
A screened porch sits empty from May through October in Daytona Beach. A four season sunroom gives you a fully insulated, air-conditioned room addition that works in July just as well as January - no wasted space, no months of the year you avoid it.

Four season sunrooms in Daytona Beach are fully insulated room additions attached to your home, with heating and cooling connected to your existing system, built to Florida's coastal wind standards - most projects run eight to fourteen weeks from permit submission to final walkthrough.
Unlike a screened porch or a basic enclosure, a four season sunroom works as a real room - you can sit in it on a hot July afternoon or a cool January morning without any discomfort. It adds usable square footage and natural light to your home without the disruption of a full interior renovation. If you are deciding between a four season room and a simpler enclosure, our all season rooms page walks through how the options compare. If your starting point is a basic screened structure, the three season sunrooms page explains when that choice makes sense instead.
If your screened porch is unusable from May through October because of heat and humidity, you are paying for outdoor space you cannot actually enjoy. A four season sunroom gives you that same connection to your yard and natural light - without the months-long gap where you avoid it.
If your home feels cramped but a full interior remodel feels overwhelming, a sunroom is a way to add a finished, comfortable room without gutting what you already have. Many Daytona Beach homeowners use four season sunrooms as a home office, a reading room, or a casual gathering space.
If you have a concrete patio that is structurally sound but just sits there collecting rain and sun, it may already be a strong starting point for a sunroom addition. A contractor can often build on an existing slab, which reduces both cost and construction time significantly.
Many older Daytona Beach homes were built with smaller windows and closed floor plans. A four season sunroom adds a wall of glass that floods your home with natural light - and because it connects to your main living area, that brightness carries into adjacent rooms as well.
Every four season sunroom we build is a permitted, permanent room addition - not a prefab kit bolted onto your slab. That means we assess your existing foundation or patio, attach the room properly to your home's structure, and connect it to your HVAC so it is genuinely climate-controlled. The glass we use meets Florida's wind-borne debris requirements, which is not optional in Daytona Beach's coastal zone - it is the standard for any room addition built to code here. For homeowners who want a lighter-weight option, our three season sunrooms page covers what that looks like and when it makes sense.
If you are comparing a four season sunroom against a broader room addition project, our all season rooms page walks through how those two approaches differ in cost, construction time, and what you get. We also handle the full permit process - from application through final inspection - so you are not managing that yourself while trying to plan a build.
The room connects to your existing heating and cooling system so it maintains a consistent temperature year-round - essential in Daytona Beach's long, hot summers.
Required in Volusia County's coastal wind zone, this glass holds together in a storm rather than shattering - and often qualifies for homeowner's insurance discounts.
Proper insulation in the walls and ceiling keeps the room from becoming a heat box in summer or drafty in winter - the detail that separates a usable four season room from one that disappoints.
We evaluate your existing slab or yard conditions before quoting so the foundation approach and the price are based on your actual lot - not a generic estimate.
Daytona Beach averages over 230 sunny days a year, and summer temperatures regularly reach the low 90s with high humidity. A sunroom that is not properly cooled will be unusable for six or more months - which defeats the entire purpose of a four season room. That means the quality of the glass, the size of the HVAC system, and the orientation of the room on your property all matter more here than they would in a cooler climate. South- and west-facing rooms get the most direct afternoon sun and need more careful design to stay comfortable. The salt air that comes off the Atlantic also accelerates corrosion on frames, fasteners, and seals - which is why we specify materials chosen for coastal conditions, not just what looks good in a showroom. ENERGY STAR's glass guidance is a useful reference if you want to understand how low-emissivity coatings work before your site visit.
We work throughout the greater Daytona Beach area, including Port Orange and Ormond Beach. A significant portion of the housing stock in these neighborhoods was built in the 1950s through 1980s using concrete block construction - which can affect how a sunroom attaches to your home's exterior wall. We assess your specific home before writing a proposal, so nothing about your foundation or wall condition becomes a surprise charge once work begins.
We respond within one business day. We ask about your home, your goals, and roughly what size and style of room you have in mind. No commitment - just enough to know whether a site visit makes sense and to give you a rough ballpark before anyone drives out.
We visit your property and look at your existing foundation or slab, the exterior wall where the sunroom will attach, your electrical panel, and how your HVAC system is set up. After the visit, you get a written estimate that breaks down materials, labor, and permit fees.
Once you approve the design and sign a contract, we submit the permit to the City of Daytona Beach Building and Code Administration. This typically takes two to six weeks. We manage that process - use the time to finalize flooring and finish decisions.
Foundation first, then framing, roof, windows, and interior finishing. A city inspector visits when construction is complete. We walk you through the finished room, show you how every system works, and hand you all permit and inspection records.
We visit your home, assess your existing slab and wall conditions, and give you a price you can actually plan around. No phone quotes, no ballparks that change once work starts.
(386) 278-1623We design every four season sunroom with Daytona Beach's climate as the starting point - glass selection, cooling capacity, and room orientation all factor in before we write a proposal. A room that looks great in a showroom but turns into an oven in July is not a room you will use. We make sure yours works in the months that matter most.
Daytona Beach is in a coastal wind zone. We use impact-resistant glass and frame materials rated for salt-air environments on every project - not as an upgrade, but as the standard. That means your room holds up during hurricane season and does not corrode quietly for the first few years after completion.
Every four season sunroom we build is permitted through the City of Daytona Beach or Volusia County, depending on your address, and inspected at completion. That documentation protects your home's appraised value, satisfies your homeowner's insurance, and shows up correctly when you refinance or sell. You can verify our Florida contractor license on the DBPR's website before signing anything.
Daytona Beach's older housing stock means every home is a little different - different slab conditions, different wall construction, different electrical setups. We visit your property before writing a proposal. That site visit is how the price you agree to at the start is the price you pay at the end. For context on what licensed Florida contractors are required to do, the National Association of Home Builders is a useful reference.
A four season sunroom is a significant investment. The things that protect that investment - proper glass, proper permits, proper site assessment - are not extras. They are what we include on every project, because cutting those corners is how a sunroom becomes a regret instead of an upgrade.
A more affordable enclosed sunroom option that works well during Daytona Beach's cooler months - good for homeowners who do not need full air conditioning in the space.
Learn MoreA broader look at year-round room additions and how they compare to four season sunrooms in cost, construction scope, and what you get at the end of the build.
Learn MorePermit windows fill up fast in Volusia County. The sooner you start the process, the sooner you are sitting in a room that works every month of the year - call us or send a message today.