
Bugs and afternoon storms keep most Royal Palm Beach homeowners off their patios for months. A three season sunroom changes that - a real enclosed room, properly permitted, built for South Florida conditions.

Three season sunrooms in Royal Palm Beach are enclosed additions with solid or glass-panel walls and a proper roof, built on your existing patio slab or a new concrete pad - most projects complete construction in one to three weeks once permits are approved.
Unlike a basic screen enclosure, a three season sunroom gives you real walls, a finished floor, and a ceiling - it feels like a room, not a porch. In Royal Palm Beach, where outdoor-connected living is a major reason people move here in the first place, a three season room lets you enjoy your backyard from October through April without fighting mosquitoes, wind-driven rain, or the glare of an open patio. Many homeowners stretch that window even further with a ceiling fan or portable cooling unit during the shoulder months.
If you want a lower-cost option that keeps bugs out while maximizing airflow, our patio enclosures page covers screen room options that may fit your budget and goals.
If your furniture sits unused because mosquitoes take over at dusk or the 3 p.m. thunderstorm ends every evening outside, that is a clear sign a three season room would change how you live in your home. Royal Palm Beach's rainy season runs June through September and mosquito pressure is high year-round near the canals and retention ponds common here.
A standard screen enclosure is a good starting point, but if you want solid walls to block wind-driven rain, a real ceiling, and a finished floor that feels like a room - not a patio - you have outgrown what a basic enclosure offers. A three season sunroom is the next step up without the cost of a full home addition.
Many Royal Palm Beach homes were built with a poured concrete patio slab that never got much use. If that slab is in good condition, it can often serve as the foundation for your sunroom - which means your project starts ahead of schedule at lower cost. A contractor can assess whether your existing slab is the right size and condition to build on.
West-facing backyards in Royal Palm Beach get hammered by afternoon sun, especially in spring and summer. If your patio is too hot to sit on by noon, a sunroom with a solid roof and smart window placement can cut that heat dramatically. A good contractor will assess your home's orientation and help you choose a design that works with the sun's path.
A three season sunroom is not a single product - it is a range of construction approaches that differ by wall type, roof system, and how much temperature control you want. Glass-panel walls give you a brighter, more finished look and block wind-driven rain more effectively than screens alone. Screened or vented panel walls maximize airflow and cost less, making them a practical choice if you use the space primarily from October through April. Our patio enclosures service covers screen-forward builds, while our screen room installation team handles simpler screened additions when that is all you need.
Every three season sunroom we build goes through Palm Beach County's permit process, which includes a final county inspection confirming the work meets current building standards. If your neighborhood has an HOA - which most communities in Royal Palm Beach do - we prepare and submit the architectural review package before the county permit application, so the two approval processes run in parallel rather than one after the other.
Solid glass walls and a finished roof - best for homeowners who want a room feel, protection from wind-driven rain, and the option to add a portable cooling unit.
Open-air panels in a solid frame - ideal for homeowners who want maximum airflow and a comfortable space from October through May at a lower cost.
Lower glass or solid panels with screened upper sections - a balance of weather protection and airflow suited to mild-season daily use.
Royal Palm Beach sits in Palm Beach County's interior, where the summer rainy season brings daily afternoon storms and humidity that rarely drops below 70 percent from May through September. Most experienced local contractors prefer to pour concrete foundations and do exterior framing between October and May, when conditions are drier and the crew can work predictably without weather interruptions. If you want your room ready for the comfortable fall and winter months - when Royal Palm Beach homeowners actually use their outdoor spaces most - plan to start the process, including HOA approval and permitting, by late summer. The flat terrain and high water table here also mean drainage around any new slab needs deliberate attention. A slab graded incorrectly can hold water against your foundation or flood the room after a heavy rain.
Royal Palm Beach was developed largely as a planned community, and a significant share of its neighborhoods are governed by HOAs with architectural review requirements that apply before any contractor can pull a county permit. Homeowners in nearby Wellington, FL face similar rules, as do homeowners further out in Loxahatchee Groves, FL - we serve the whole western Palm Beach County corridor and know the local process well. For independent guidance on Florida building standards, the National Association of Home Builders is a reliable reference for homeowners comparing contractors and project approaches.
Reach out by phone or through the contact form and we respond within one business day. We will ask a few basic questions - your patio size, whether you have an HOA, and how you plan to use the room - to make sure the project is a fit before scheduling a site visit.
We come to your home, measure the space, and assess your existing slab or foundation. You receive a written estimate within a few days - not a ballpark over the phone. If your neighborhood has an HOA, this is the time to pull out your HOA documents so we know what design rules apply.
We prepare the HOA submission and the Palm Beach County permit application at the same time. Together, these approvals typically take three to six weeks. We keep you updated on where each process stands so you are never left guessing.
Once permits are in hand, construction begins - foundation work first if a new slab is needed, then framing, roofing, and panel installation. The county inspection happens at completion, and we walk you through the finished room before we leave.
Free on-site estimates. Written quotes before any work begins. No pressure, no obligation.
(561) 359-1679We pull the Palm Beach County building permit on every project and schedule the final inspection ourselves. You receive the closed permit and certificate of completion when we are done - the documentation that protects you at resale and in any insurance claim.
Royal Palm Beach's planned communities have specific HOA review requirements, and we prepare the site plan and drawings to meet them the first time. Avoiding back-and-forth with your association keeps your project on schedule. The Village of Royal Palm Beach publishes community standards that outline typical requirements.
We have been building and enclosing patios in the western Palm Beach County communities since 2017. We know the local permit timelines, the HOA landscape, and the drainage challenges that come with flat lots and high water tables in this area.
Cost surprises are the most common complaint about contractor work. You receive a written contract with a clear scope and fixed price before anyone picks up a tool. If something unexpected comes up during construction, you hear about it - and approve it - before any additional work is done.
Every one of these commitments comes from working in this specific market for years. Royal Palm Beach is not a generic suburban job site - it has its own permit timelines, HOA culture, and weather conditions, and the contractors who do the best work here are the ones who take those seriously.
For permit and licensing details, visit the Palm Beach County Building Division or verify contractor license status at myfloridalicense.com.
Turn your existing concrete slab into a protected outdoor living space - screen room or glass enclosure, built to Palm Beach County wind standards.
Learn MoreA screened enclosure keeps the bugs out and the breeze in - a practical, lower-cost option when you want outdoor living without a full enclosed room.
Learn MorePermit slots in Palm Beach County fill up - reaching out now means your room is ready before the season. Call or submit the form and we respond within one business day.