
Your patio sits empty for half the year because of the heat and bugs. We convert it into a finished, air-conditioned room your family actually uses - with permits, HOA approvals, and storm-rated windows handled start to finish.

A patio-to-sunroom conversion in Royal Palm Beach takes your existing outdoor patio slab and transforms it into a fully enclosed, climate-controlled living space - contractors build walls, install windows, add a roof system, and connect the new room to your home's heating and cooling. Most jobs run one to three weeks of active construction once Palm Beach County approves the permit, with the full timeline from contract to move-in typically between eight and fourteen weeks.
If your patio is covered but still feels too exposed to use comfortably, a conversion is the practical answer. You are not building from scratch - your existing slab does most of the structural work, which keeps costs lower than a full home addition. The result is a room that feels like it was always part of the house. For homeowners who want to explore related options before deciding, our deck-to-sunroom conversion page covers what happens when the starting point is a raised deck, and our enclosed patio rooms page outlines flexible partial-enclosure paths worth comparing.
If you walk past your patio from May through October without stopping because it is simply too hot and humid, that is the clearest sign a sunroom conversion makes sense. A properly insulated, air-conditioned sunroom turns that dead space into one of the most-used rooms in your house - even in the middle of a South Florida summer.
Many Royal Palm Beach homes have covered patios that are neither fully outdoors nor fully indoors - too exposed to use comfortably, too enclosed to feel like real outdoor space. If your covered patio is storing things you do not need or just sitting unused, converting it into a finished room is a straightforward way to get real value from that footprint.
South Florida's mosquitoes and sudden afternoon thunderstorms make traditional open patios frustrating for much of the year. If you find yourself retreating inside every time you try to relax outside, a screened or glass-enclosed sunroom solves that problem without giving up the feeling of being connected to your backyard.
If you are using your living room as a home office or playroom because there simply is not enough dedicated space, a sunroom conversion adds a new room without the cost of a full home addition. It is one of the most efficient ways to gain real, finished square footage in a Royal Palm Beach home without touching the existing structure.
Not every patio conversion looks the same. The finish level you choose - from a basic screened enclosure to a fully climate-controlled glass room - determines both the cost and how the space performs through a South Florida summer. A screened conversion gives you bug and rain protection with good airflow at the lower end of the cost range. A fully enclosed sunroom with insulated walls, impact-rated glass, and air conditioning is the room you can comfortably use every month of the year. Both approaches start with your existing slab, but the materials, permits, and trades involved are different. Your contractor should walk you through the tradeoffs clearly before you commit. If you have been looking at related options, our deck-to-sunroom conversion page covers what happens when the starting point is a raised deck rather than a ground-level slab.
Every conversion we handle goes through Palm Beach County's full permit process, with county inspections at framing, electrical rough-in, and final completion. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we prepare the architectural review submission before the permit application goes in, so both processes move in parallel rather than one blocking the other. We also coordinate with the licensed electricians and HVAC technicians who extend your home's systems into the new space. Our enclosed patio rooms service is worth reviewing if you want flexible partial-enclosure options rather than a full conversion.
Ideal for homeowners who want bug protection and rain coverage without air conditioning - the most cost-effective entry point for converting an existing patio slab.
Glass walls and a solid roof give you year-round protection from bugs, rain, and wind, with natural ventilation for the cooler months - a popular middle-ground option.
The most livable option for South Florida - insulated walls, impact-rated low-e glass, and air conditioning so you can use the room comfortably every day of the year.
Royal Palm Beach averages over 230 sunny days a year and summer temperatures that regularly push into the low 90s with high humidity. Standard patios, even covered ones, become genuinely uncomfortable from May through October. That is five months of unused living space on most homes in this area. Adding proper insulation and impact-rated, heat-blocking glass turns that lost space into a room your family uses daily. In Palm Beach County, Florida's hurricane code requires all new enclosed structures to meet strict wind-resistance standards, so a permitted conversion also gives you a room that holds up when storm season arrives. We regularly complete conversions for homeowners throughout the western communities, including Lake Clarke Shores and Greenacres.
Royal Palm Beach was developed as a planned community, and a large number of its neighborhoods are governed by HOAs with architectural review requirements. That means a patio-to-sunroom conversion here has more moving parts than a simple remodel - HOA submission, permit application, and staged county inspections all need to happen in the right order. Working with a contractor who knows this process for the Palm Beach County market specifically saves you weeks of delays. South Florida's rainy season also affects scheduling: if you want the room finished before summer, starting the planning process by February gives you the best chance of a dry-season build. Florida's building requirements for new enclosed structures can be reviewed at the Florida Building Commission, and permit records are maintained online by the Palm Beach County Building Division.
You reach out by phone or through the contact form and we respond within one business day. We ask a few basic questions about your patio size, whether it has an existing cover, and how you want to use the new room - then schedule a free on-site visit, because the condition of your slab and the layout of your home both affect the price significantly.
We visit your home, measure the patio, and inspect the existing slab for any cracks or settling that need attention before framing begins. We walk through your design options - glass versus screen walls, roofline style, and how the room will connect to your air conditioning - and give you a written estimate that breaks down all major cost categories clearly.
If your neighborhood has an HOA, we prepare the architectural review submission first. Once HOA approval is in hand, we file the permit application with Palm Beach County. Permit review typically takes two to six weeks - we track the status and let you know the moment you are cleared to start construction.
Once permits are approved and materials arrive, construction usually takes one to three weeks. County inspectors visit at framing, electrical rough-in, and final completion - this is normal and required. After the final inspection passes, we walk through the completed room with you and hand you copies of all permits and inspection records to keep with your home's paperwork.
Free on-site estimate. No pressure, no obligation. We respond within one business day.
(561) 359-1679We manage the Palm Beach County permit application and, when needed, the HOA architectural review submission from start to finish. You do not have to track down forms, follow up with the county, or figure out what your HOA committee needs. You can verify any contractor's current Florida license on the state's public portal at myfloridalicense.com.
Every window, roof connection, and wall framing component we install is specified to meet Palm Beach County's wind-resistance requirements. That means the room holds up through storm season - not just through fair weather. We show you the impact ratings on any window we recommend before you commit to anything.
We inspect your existing concrete slab for cracks, uneven settling, and load capacity before framing begins. Royal Palm Beach's sandy soil can cause slabs to shift over time, and catching any issues upfront prevents structural problems later. If repairs are needed, we show you exactly what was found and give you a clear plan before any work starts.
We have completed conversions throughout Royal Palm Beach and nearby areas since 2017, which means we know how Palm Beach County's permit office operates, what local HOA committees typically ask for, and how the area's soil and drainage conditions affect slab work. That local knowledge shortens timelines and prevents surprises.
Every patio-to-sunroom conversion we complete is documented from permit application through final inspection, so you have a complete paper trail when you sell. In Palm Beach County's active real estate market, a properly permitted sunroom can meaningfully differentiate your home from others on the block.
Have a deck instead of a ground-level slab? A deck-to-sunroom conversion encloses your existing deck structure into a fully livable, climate-controlled room.
Learn MoreEnclosed patio rooms offer flexible partial-enclosure designs - from glass lower panels to full weathertight walls - for patios of any size or shape.
Learn MoreSpots fill up before Royal Palm Beach's rainy season - reach out now to lock in your start date and get a free on-site estimate.