WPB West Palm Beach Sunrooms is a licensed sunroom contractor serving Boynton Beach, FL, with services including screen room installation, patio enclosures, and custom sunroom additions. We work in HOA communities throughout Boynton Beach and know what it takes to build outdoor living spaces that hold up against Atlantic coast salt air and Florida storm seasons.

Boynton Beach sits right on the Atlantic, and from May through October the mosquito and no-see-um pressure is real enough to keep most people indoors in the evenings. Our screen room installation service gives you a protected outdoor living space where you can sit in the breeze without the bugs or the direct afternoon sun - using frames rated for Florida's coastal wind requirements.
Boynton Beach homeowners deal with flat lots and limited natural drainage, which means open patios can collect standing water during the heavy summer rains that roll through almost every afternoon. Enclosing your patio raises it into a protected, dry space that you can actually use through rainy season.
Many Boynton Beach homeowners have lived in their properties for 20 to 30 years and are now looking to upgrade rather than move. A sunroom addition converts unused outdoor square footage into a year-round room that adds real value to a home whose price has climbed sharply in recent years.
Boynton Beach has a large retired population that uses their outdoor spaces year-round, not just in winter. A four-season sunroom with climate control and low-emissivity glass makes that space genuinely livable in August as much as in January - which matters in a city where summer heat and humidity are relentless.
Single-story concrete block ranch homes - the most common style in Boynton Beach - usually have a rear patio that is the right size and shape to convert into a fully enclosed sunroom without a major addition. We work with the existing slab and structure wherever possible to keep costs and disruption down.
Many HOA-governed communities in Boynton Beach have requirements about exterior materials, colors, and designs. A custom sunroom lets us match your HOA's specifications and your home's existing exterior finish so the new room looks like it was always part of the house.
Boynton Beach is an Atlantic coast city, and that means salt air is a constant presence. Bare metal frames, standard fasteners, and uncoated aluminum all corrode significantly faster here than they would in an inland community 20 miles west. Contractors who use inland-spec materials on coastal Boynton Beach projects are setting their customers up for premature failure - rust, frame degradation, and screen tears within a few years of installation. Every screen room and sunroom we build here uses materials selected for coastal conditions.
The age of Boynton Beach's housing stock also matters. A large share of single-family homes here were built between 1960 and 1990, making them 35 to 60 years old. The slabs, footers, and stucco on those homes need to be assessed before any new structure is attached. A contractor who skips that assessment and just anchors into an aging slab is creating a liability. Beyond that, many of Boynton Beach's neighborhoods are in HOA-governed communities with their own approval processes on top of the county building permit. Knowing how to navigate both - and in the right order - keeps your project on schedule. For guidance on storm preparedness in Palm Beach County, the Palm Beach County Division of Emergency Management is a useful resource.
Our crew works throughout Boynton Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits through Palm Beach County's Building Division on every project and have worked in HOA communities across Boynton Beach, from established neighborhoods near Congress Avenue to communities closer to the Intracoastal Waterway and the Boynton Beach Inlet.
Boynton Beach sits between Delray Beach to the south and West Palm Beach to the north, and we serve the full stretch. The city's flat topography means drainage around patios and slabs is something we look at on every site visit - it affects how we design the enclosure and slope the floor to keep water moving away from the structure during heavy rain. Oceanfront Park and the surrounding neighborhoods along A1A have homes with particularly high salt air exposure, and our material recommendations for those properties reflect that.
We also work regularly in Delray Beach just to the south, which has similar housing stock and coastal conditions. If your property is in either city, we can schedule your free estimate quickly.
Call or use our contact form and tell us about your project. We ask about your property type, HOA status, and what you are looking to build. We respond to every inquiry within one business day.
We visit your property, review the existing slab and structure, assess salt air exposure if you are near the coast, and walk you through material options and realistic cost ranges - before you commit to anything.
After you approve the design and contract, we file for the Palm Beach County building permit and, if needed, prepare the documentation your HOA requires for architectural review. We manage both processes so you do not have to.
Once permits are approved, we build the project and schedule the county inspection. You do a final walkthrough with us to confirm everything is right before we close out the job.
We serve Boynton Beach homeowners with screen rooms, patio enclosures, and custom sunroom additions. Every estimate is free, every project is permitted, and we handle the HOA paperwork if your community requires it. Reach out today.
(561) 954-1833Boynton Beach is a city of about 80,000 people in Palm Beach County, situated directly on the Atlantic coast between Delray Beach to the south and Lake Worth Beach to the north. The city has direct ocean access through Oceanfront Park on the barrier island, and the Boynton Beach Inlet connects the Intracoastal Waterway to the Atlantic - a landmark most residents pass regularly. Congress Avenue is the main commercial corridor through the middle of the city, and Boynton Beach Boulevard carries traffic east toward the coast and west into newer suburban neighborhoods.
The housing stock is heavily weighted toward single-story concrete block ranch homes built in the 1960s through 1980s, though newer townhome and condo developments have added density closer to the water and along Federal Highway. Boynton Beach has a notably large retired and senior population, including residents in long-established communities like Leisureville, and many of these homeowners are now looking at upgrades and outdoor living improvements rather than moving. For local permitting and code information, the City of Boynton Beach Planning and Zoning Division is the right starting point. We also regularly serve homeowners in Delray Beach to the south, which shares similar building conditions and coastal exposure.
Keep pests out and breezes in with a quality screen room installation.
Learn MoreTurn your underused deck into a beautiful, functional sunroom space.
Learn MoreFrom screen rooms near the Boynton Beach Inlet to patio enclosures in HOA communities off Congress Avenue, we build outdoor living spaces across Boynton Beach that are permitted, code-compliant, and built for the coast. Call today to schedule your free estimate.