WPB West Palm Beach Sunrooms is a licensed sunroom contractor serving West Palm Beach, FL, specializing in custom sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen room installation. We have been building for local homeowners and understand the permit requirements, hurricane-rated materials, and South Florida conditions that every project here demands.

West Palm Beach homeowners with underused screened porches or lanais get the most out of their outdoor space by converting it into a fully enclosed, climate-controlled sunroom. Our sunroom additions are built to Florida wind load requirements, using hurricane-rated glass and reinforced framing so your new room stands up to storm season.
In a city where summer temperatures push into the 90s for months at a time, a four-season sunroom built with proper insulation and a dedicated mini-split means you can use the room comfortably year-round, not just in the mild winter months. These rooms are fully insulated and climate-controlled for real daily use.
West Palm Beach's open-air patios and lanais face constant exposure to afternoon thunderstorms, humidity, and insects from May through October. Enclosing your patio gives you a protected, comfortable space that connects to the outdoors without exposing you to the elements.
The mosquito and no-see-um pressure in South Florida during the rainy season is significant, and a properly installed screen enclosure lets you enjoy the breeze and natural light without the bugs or the afternoon sun blazing directly into your space.
Many homes in West Palm Beach have older screened enclosures or poorly built additions that leak during the rainy season or overheat in summer. A remodel done to current Florida building code resolves those issues while updating the look of your outdoor living space.
West Palm Beach has a wide range of home styles - from 1920s Mediterranean Revival homes in Flamingo Park to newer construction on the west side - and a custom sunroom can be designed to match your home's roofline, exterior finish, and floor plan rather than looking like a box tacked on the back.
West Palm Beach sits in a high-wind zone and hurricane season runs from June through November. Florida building code requires that any structure attached to your home - including a sunroom - be built to withstand hurricane-force winds. That means the glass, framing, roof connections, and anchoring all have to meet standards that are significantly stricter than most other states. A contractor who quotes you a price without factoring in impact-rated materials either does not know the local code or is planning to cut corners.
The climate here also demands careful planning around heat and moisture. West Palm Beach averages over 230 sunny days a year, and the humidity from May through October is relentless. Standard glass will make a sunroom unusable in summer - it turns into an oven. Low-emissivity glass, proper roof insulation, and a dedicated cooling solution are not optional upgrades here; they are the baseline for a room you can actually use. The National Weather Service Miami office documents average highs in the low 90s for five months of the year in this part of Florida.
Our crew works throughout West Palm Beach regularly, and we pull permits through Palm Beach County's Building Division on every project. We know what the inspectors here look for, how long approvals typically take at different times of year, and what happens if your HOA also needs sign-off before work starts. Getting all of that right upfront keeps your project moving on schedule.
West Palm Beach is a city with real range - historic Mediterranean Revival homes in Flamingo Park and El Cid, 1950s concrete block ranch houses throughout the middle of the city, newer construction near the downtown SoSo district, and condos along the Intracoastal. We have worked on all of them, and each building type has its own quirks when it comes to attaching a new structure and tying into the existing foundation. Salt air from the Intracoastal Waterway and the Atlantic coast accelerates corrosion on fasteners and frames, so material selection matters here in ways it does not in inland markets.
We also serve neighboring communities. If you are in Riviera Beach just north of West Palm Beach, or further west in communities like Lake Worth Beach, our team covers the full surrounding area.
We respond to every inquiry within one business day. In your first conversation, we will ask about your space, your goals, and whether your property is in an HOA, so we can give you accurate information from the start.
We come to your property, review your existing foundation and slab, measure the space, and discuss material options with you in person. This is also when we talk through realistic cost ranges for your project - no surprises later.
Once you approve the design and contract, we submit for the Palm Beach County building permit before any work begins. Permit approval typically takes 2 to 4 weeks, and we manage that process entirely on your behalf.
When the work is complete, we do a full walkthrough with you to make sure everything meets your expectations. We do not consider the job done until the county inspection passes and you are satisfied with the result.
Get a free estimate from a licensed sunroom contractor who knows West Palm Beach's permit process, HOA requirements, and what it takes to build a room that holds up in Florida weather. We respond within one business day.
(561) 954-1833West Palm Beach is the largest city in Palm Beach County, with a population of about 117,000 residents. The city has a wide range of neighborhoods - from the historic streets of Flamingo Park and El Cid, where Mediterranean Revival and Mission-style homes from the 1920s and 1930s are listed on the National Register of Historic Places, to the newer townhomes and condos near Rosemary Square in the downtown area. The Clematis Street corridor and the waterfront along the Intracoastal Waterway are central to the city's identity, and most residents can reach the Atlantic Ocean in under 15 minutes.
The housing stock reflects the city's growth across decades. The largest share of single-family homes are 1950s and 1960s concrete block ranch houses, built in a style that holds up well in hurricane conditions but requires regular maintenance on stucco, roofing, and windows as those homes age past 60 years. Condo and townhome density increases toward the water. We serve homeowners across the full city and also work regularly in Riviera Beach to the north. If you want more information about the city, the City of West Palm Beach website has details on neighborhoods, permits, and local services.
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 historic neighborhoods in Flamingo Park to newer homes near downtown, we build sunrooms across West Palm Beach that pass inspection and hold up to Florida weather. Call today and we will schedule your free estimate within one business day.