
You have a specific house, a specific yard, and specific plans for how you want to use the space. We build custom sunrooms designed around all three - fully permitted and built to handle South Florida's weather.

Custom sunrooms in West Palm Beach are fully enclosed additions designed around your specific home and yard - unlike a kit room built to catalog dimensions, most projects take eight to sixteen weeks from contract to completion, with two to four weeks of active construction on your property.
If you have a patio that sits empty from June through September because the heat makes it unbearable, a custom sunroom solves that problem permanently. The room is designed for how you plan to use it - not squeezed into a standard size that may not match your floor plan. In West Palm Beach, where the warm season stretches nearly eight months, getting the design right from the start matters far more than it would in a cooler climate.
Many homeowners start by comparing a custom build against a prefabricated option. The right starting point is sunroom construction - understanding what the build process actually involves helps you know which questions to ask and what to compare across quotes.
If your outdoor space is unusable from May through October because of the heat and humidity, you are losing most of the year on a space you paid for. A properly cooled custom sunroom gives that square footage back to you, every single day.
Older screened enclosures and Florida rooms with jalousie windows let in too much of what you are trying to keep out. If you retreat inside every time a storm rolls through or every afternoon when the sun hits your enclosure, you already know the problem a custom sunroom solves.
If your family has grown or you need a dedicated home office, a custom sunroom adds real usable square footage without the disruption of rerouting plumbing or reconfiguring your existing floor plan. In West Palm Beach's competitive real estate market, it is often more practical than buying a larger home.
If your current enclosure has fogged or cracked glass, frames that have shifted, or a roofline that no longer sits flush after a storm, patching an older structure built to outdated standards is rarely the right long-term answer. A custom rebuild to current hurricane requirements protects the investment going forward.
Every custom sunroom starts with a design conversation, not a catalog. We look at your home's roofline, your yard, how the addition will connect to your living space, and how you plan to use the room. From there, the project moves through sunroom construction - foundation, framing, impact-rated glass installation, HVAC, and finishes - all permitted through the City of West Palm Beach or Palm Beach County.
The sunroom design phase is where your specific goals - size, roof style, glass type, flooring, and how the room connects to your home - get translated into a buildable plan. We handle the HOA submission alongside the building permit so you are not navigating two separate approval processes on your own.
Best for homeowners who want a room that looks and feels like it was always part of the house, matched to their specific roofline, exterior finish, and interior flow.
Best for homeowners who want to use the space every day of the year, including the hottest months, with a proper connection to your home's air conditioning or a dedicated mini-split unit.
Best for homes in Palm Beach County where hurricane-rated glass is required by code, and for homeowners who want the added benefit of noise reduction and stronger storm protection.
Best for homeowners in West Palm Beach communities with architectural review requirements, where the design needs to meet specific size, roofline, or material standards before construction can begin.
West Palm Beach averages over 230 sunny days a year, and summer temperatures regularly push into the low 90s with high humidity. Any sunroom that is not properly insulated and connected to air conditioning will be genuinely unusable from May through October - which is most of the year. That is why the design choices made at the start of a custom project matter so much here. Low-emissivity glass, a well-sealed roof, and a clear plan for climate control are not optional upgrades in this market - they are what makes the room worth building.
Palm Beach County also sits in a high-velocity hurricane zone, which means all new glass on your home must meet specific impact resistance standards set by the Florida Building Code. This adds cost compared to national averages, but it also means the room is genuinely built for the storms that come through here every few years. Homeowners in Wellington and Royal Palm Beach often deal with HOA requirements on top of county building permits, which is an approval step that needs to be sorted out before a contract is signed. We handle that process as part of the standard project workflow.
South Florida's sandy soil also affects how foundations are designed. A sunroom that settles unevenly can develop gaps at the roofline, doors that stick, and cracked glass panels - all problems that trace back to a foundation that was not engineered for local soil conditions. We assess the foundation during every site visit, not after the contract is signed.
We schedule a visit to your home, usually within a few days of your call. We measure the space, look at your existing roofline and foundation, and ask how you plan to use the room. You will hear back with a written estimate within a week or two - no cost, no commitment.
Once you decide to move forward, we finalize the design and pull the building permit from the City of West Palm Beach or Palm Beach County on your behalf. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we help you prepare the submission. In West Palm Beach, permit review typically takes four to eight weeks - we build this into the schedule from day one.
Work begins with the foundation slab or footings, which cure before framing starts. After the frame is up, impact-rated glass panels are installed, the roof is tied into your existing home, and electrical and HVAC work is completed. Each stage is inspected by the county before we move to the next.
Interior finishes - flooring, trim, outlets, and lighting - come last. Before we leave, we do a walkthrough with you. We check that every door and window operates smoothly, the roofline is tight, and the room is comfortable with the air running. You receive the final county inspection certificate to keep with your home records.
Free on-site estimate. No commitment. We handle permits, HOA submissions, and impact glass requirements from start to finish.
(561) 954-1833We specify impact-rated glass on every Palm Beach County project because it is required by code - and because it is what actually protects your investment when a storm comes through. Any contractor who quotes standard glass without discussing this requirement has not done this work here before.
A licensed contractor handles the permit application from start to finish. You should never have to navigate the City of West Palm Beach or Palm Beach County building departments yourself. That paperwork is our responsibility, and the inspection records we hand over at the end protect your home's value at resale.
Many West Palm Beach neighborhoods - especially in the western communities and gated developments throughout Palm Beach County - require architectural review before any exterior addition. We ask about your HOA on the first call and manage the submission process so there are no approval surprises halfway through the project.
South Florida's sandy soil can cause a sunroom to settle unevenly if the foundation is not designed for local conditions. We assess the foundation during the initial site visit, not after a contract is signed. That assessment is what separates a room that lasts from one that develops problems in five years.
Florida Solar Energy Center - energy guidanceEvery one of these points connects to a real outcome for you: a room you can use year-round, a permitted addition that holds up in a storm, and a project that does not create surprises at your HOA meeting or your closing table.
The full build process - from foundation and framing to glass installation and final inspection - for any new sunroom addition.
Learn MoreGet the plans and design decisions right before construction starts, so the finished room fits your home and your goals.
Learn MorePermit slots and build dates fill up - reach out now and we can walk you through your options before the season gets busy.