
West Palm Beach Lanai Sunrooms & Patios has been building sunroom additions, screen rooms, and patio enclosures in West Palm Beach since 2017. We understand the local permit process, the HOA approval requirements in communities across the city, and the wind-load and glass standards that Florida building code requires for every project we build here.

West Palm Beach homeowners with underused screened lanais or open patios can convert that space into a fully enclosed, climate-controlled room they can use 365 days a year. If you have been avoiding your outdoor space because of summer heat or afternoon storms, a sunroom addition solves that problem permanently.
Screen rooms are a practical first step for West Palm Beach homeowners who want to enjoy their outdoor space without the bugs and without the cost of a fully enclosed sunroom. The heavy mesh screening we use is rated for South Florida wind conditions, so it holds up through hurricane season without tearing or pulling away from the frame.
Many West Palm Beach properties have open concrete slab patios behind the house that bake in the afternoon sun from April through October. Enclosing that slab with impact-rated glass or screen panels turns a space most homeowners barely use into one of the most-used rooms in the house.
Older homes in neighborhoods like Flamingo Park and El Cid have rooflines and exterior profiles that standard prefab kits cannot match. A custom-built sunroom is designed to tie into your home's existing architecture so the addition looks like it was always there, not bolted on as an afterthought.
Older sunrooms built before Florida updated its building code after 1992 often lack adequate insulation, proper glass ratings, and code-compliant framing. We remodel these rooms to current standards, which typically means significantly better energy efficiency and a room that performs better in heat and storms.
Vinyl framing resists the salt-air corrosion that accelerates rust on metal frames in West Palm Beach's coastal climate. For homeowners within a few miles of the Intracoastal Waterway or the Atlantic coast, a vinyl sunroom holds its appearance and structural integrity longer than aluminum alternatives.
West Palm Beach averages more than 230 sunny days a year, and summer temperatures push into the low 90s with humidity that rarely lets up. Any sunroom built here has to be engineered for heat and moisture first, and aesthetics second. A room with standard single-pane glass will be unusable from May through October, and an under-insulated roof will drive up your cooling bills in the months you can use it. Low-emissivity glass, proper roof insulation, and a correctly sized HVAC connection are not optional upgrades in this climate - they are the baseline for a room that works.
The other factor that catches homeowners off guard is Florida's wind load requirements. West Palm Beach sits in a high-wind zone, and any structure attached to your home must be built to withstand hurricane-force conditions. The framing, anchoring, glass, and roof connections all have to meet the standards set by the Florida Building Code, which is more stringent than what most national sunroom manufacturers design for by default. A contractor who builds the same room in West Palm Beach as they would in Georgia is cutting corners that will show up during the next storm inspection.
Our crew has been pulling permits from the Palm Beach County Building Division for sunroom and patio enclosure projects in West Palm Beach since 2017. We know the review timeline, the plan submission requirements, and the inspection checkpoints - which means your project does not stall because of a paperwork issue we could have anticipated. When a permit revision comes back, we handle it quickly so your timeline stays on track.
West Palm Beach has a wide range of home types, from Mediterranean Revival and Mission-style homes in Flamingo Park and El Cid - many built in the 1920s and 1930s - to postwar concrete block ranches from the 1950s and 1960s, to newer construction near Rosemary Square and the SoSo district. The older homes require different foundation assessments and framing approaches than a newer slab-on-grade build, and we adjust our approach accordingly. If you are not sure what your home's structure can support, that is exactly what the on-site assessment is for.
We also serve homeowners in Riviera Beach just north of West Palm Beach, and throughout the broader Palm Beach County area. If you have a neighbor or family member looking for the same work in a nearby city, we likely cover that area too.
Contact us by phone or through the estimate form on this page. We respond within one business day and can usually schedule an on-site visit within the same week.
We visit your home at no cost, assess the existing foundation or slab, check the roof attachment point, and talk through your goals. This is also where we address cost - you will not get a vague estimate that changes later.
We prepare and submit the Palm Beach County permit application and, if your community requires it, assist with HOA documentation. Construction begins only after the permit is approved - no exceptions.
Our crew completes the framing, glass installation, and finishing work with county inspections at the required checkpoints. When the final inspection passes, we do a walkthrough with you to make sure everything meets your expectations before we close out the job.
We serve all of West Palm Beach and respond within one business day. No obligation, no pressure - just a straightforward conversation about what you want to build and what it will cost.
(728) 226-6069West Palm Beach is the largest city in Palm Beach County, with roughly 117,000 residents spread across a wide range of neighborhoods. The city sits along the Intracoastal Waterway, with the Atlantic Ocean just a few miles east across Palm Beach Island. That coastal location shapes how homes here age - salt air works on exterior materials year-round, and the combination of heat, humidity, and storm exposure means outdoor structures need more maintenance and more durable materials than homes in other parts of the country. The city spans from its historic downtown core out to quieter residential neighborhoods on the west side, with a mix of long-term homeowners and newer arrivals.
The housing stock here ranges from Mediterranean Revival homes built in the 1920s and 1930s in Flamingo Park and El Cid, to postwar concrete block ranch homes from the 1950s through 1970s, to newer townhomes and condos near the revitalized downtown around Rosemary Square and Clematis Street. Homeowners throughout the city share the same basic challenge: how to make outdoor and semi-outdoor spaces usable despite intense heat, frequent afternoon storms, and a hurricane season that runs from June through November. We also work regularly in Riviera Beach to the north, where many of the same property types and conditions apply.
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Learn MoreCall us today or send a message to get a free on-site estimate. Hurricane season does not wait, and neither should your sunroom project.