
A screened porch sits empty half the year. An all season room with real climate control turns that dead space into a room your family actually uses - morning coffee in July, family dinner in September, every week of the year.

All season rooms in Royal Palm Beach are fully enclosed additions with insulated walls, real impact-rated windows, and a connection to your home's air conditioning and heating system - most projects run three to five months from signed contract to move-in once Palm Beach County permit review and any HOA approvals are factored in.
Unlike a basic screened porch or an older Florida room with jalousie windows, an all season room in Royal Palm Beach is built to be comfortable year-round. That means proper insulation, windows that seal tightly against the humidity and heat of summer, and an HVAC connection that keeps the space genuinely cool rather than just tolerable. Many homeowners in this area have an existing screened porch or patio that sits empty for five or six months every year - an all season room solves that problem permanently. If you already have a concrete slab, the project can often build directly on it, which saves meaningful cost.
If you want maximum glass and light with a lightweight frame, our four season sunrooms page covers that option. If you are looking for a more open-air space with partial protection, our enclosed patio rooms page outlines designs with more flexibility in how much you seal in.
If you walk past your back porch all summer without stepping into it because the heat and humidity make it unbearable, your outdoor space is not working for you. Royal Palm Beach sits in Palm Beach County's inland corridor, where summer temperatures regularly push past 90 degrees and the humidity adds to every degree. An all season room with real climate control turns that unused space into a room your family actually wants to be in.
Royal Palm Beach receives roughly 60 inches of rain per year, with heavy afternoon storms rolling through almost daily from June through September. If your current patio or porch floods, soaks through, or becomes unusable every time a storm passes, you are losing months of outdoor living every year. An enclosed, properly drained all season room solves that problem permanently.
If your family has outgrown your home's interior but a full addition feels like too much, an all season room is often the most cost-effective way to add a dedicated, climate-controlled space. It is a real room - with electricity, lighting, and air conditioning - without the full cost and disruption of a traditional interior room addition.
Older Florida rooms with jalousie windows or single-pane glass are common in Royal Palm Beach's 1980s and 1990s housing stock, and they simply were not built to handle today's expectations for comfort or energy efficiency. If you can feel outside air coming through your existing enclosure or the space heats up like an oven within minutes of the sun hitting it, your current setup is not doing the job.
An all season room can be built as a standalone addition on a new concrete slab, or it can be built on top of an existing patio that is in good structural condition. The framing, roofing, and wall system are built to match your existing home as closely as possible - which matters both for aesthetics and for how your HOA architectural review committee will respond to the submission. We handle the glass specification carefully in Royal Palm Beach, where impact-rated, low-emissivity glass is not just a code requirement but also the single most important factor in keeping your room cool without overloading your air conditioner.
If you want something more open and less expensive than a fully sealed room, our enclosed patio rooms service covers hybrid designs that give you weather protection without full climate control. For homeowners who want the look and feel of a traditional sunroom addition with maximum glass coverage, our four season sunrooms page walks through that system. Every project we take on goes through Palm Beach County's complete permit and inspection process - no shortcuts that could create problems when you sell.
The most cost-effective path - for homeowners with a structurally sound patio slab in good condition and the right dimensions for the room they want.
For yards with no existing patio or where the current slab is too small or poorly graded - includes foundation prep and drainage before framing begins.
For homeowners with an existing Florida room or older enclosure that needs to be brought up to current comfort and code standards - often the most budget-conscious upgrade path.
Royal Palm Beach sits in Palm Beach County's inland corridor, which means the climate is genuinely demanding - hot, humid summers that last well past September, an intense rainy season, and a hurricane season that runs through November. A room addition that is not designed and built for those specific conditions is going to underperform from the start. Impact-rated glass is not an upgrade here, it is what the Florida Building Code requires for any new enclosed addition in this area. The good news is that the same glass that meets the wind-load requirements also dramatically reduces heat gain - so the building code requirement and the energy efficiency goal point in the same direction. Homeowners in communities near Wellington, FL and Loxahatchee Groves, FL face the same building code requirements and benefit from the same glass choices.
Royal Palm Beach is also a village with a large number of planned communities and active homeowners associations. Before a contractor can even apply for a building permit with Palm Beach County, many homeowners need written approval from their HOA's architectural review committee - a process that can take two to four weeks. A contractor who does not know how to navigate that step, or who suggests working around it, is going to create problems for you down the road. The homes in this area were mostly built in the 1980s through the early 2000s with concrete block construction, which means anchoring and attachment work requires specific tools and techniques that a contractor unfamiliar with South Florida housing stock may not be prepared for. We work in this area every week and know exactly what these projects require. For more on the energy benefits of low-emissivity glass in hot-humid climates, the U.S. Department of Energy publishes useful guidance on their Energy Saver pages.
When you reach out, we ask a few basic questions - the size of the space you have in mind, how you plan to use the room, and whether you have an existing patio slab. We reply within one business day and schedule a site visit at a time that works for you.
We come to your home, take measurements, assess the existing foundation or slab, and look at where your electrical panel and HVAC system are located. You receive a written proposal with a real number within one to two weeks - not a vague range.
We prepare and submit your HOA architectural review package if required, then apply for the Palm Beach County building permit. HOA review adds two to four weeks; county permit review typically adds four to eight weeks. We track both on your behalf.
Once permits are in hand, work begins - foundation if needed, framing, glass, roof, and systems connections. County inspections happen at key stages. We walk through the finished room with you before the project is closed and provide written warranty documentation.
We handle the HOA paperwork, pull the Palm Beach County permit, and keep you updated every step of the way. No pressure - just a real estimate for your specific home.
(561) 359-1679We hold a current Florida state contractor's license, which you can verify in minutes through the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation. That license means we have met the state's requirements for training, insurance, and financial responsibility - and it means we are legally authorized to pull the permits your project requires.
We pull every required permit through Palm Beach County's Building Division and see each project through to final inspection and permit closeout. You receive a room that is officially on record as a legitimate part of your home - which matters for your insurance, your resale value, and your peace of mind. We do not offer to skip the permit process to save time.
We prepare the drawings and documentation your architectural review committee needs and submit the package on your behalf. Royal Palm Beach has dozens of planned communities with active HOAs, and we work with them regularly. We know what most committees want to see and how to get your project approved the first time.
The glass we specify for all season rooms in Royal Palm Beach meets both the Florida Building Code's wind and impact requirements and the energy efficiency standards that keep your cooling costs reasonable. We do not use what is cheapest - we use what is right for this climate. The National Sunroom Association, of which we are aware of as a standards body, publishes guidelines on glass selection for hot-humid regions that align with our approach.
When you combine a verifiable license, a full permit record, and local experience with Palm Beach County's HOA landscape, you get a project that closes cleanly and a room that holds up long after we leave. That is what we deliver on every all season room we build in Royal Palm Beach. Verify any Florida contractor license online before you sign anything.
Enclosed patio rooms offer a range of protection levels - from screened and partially open to fully sealed glass - suited to homeowners who want flexibility in how much weather they keep out.
Learn MoreFour season sunrooms use large glass panel systems and lightweight aluminum framing for a light-filled addition that connects your home to the outdoors without sacrificing comfort.
Learn MorePermit slots in Palm Beach County fill up - the sooner we submit your plans, the sooner you are using your new room. Call us or send a message to get started.