
Jupiter Lanai Sunrooms & Patios builds all season rooms, screen enclosures, and sunroom additions for Royal Palm Beach homeowners. We know HOA approval requirements in this village and handle Palm Beach County permitting. We reply within one business day.

Royal Palm Beach summers are hot and humid, and a basic screen room stops being comfortable by June. Our all season rooms use insulated glass and a climate control connection so you can use the space comfortably through July and August - not just during the mild winter months when every screened porch in the village gets some use.
Most Royal Palm Beach homes were built with a covered slab or back porch that is a natural candidate for a screen enclosure. Adding screens keeps mosquitoes and no-see-ums out during the warm months and makes the covered area genuinely usable for more of the year without the cost of full enclosure.
In a community where most homes were built between 1980 and 2005, the available back-of-house slab space is well-suited to a permitted sunroom addition that adds square footage without a full-scale home renovation. Royal Palm Beach lots are generally flat and have good access, which keeps site prep straightforward on most jobs.
Royal Palm Beach homes with pool decks or rear patios benefit from enclosures that keep the pool area screened and reduce the amount of debris and leaf litter that lands in the water. For neighborhoods where the HOA tracks property appearance, an enclosed patio also keeps the rear yard looking neat regardless of the season.
For Royal Palm Beach homeowners who want a fully conditioned room that functions as living space rather than a seasonal add-on, a four season sunroom with energy-efficient glazing is the right fit. The concrete block construction common in this area provides a solid attachment point for the structural framing.
Vinyl frame systems resist the high humidity of South Florida summers without needing periodic repainting, which is an advantage in Royal Palm Beach where homes sit through intense UV exposure and regular afternoon thunderstorms year after year. For HOA communities that require a tidy exterior appearance, vinyl holds color and finish well over time.
Royal Palm Beach was developed as a planned community starting in the 1960s, with most homes built between 1980 and 2005 using concrete block and stucco construction. That housing stock is now 20 to 45 years old, and many homes have screened porches or patio slabs that were built to a lower standard than what Florida Building Code requires today. A new enclosure or sunroom addition must be designed and permitted to current code, which means a contractor who is working from older templates or not pulling permits is creating a liability for the homeowner - not just a building code problem.
South Florida's climate puts constant stress on exterior materials. Daily afternoon thunderstorms from May through October, intense year-round UV exposure, and occasional strong winds from tropical systems all accelerate wear on screens, frames, and sealants. Royal Palm Beach is far enough inland to avoid direct salt air from the coast, but the heat and humidity alone shorten the life of standard materials faster than homeowners expect. We use heavy-gauge aluminum, UV-resistant screen mesh, and stainless steel fasteners on every job so the work holds up through multiple storm seasons.
Our crew works throughout Royal Palm Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Permits for structural additions go through Palm Beach County Building Division, not a separate village building department, because Royal Palm Beach operates under the county's permitting system. Many subdivisions here also have HOA review requirements that run parallel to the county permit process, and we factor both into the project schedule from the start.
The village sits in the western communities corridor of Palm Beach County, bounded by State Road 7 to the east, Southern Boulevard to the south, and Okeechobee Boulevard to the north. Royal Palm Beach Commons Park anchors the community's center, and the surrounding neighborhoods are a mix of subdivisions with HOAs of varying strictness. Lots here are flat, access is generally good, and the CBS construction common throughout the village is a solid base for the framing work required by sunroom and enclosure additions.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring Wellington to the south and Palm Beach Gardens to the northeast. If you are near the boundaries of Royal Palm Beach, we cover your area on the same schedule.
Reach us by phone at (728) 221-1197 or through the contact form. We respond to every inquiry from Royal Palm Beach homeowners within one business day - no waiting over a weekend to hear back.
We visit your home, measure the space, check the existing slab and structure, and review any HOA guidelines or county setback requirements that apply to your lot. We give you a detailed written estimate before any commitment is required - no hourly charge for the visit.
We file the Palm Beach County permit application and prepare any documents your HOA requires for review. You do not need to manage that process - we handle the paperwork and notify you of approvals and inspection dates.
Construction moves forward once permits are in hand. Most Royal Palm Beach projects complete within 4 to 8 weeks of permit approval. We do a final walkthrough with you before closing out the permit and confirm the county inspection is passed before we leave the job.
We serve Royal Palm Beach and the surrounding western communities. Free estimate, no pressure, and we handle all the permit paperwork.
(728) 221-1197Royal Palm Beach is a village in western Palm Beach County with a population of around 40,000 residents. Originally developed as a planned community starting in the 1960s, it grew rapidly through the 1980s and 1990s and is now one of the more established suburban communities in the western corridor of the county. The village is predominantly single-family residential, with most homes in organized subdivisions - many of which have active homeowners associations. The housing stock runs from modest three-bedroom homes to larger properties with pools, and owner-occupancy rates are high, which means residents here tend to maintain their properties carefully.
The village center is anchored by the Village of Royal Palm Beach, with Royal Palm Beach Commons Park serving as the main community gathering space. To the west lies the Acreage and Loxahatchee, where larger rural lots give way to a different scale of property. To the south, the equestrian community of Wellington is the next major community, and its residents share many of the same housing characteristics and building conditions. To the east, the broader Palm Beach County suburbs stretch toward the coast.
Glass solarium installations that flood your home with natural light.
Learn MoreWe build all season rooms, screen enclosures, and sunroom additions throughout Royal Palm Beach. Spots fill up - reach out today to lock in your project date.