Add a climate-controlled room to your home that stays comfortable even in August. Built to South Florida hurricane standards, fully permitted, with real insulation and cooling so you actually use it.

Sunroom additions in Delray Beach FL add a fully enclosed, climate-controlled room to your home where you get natural light without the heat, bugs, or weather. Most jobs take two to six weeks once permits are approved.
If you have a patio or porch that sits empty half the year because the Florida heat makes it unbearable, a sunroom addition solves that. You get a real room, tied into your home's air conditioning, with impact-rated glass that blocks UV rays and heat while still giving you a view. It's a space you can use every day, not just on the five perfect-weather days South Florida gets each year.
We also handle four season sunrooms for homeowners who need a room that functions like the rest of the house, and full sunroom construction from foundation to final inspection.
If your patio or back porch sits empty from June through September because the heat and humidity make it miserable, a sunroom can give that space back to you. In Delray Beach, where summer afternoons regularly feel like stepping into a sauna, a climate-controlled sunroom means you actually get to enjoy your outdoor view without suffering through it.
If your screened enclosure lets in bugs, gets soaked during afternoon thunderstorms, or feels like an oven in summer, it's doing less than it should. Converting or replacing it with a proper sunroom gives you a real room, one that's comfortable, dry, and usable regardless of what the weather is doing outside.
If your family has outgrown your current layout but you love your neighborhood, a sunroom addition can add meaningful square footage without the cost and disruption of a full home addition. Many Delray Beach homeowners use sunrooms as a flexible space that adapts as their needs change: a home office, a playroom, a reading room.
In Delray Beach's competitive real estate market, a well-built sunroom is a feature that photographs well and shows well. If your home is similar to others in your neighborhood but lacks a standout indoor-outdoor living space, a sunroom addition can be the detail that makes buyers choose your home over the one down the street.
Every sunroom we add starts with a conversation about how you're actually going to use the space. If you want a room that works in July and August, not just October and March, that means real insulation, hurricane-rated glass, and a plan to tie the room into your home's cooling system. We handle four season sunrooms for homeowners who need year-round comfort, and full sunroom construction from foundation to finish.
The foundation gets poured or extended to match your existing slab. The framing goes up with connections engineered to meet Palm Beach County's wind-load requirements. The glass is impact-rated and coated to block UV rays and heat. The roof ties into your home's existing structure in a way that passes inspection. The electrical and HVAC work gets done by licensed trades who pull their own permits. You get a room that feels like part of your house, not an afterthought bolted onto the back of it.
Fully insulated and climate-controlled, built to the same standard as the rest of your home so you can use it comfortably even in South Florida's hottest months.
Designed to match your home\'s architecture and your family\'s needs, from foundation work through final inspection and permitting.
Delray Beach gets more than 230 sunny days a year, and summer heat indexes regularly top 100°F. That kind of heat and humidity means an outdoor space without serious climate control isn't a room, it's a greenhouse. A sunroom addition built for this area uses low-E glass to block solar heat, insulation to stop heat transfer through the walls and roof, and a cooling plan that accounts for South Florida's summer reality. The homes we work on in neighborhoods near Boynton Beach and throughout Delray Beach face the same challenge: if the room isn't built right, you won't use it.
Palm Beach County also sits in a high-wind zone under Florida's building code, which means every sunroom addition has to meet hurricane-force wind standards. That's not optional, and it's one of the biggest reasons costs here run higher than what you'd see in other parts of the country. The glass has to be impact-rated. The roof connections have to be engineered and inspected. The framing has to handle wind loads that would flatten a room built to code in most other states. This is expensive, but it's also what keeps your investment safe when the next storm rolls through.
We ask about how you plan to use the space, your rough budget, and whether you have an HOA. Then we schedule a visit to see your property, measure, and talk through what's possible. You'll leave with a clearer picture of cost and timeline. We reply to every inquiry within one business day.
We put together a proposal that breaks down the work by category: foundation, framing, glass, roofing, electrical, HVAC. This is when you ask questions and compare what different contractors are offering. A detailed estimate protects you from surprises later.
We handle the permit application through the City of Delray Beach and any HOA review your community requires. This phase takes two to four weeks. We keep you updated so you're not left wondering what's happening.
Once permits are approved, we pour the foundation, frame the walls and roof, install the glass, and finish the interior. The city inspects the work at key stages. After final sign-off, we walk you through the completed room and hand over all warranty documents.
Most homeowners hear back within one business day. No pressure, just straight answers about what's possible for your home and budget.
Every sunroom we add uses impact-rated glass and roof connections engineered to meet Palm Beach County's high-wind requirements. That's not marketing language, it's what shows up on the permit drawings and gets checked by the city inspector. It costs more upfront, but it's what protects your investment when the next storm rolls through.
Most homeowner frustration during a construction project comes from surprises with permits or HOA rules that pop up after plans are already drawn. We ask about your HOA in the first conversation, handle the architectural review process upfront, and submit the permit application before a single board is cut. You know what's approved before we start.
We've worked in Kings Point, Lake Ida, Tropic Isle, and neighborhoods across Delray Beach and Boynton Beach. That means we've seen the range of foundation types, HOA requirements, and site conditions that affect what's possible and what it costs. We come prepared for what we're going to find, not surprised by it. Learn more about our credentials and industry standards.
You get a proposal that lists what's included by category: materials, labor, permits, and cleanup. The number you agree to at the start is the number you pay at the end, unless you change the scope of work. No vague lump-sum quotes that make it impossible to compare contractors or understand what you're actually buying.
We've been building sunrooms in South Florida long enough to know what holds up and what doesn't. The homeowners who call us back for their next project, or send their neighbors our way, aren't doing it because we're the cheapest option. They're doing it because the room we built still works the way it's supposed to.
Call today for a free estimate. Most Delray Beach homeowners hear back within one business day, and there's never any pressure to commit before you're ready.