our sunroom remodeling service covers that scope. Whether you are replacing dated glass, addressing water intrusion, updating an older prefab structure, or reconfiguring a room that never worked well for your family, remodeling is often a faster and more cost-effective path than a complete tear-down and rebuild.
Best for homeowners adding a sunroom where nothing currently exists - new foundation, framing, glass, and roof, permitted and inspected from the start.
Suited to homeowners converting a screened lanai or patio enclosure into a fully enclosed, climate-controlled sunroom using the existing footprint and slab.
A faster path for homeowners with a defined budget and a standard footprint - prefabricated components installed on a prepared slab, fully permitted.
The right choice for year-round use in Palm Beach Gardens - includes low-e glass, a dedicated cooling connection, and ceiling fans designed for the room's heat load.
Palm Beach Gardens averages over 230 sunny days a year, and summer temperatures regularly push into the low 90s with high humidity. A sunroom that is not properly ventilated and insulated for this climate will be unusable from May through September - essentially half the year. This makes glass selection and cooling strategy more critical here than almost anywhere else in the country. The Florida Solar Energy Center at the University of Central Florida publishes guidance on building performance in Florida's climate that is worth reviewing if you want to understand the technical reasoning behind glass and insulation choices. The U.S. Department of Energy also has accessible guidance on energy-efficient windows and glazing that applies directly to sunroom decisions.
The county also falls in a high-velocity hurricane zone, which means every structural element of a sunroom - the footings, the framing, the glass, and the roofline connection - must be engineered to meet strict wind-resistance requirements before the permit is issued. This is not overhead - it is what keeps your investment standing after a serious storm. We build for homeowners throughout Riviera Beach, FL and Royal Palm Beach, FL, and we carry the same standards across every project regardless of location.
Reach out by phone or form and you will hear back within one business day. We will ask a few quick questions about your home, the space you have in mind, and your rough budget - this is not a sales call, it is how we figure out whether we are the right fit for your project.
We visit your property, check the exterior wall and roofline where the sunroom will attach, assess the yard space and soil conditions, and ask about your HOA. A price is not quoted until we have seen the site - no contractor who quotes from photos is accounting for what actually matters in this climate.
Once you sign a contract, we submit the permit application to Palm Beach County on your behalf. If HOA approval is required, we handle that documentation at the same time. Permit approval typically takes four to eight weeks - we update you as milestones are reached and let you know the moment a start date can be confirmed.
Work begins with footings and the concrete slab, then framing, glass panels, roof, and interior finishing. Construction on-site typically runs four to eight weeks. Once the work is complete, a county inspector verifies it meets local code before you use the room - we schedule that visit and handle the paperwork.
Free on-site estimate. No pressure, no obligation - just a clear picture of the timeline and cost before you commit to anything.
(561) 954-0674We have worked through the Palm Beach County Building Division process on numerous local projects, including navigating the difference between county and city permit jurisdictions. This experience means fewer delays and no surprises at the inspection stage - details that matter significantly when permit timelines are already measured in weeks.
We specify glass, framing, and roofing materials rated for South Florida's heat, UV load, and wind requirements - not products pulled from a general contractor supply catalog. The Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation maintains licensing records for every contractor in the state - you can verify ours at any time.
A large portion of Palm Beach Gardens homes sit inside HOA communities with architectural review processes that add weeks to any exterior project. We build that time into the schedule from day one and handle the submission on your behalf - which means your project does not stall while waiting on a board review you were not prepared for.
One of the most common complaints homeowners have about contractors is being left in the dark. Before construction starts, you will have a written schedule with key milestones. When something shifts - a weather delay, a permit hold - you hear from us the same day, not after the fact.
The combination of local permit experience, Florida-rated materials, and transparent scheduling is what separates a sunroom construction project that goes smoothly from one that drags on and delivers surprises. Those things matter more than any single credential.
Updating or restoring an existing sunroom - replacing glass, addressing water damage, or modernizing a dated structure without a full tear-down.
Learn MoreAdding a sunroom where no structure currently exists - expanding your home's footprint with a permitted addition designed to match your existing exterior.
Learn MorePermit timelines in Palm Beach County move slowly - the sooner you reach out, the sooner your project can break ground before the next rainy season arrives.