
Your patio or screened lanai sits empty most of the year. We enclose it into a real, climate-controlled room - permitted, built to Florida storm standards, and usable in July.
Your patio or screened lanai sits empty most of the year. We enclose it into a real, climate-controlled room - permitted, built to Florida storm standards, and usable in July.

A patio-to-sunroom conversion in Jupiter, FL takes your existing concrete slab or screened lanai and encloses it with walls, windows, insulation, and a proper roof to create a true indoor living space - most straightforward projects run two to four weeks of active construction after permits are approved, with a total timeline of eight to fourteen weeks from first contact to final inspection.
In Jupiter, where summers run hot and humid from May through October, a screened porch or uncovered patio only earns its square footage for a few months each year. A converted sunroom with real walls, proper windows, and air conditioning changes that completely. We handle the full process - site assessment, permit drawings, Palm Beach County permit submission, construction, and final inspection. If you are comparing options and want something more open, we also build enclosed patio rooms for homeowners who want a middle ground between a screened porch and a fully finished sunroom.
Call us or request a free estimate and we will come take a look at your existing patio. There is no cost and no obligation - just an honest assessment of what is possible and what it will cost.
If you walk past your back patio all summer without stepping into it because the heat and bugs make it unbearable, that space is not working for you. Jupiter's summers are long and relentless, and a screened enclosure offers almost no protection from the heat. A converted sunroom with real walls, proper windows, and air conditioning turns that dead space into a room your family actually uses throughout the year.
If your screened enclosure or covered patio lets in rain during a typical Florida thunderstorm - or during a tropical system - the structure is not doing its job. Water intrusion is also a warning sign that the existing roof or framing may not be in good enough shape to simply patch. A full conversion may be the more cost-effective long-term solution, and it gives you a chance to address the structural issues properly rather than chasing leaks year after year.
If your patio or screened lanai is only comfortable from November through February, you are paying property taxes on square footage you cannot use for most of the year. In Jupiter's real estate market, that is a significant missed opportunity - both for your daily life and for your home's value. A properly built sunroom converts that seasonal space into year-round living area that adds genuine value to your property.
If you have been thinking about adding a home office, a playroom, or a sitting room but do not want the disruption and cost of building from scratch, your existing patio slab is a head start. Converting what is already there is almost always faster and less expensive than adding square footage where none exists. Your contractor can assess during the site visit whether your slab is in good enough shape to build on without modification.
We convert open patios, covered patios, and existing screened lanais into fully enclosed, permitted sunrooms. The scope of each project depends on what you are starting with: an open slab needs full framing, roofing, and weatherproofing; an existing screened enclosure may be partially reusable depending on the condition of its framing. We assess that honestly on the first visit and give you a written proposal before any work begins. Every conversion includes engineered drawings for the Palm Beach County permit process, which is a code requirement for enclosed structures here - not something we offer as an optional add-on. Climate control is a strong recommendation in Jupiter's climate, and we can help you choose between extending your existing HVAC or installing a dedicated mini-split system. The U.S. Department of Energy has useful guidance on comparing HVAC options for new additions.
Window selection is one of the most important decisions in the conversion process. In Jupiter, impact-rated glass is the right choice - it meets Florida's wind requirements and eliminates the need for storm shutters. We also offer deck-to-sunroom conversion for homeowners starting from a raised deck platform rather than a ground-level slab - the process is similar but includes a structural assessment of the deck framing and footings before walls go up.
Best for homeowners with an existing concrete slab who want to build a fully enclosed, climate-controlled room from the ground up.
Best for homeowners with an existing screened enclosure who want to close it in fully and add real windows, insulation, and climate control.
Best for homeowners who already have a basic enclosure but want to add insulation and HVAC to make the room comfortable year-round.
Best for homeowners who want a finished room that functions as true interior living space, with flooring, lighting, and integrated HVAC.
Jupiter sits in a high-wind zone, and any new enclosed structure built here must meet Florida's strict wind load requirements. In practical terms, this means the windows, doors, and roof connections are engineered to withstand hurricane-force winds - not just typical summer storms. That engineering adds some cost upfront, but it also means your new room is genuinely built to last through storm season. Many homes in Jupiter, particularly those built in the 1980s through early 2000s, include existing screened lanais that were built to older standards. When we assess those structures, we look at whether the existing aluminum framing is strong enough to support a true sunroom or whether it needs to be replaced. Homeowners near the water - in neighborhoods closer to the Intracoastal or in communities like Riviera Beach - also need to consider salt air exposure when choosing framing and window materials.
HOA requirements are common in Jupiter's residential communities, and many associations require written architectural approval before any exterior modification - including a sunroom conversion. The HOA review process is separate from the county permit process, and both need to be complete before work begins. We are familiar with how local HOA review works and can help you prepare a submission package that gets approved the first time. Homeowners in Palm Beach and surrounding communities face similar requirements, and the process is manageable when handled correctly from the start. The Palm Beach County Building Division handles permit applications and inspections for projects throughout the area.
We respond to all inquiries within one business day. When you reach out, we will ask a few quick questions about your existing patio and how you plan to use the new space - this lets us show up to your home with realistic ideas rather than starting from scratch on-site.
We come to your home, measure the space, and inspect the existing slab or enclosure. This visit is free and carries no obligation. After the visit, we send a written proposal that spells out exactly what work will be done, what materials will be used, and the total cost - so you can compare with confidence.
Once you decide to move forward, we prepare engineered drawings and submit the permit application to Palm Beach County's Building Division. Review times typically run two to four weeks. We handle this process completely - you do not need to visit any county office or follow up on the status yourself.
With the permit in hand, work begins. The first week involves framing, windows, and roofing - the most visible phase. Interior work follows: insulation, electrical, and HVAC if included. After the final county inspection passes, we walk through the finished room with you and demonstrate how every window and door operates before we leave the job site.
Free estimate, no obligation. We respond within one business day and handle the entire permit process on your behalf.
(728) 221-1197We prepare the engineered drawings, submit the permit application, and coordinate every inspection required by Palm Beach County. You do not have to navigate the building department or chase down approvals - we keep you informed and handle the paperwork from start to finish.
Every conversion we build is designed around impact-rated windows from the proposal stage, not added in later as an upgrade. In Jupiter's high-wind zone, this is a code requirement - and it also means your new room protects everything inside without requiring storm shutters before each tropical system.
We check your existing concrete slab and any existing enclosure framing during the site visit and tell you exactly what can be reused and what needs to be replaced. If the slab needs reinforcement or the existing aluminum frame cannot support a true sunroom, you hear that before a contract is signed - not mid-project when it is expensive to change course.
A significant share of Jupiter neighborhoods require HOA architectural review before exterior changes. We are familiar with local HOA requirements and can help you prepare a submission package that satisfies the review board the first time - avoiding the delays that come from incomplete or non-compliant applications. The National Association of the Remodeling Industry
Every project we take on is permitted, inspected, and backed by a written warranty. When you call us, you are working with a team that knows Jupiter's building requirements and HOA landscape - and that handles the complexity so you do not have to.
Starting from a raised deck rather than a slab? We assess the existing framing and enclose it into a permitted, weather-protected room.
Learn MoreA flexible option between a screened porch and a full sunroom - solid on some sides, open on others, built to the same permitted standard.
Learn MoreJupiter's contractor schedules fill up fast - reach out now to lock in your project start date and get a free, no-obligation estimate.