
You want a room that holds up to Florida heat, storm season, and years of use - not one that leaks after the first heavy rain or fails the first inspection.

Sunroom construction in Royal Palm Beach is a permitted addition to your home - foundation work, framing with impact-rated components, glazing, roofing, and a county inspection at the end - most projects take ten to eighteen weeks from contract to completion, with the majority of that time spent on permit and HOA approvals rather than the build itself.
Building a sunroom in Royal Palm Beach is not the same as building one in Ohio or the Carolinas. Florida's wind code requires impact-rated glass and reinforced structural components. The flat terrain and high water table here mean foundation drainage must be deliberately planned. And most Royal Palm Beach neighborhoods have HOA rules that require architectural review before a county permit can even be applied for. A contractor who has not built in this specific area will underestimate all three of those factors.
If you are trying to decide between a new sunroom build and updating what you already have, our sunroom additions page covers how a new addition connects to your existing structure and what to expect through the process.
If your screened porch or lanai becomes too hot and humid to use for most of the year, that is a clear sign a climate-controlled sunroom would change how you live in your home. Royal Palm Beach summers are long and intense, and a screened enclosure cannot keep up with that kind of heat. A properly built sunroom with air conditioning turns that unusable space into one of the most comfortable rooms in your house.
If your household has grown and you love your Royal Palm Beach neighborhood but not the square footage, a sunroom addition is one of the most practical ways to add usable space without moving. Many homeowners find that a sunroom becomes the room the whole family gravitates toward - a flexible space that works as a playroom, a home office, or a casual dining area.
If you have an older screened porch or aluminum-framed enclosure showing rust, torn screens, or structural movement, you may be at the point where replacing it with a proper sunroom makes more financial sense than another round of repairs. South Florida's combination of salt air, humidity, and UV exposure degrades older aluminum structures faster than in drier climates.
Royal Palm Beach gets over 60 inches of rain per year and the mosquito season is relentless near the canals and retention ponds common in western Palm Beach County. If you want to enjoy natural light and a connection to your yard but keep getting driven inside by weather or insects, sunroom construction gives you exactly that - the view and the light, without the drawbacks.
Sunroom construction covers a wide range of outcomes - from a basic glass enclosure to a fully insulated, climate-controlled four-season room that functions as an interior living space year-round. The right choice depends on how you plan to use the room, your budget, and your HOA's design standards. We build across the full range, and our sunroom remodeling team can also upgrade or rebuild an existing structure that is no longer performing the way it should.
Every project we build is fully permitted through Palm Beach County and inspected at the foundation, framing, and completion stages. If you want to start from scratch rather than adapt what is already there, our sunroom additions service is specifically focused on new attached construction - how the addition ties into your existing roofline, slab, and exterior finish so the result feels like part of the original home.
A fully enclosed glass or panel room without central climate control - comfortable from October through May, a practical lower-cost option for seasonal use.
A fully insulated room connected to your HVAC or fitted with a mini-split - the right choice for year-round daily use in Royal Palm Beach's long hot summers.
Lower solid panels with screened upper sections - a balanced approach offering weather protection and airflow, suited to homeowners who prioritize the outdoor feel.
Royal Palm Beach sits in Palm Beach County's high-wind zone, which means any sunroom built here must use impact-rated glass and structural components designed to withstand hurricane-force winds. That requirement adds cost compared to what you might see quoted in national price guides, but it also means your sunroom is built to genuinely protect your home during storm season - not become a liability when a watch is issued. The Florida Building Commission sets the statewide code that every Palm Beach County permit must meet. Beyond the wind code, Royal Palm Beach's flat terrain and high water table mean foundation drainage needs careful attention on every project - a slab that is not properly graded will hold water against the structure and cause problems inside the room after the rainy season.
The HOA landscape here is another local factor that shapes every project timeline. Most of Royal Palm Beach's neighborhoods were developed as planned communities, and a large share have architectural review committees that must approve any exterior addition before the county permit application can even go in. Homeowners in neighboring Wellington, FL face the same dynamic, as do those in The Acreage, FL where lot sizes are larger but county permit requirements still apply. We handle the HOA submission and the county permit filing on your behalf so both processes move in parallel rather than stacking one behind the other.
We schedule a visit to your home - typically within a few business days of your call. We measure the space, look at your existing foundation and roofline, and ask about your HOA situation and how you plan to use the room. The visit is free and usually takes about an hour.
After the site visit, we put together a written proposal covering size, materials, glazing type, climate control options, and permit fees - all at a fixed price. This is the stage to compare proposals and ask every question you have before anything is signed.
We prepare the HOA submission package and file the building permit application with Palm Beach County. Combined, these approvals typically take four to eight weeks. We keep you updated throughout so you always know where your project stands.
Once permits are approved, the crew prepares the slab, installs the frame, sets the glass and roof, and completes interior finishing. County inspections happen at the foundation, framing, and completion stages - we schedule those. You receive your permit documentation when the final inspection passes.
Free in-home estimate. No sales pressure. We reply within one business day.
(561) 359-1679We pull the Palm Beach County building permit on every project and schedule all required inspections ourselves. You receive the closed permit and certificate of completion when the job is done. That documentation protects your investment at resale and confirms the work was independently reviewed against Florida's building standards. The Palm Beach County Building Division maintains all permit and inspection records on file.
We prepare the architectural drawings and documentation your HOA needs and submit on your behalf. Getting this right the first time prevents costly revision delays and keeps your project on schedule. In Royal Palm Beach's planned communities, HOA approval is often the longest single step in the project timeline - we treat it as a priority, not an afterthought.
We have been building and enclosing patios in the western Palm Beach County communities since 2017. We know the local permit timelines, the specific HOA communities in Royal Palm Beach, and the foundation and drainage considerations that come with flat lots and a high water table - details that out-of-area contractors consistently miss.
South Florida's combination of intense sun, heavy rain, and salt-tinged air is hard on materials not selected with this environment in mind. The glass, framing, and finishes used in your sunroom are chosen specifically for Royal Palm Beach's conditions - not generic materials that look fine at first but start to fade, rust, or leak within a few years of installation.
These commitments reflect what it takes to build well in this specific market. Royal Palm Beach has its own permit culture, its own HOA expectations, and conditions that punish work done to a lesser standard. The contractors who do the best work here are the ones who plan for all of that from the very first conversation.
Already have a sunroom or screened enclosure that needs updating? We rebuild, re-glaze, and modernize existing structures to current code.
Learn MoreAdding a sunroom to your home increases usable square footage and can add meaningful appeal when it comes time to sell - see how the addition process works.
Learn MorePermit timelines in Palm Beach County mean the sooner you start, the sooner you are enjoying your new room - contact us today to lock in your project date.