
Vinyl sunrooms handle South Florida's heat, humidity, and storm season without rusting, rotting, or warping. We build them to Palm Beach County's wind standards and handle every step from HOA approval to the final inspection.

Vinyl sunrooms in Royal Palm Beach typically run $20,000 to $50,000 installed, with most projects taking four to eight weeks from permit approval to completion, though the full timeline from first call to a finished room is usually two to four months once HOA review and Palm Beach County permitting are factored in.
A vinyl sunroom is an enclosed room addition built with a frame made almost entirely of vinyl - the same durable material used in modern windows and doors - combined with glass panels and a finished roof. It is not a screened porch and it is not a traditional home addition. It sits in between, giving you a bright, comfortable space that stays protected from bugs, rain, and heat. Because vinyl does not rust, rot, or need painting, it holds up well in South Florida's combination of high humidity, salt air, and intense UV exposure. If you are still deciding on the right approach, our sunroom additions page covers the full range of enclosure types, and our three season sunrooms page outlines a lighter-build option for homeowners who do not need full climate control.
Royal Palm Beach is designated a High-Velocity Hurricane Zone under Florida's building code, which means every sunroom addition here requires engineering drawings showing the structure can handle hurricane-force winds - not just standard residential permits. The Florida Building Commission sets these requirements, and any contractor who quotes a fast or unusually cheap project in this area should be asked directly how their products meet the wind-resistance standard.
If you walk out to your screened enclosure in July and immediately walk back inside because of the heat, bugs, and humidity, you are not getting the outdoor living space you paid for. A vinyl sunroom with proper glass and cooling can turn that same footprint into a room you use 365 days a year. Many Royal Palm Beach homeowners make this switch after realizing their screened porch is only comfortable for about four months out of twelve.
If you have a bonus room, Florida room, or enclosed porch that sits empty because it gets too hot in summer or too drafty during a cold front, that is a sign the space was not built for South Florida's climate swings. A properly designed vinyl sunroom with insulated glass and a connection to your cooling system turns an empty room into one that actually earns its place in your home.
After hurricane season, it is worth walking around your existing screened enclosure or older sunroom and looking for bent frames, cracked panels, or gaps where the structure meets the house. In Palm Beach County's wind environment, an aging enclosure that has been patched multiple times is often better replaced than repaired. A new vinyl structure built to current hurricane standards will be significantly more resilient.
If your family has outgrown your home's interior square footage but a full room addition feels overwhelming in cost and construction time, a vinyl sunroom is worth exploring. It is a faster and typically less expensive way to add livable space because it uses a lighter structure than a traditional addition. Many Royal Palm Beach homeowners use sunrooms as home offices, hobby rooms, or casual dining spaces.
Not every vinyl sunroom is built for the same purpose. A room designed as a morning reading space needs different glass and cooling than one you plan to use as a home office every afternoon. We start every project with an in-home consultation to understand how you want to use the space, what your HOA allows, and what will keep the room comfortable in July - before any drawings are produced. Our sunroom additions service covers projects where the vinyl frame is combined with other materials or integrated with a larger home expansion. For homeowners who want a lighter approach to weather protection, our three season sunrooms offer that middle ground with a less insulated build.
Every vinyl sunroom we build goes through the full Palm Beach County permit and inspection process. We also handle HOA submissions for homeowners in planned communities - preparing the drawings, material documentation, and any additional information the architectural review committee needs. The National Association of Home Builders provides general guidance on what homeowners should expect from a permitted addition, and our process aligns with those standards at every stage.
The most straightforward vinyl sunroom - engineered for Palm Beach County's wind requirements and suited to homeowners who want a clean, functional space without custom detailing.
Upgraded glass panels with sealed air gaps reduce heat buildup significantly - the right choice for homeowners who plan to use the room daily through Royal Palm Beach's summer months.
Fully connected to your home's air conditioning system or fitted with a dedicated mini-split unit - for homeowners who want a room that functions like an interior space year-round.
Royal Palm Beach averages more than 230 sunny days per year, and summer temperatures regularly reach the low to mid 90s with high humidity. Vinyl frames handle that climate well - they do not rust, rot, or need repainting, and high-quality vinyl resists the expansion and contraction that happens when temperatures swing. But the glass choice is where most homeowners make the biggest mistake. Without insulated glass panels designed to reduce solar heat gain, a vinyl sunroom in this climate will be unusable for most of the year. We serve homeowners throughout Wellington and the surrounding western communities, and the glass specifications we use are consistent with what this climate actually demands, not what is standard in cooler states.
The other factor that separates a local contractor from an out-of-area one is familiarity with how Royal Palm Beach handles permits and HOA approvals. The village has its own building department for properties within its limits, while properties in unincorporated Palm Beach County go through the county's building division - and those two processes are different. Add the architectural review requirements of the many planned communities here, and you have a permitting landscape that rewards contractors who have done it before. We have worked on homes throughout Royal Palm Beach and know the local drainage and foundation considerations that affect how a slab is prepared before any frame goes up.
We ask about the size of the space, how you plan to use it, and whether you have an existing structure like a screened porch. We always ask about your HOA situation early because it affects design options and timeline. We reply to every inquiry within one business day.
We visit your home to measure the space, assess how drainage around the slab will be handled, and talk through design options in person. You leave this meeting with a clear picture of what is possible, what it will cost, and what the timeline looks like.
Once you sign a contract, we prepare the drawings for both your HOA and Palm Beach County at the same time. The county permit requires engineering drawings showing the room meets hurricane wind standards. Plan for four to eight weeks at this stage - we keep you updated throughout.
Work begins with slab preparation, then frame and panel installation. After construction, Palm Beach County schedules a final inspection. Once the inspection passes, we walk through the finished room with you. You receive a certificate of completion to keep with your home's records.
We come to your home, measure the space, and give you a detailed written quote - no obligation and no sales pitch.
(561) 359-1679Royal Palm Beach is in a High-Velocity Hurricane Zone, and every vinyl frame and glass panel we use has passed Florida's product approval process for wind resistance. That is not a marketing claim - it is a requirement for a permitted addition in this county, and we build to it on every project.
We have worked with architectural review committees across Royal Palm Beach's planned communities. We know what each type of association needs, we prepare the full submission package, and we track the response so your approval does not get held up waiting for follow-up documents.
We provide a detailed written contract before construction starts, and we do not ask for change orders unless something genuinely unexpected comes up. If it does, we explain it clearly and get your approval before proceeding. You plan your budget with confidence and there are no surprise invoices at the end.
Florida requires contractors doing structural work to hold a valid state-issued license, and Palm Beach County requires local registration as well. You can verify our license on the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation's website before you sign anything. We are based in Palm Beach County and encourage that check.
Those four points come back to the same thing: a vinyl sunroom that is built correctly for this specific place. Royal Palm Beach has strict wind requirements, widespread HOA oversight, and a climate that punishes rooms that were not designed with South Florida in mind. We have been solving those problems for homeowners across Palm Beach County for years.
Sunroom additions cover the full range of enclosure types and materials - a good starting point if you are still deciding whether vinyl is the right fit for your home.
Learn MoreThree season sunrooms offer weather and bug protection with a lighter build - worth considering if full climate control and maximum insulation are not top priorities.
Learn MorePermit slots fill up heading into fall season - reach out now to lock in your timeline and get a written quote before the rush.