
Your patio sits empty every summer. We enclose it into a comfortable, air-conditioned sunroom you can use in January, July, and every month in between.

Patio-to-sunroom conversion in Daytona Beach takes your existing outdoor slab and encloses it with framed walls, impact-rated windows, and a weathertight roof - most jobs run four to six weeks from permit approval to final walkthrough, including one to three weeks for Volusia County permit review before work begins.
If your patio feels useless from June through September because of the heat, the bugs, and the afternoon storms, you are not alone. This is one of the most common problems Daytona Beach homeowners face with their outdoor spaces. A patio-to-sunroom conversion solves it by giving you a fully enclosed room - one with glass panels that let the light and the view in while keeping the Florida summer out. The existing slab is your foundation, which means the project moves faster and costs less than building a new addition from scratch.
Many homeowners who look into this service also explore deck-to-sunroom conversion if they have a deck rather than a concrete slab - the approach is similar, though the structural assessment steps differ. Either way, the result is the same: a room that works for you every month of the year.
If you walk past your patio from June through September without using it because the heat is too much, the space is not working for you. Daytona Beach summers consistently push feels-like temperatures well above 100 degrees, making an uncovered or screened patio genuinely miserable. A properly enclosed and cooled sunroom turns that dead space into your favorite room in the house.
If your current screened porch lets rain blow in during afternoon storms, fills with no-see-ums despite the mesh, or leaves furniture soaked after every weather event, the structure is not doing enough. Daytona Beach's wet season brings near-daily afternoon thunderstorms from June through September. A fully enclosed sunroom eliminates all of those frustrations in one project.
Many Daytona Beach homes have aluminum-framed screen enclosures from the 1980s or 1990s showing bent frames, torn screens, rust stains, or panels that no longer latch. Rather than repairing a structure that still leaves you exposed to heat and rain, converting it to a proper sunroom gives you something built to current Florida wind standards that will last far longer.
If your home feels cramped but you already have a patio slab in good condition, converting it is almost always faster and less expensive than building a new room from scratch. The slab is already there, the footprint is already defined, and the work focuses on enclosing and finishing rather than excavating and pouring new concrete - one of the most efficient ways to add usable square footage to a Florida home.
Every conversion starts with an honest assessment of your existing slab - we check it for level, cracks, and structural soundness before anything else. Then we frame the walls, install Florida-code-compliant windows and doors, complete the roof, run electrical for outlets and lighting, and finish the interior. If you want air conditioning added - which we strongly recommend for Daytona Beach summers - we can integrate a mini-split system or connect the room to your existing HVAC as part of the same project. The enclosed patio rooms we build are designed to function as real living space, not just a slightly better version of what you already had.
We handle the entire Volusia County permit process from plan submission to final inspection sign-off. We also work through HOA architectural review if your community requires it - a step many homeowners do not realize they need until a contractor skips it and problems follow. Whether you are starting with a bare concrete slab, an existing screen enclosure, or a covered but open patio, we can work with what you have.
Best for homeowners who primarily want to use the space in fall, winter, and spring and are comfortable without air conditioning during peak summer months.
The right choice for anyone who wants to use the room every month of the year - insulated walls, energy-efficient glass, and a connected HVAC system keep it comfortable even in August.
Ideal for homeowners who already have an aging aluminum screen enclosure and want to replace it with a solid, weathertight room built to current Florida wind standards.
For older homes where the existing slab needs leveling or patching before enclosure work begins - we assess and address structural issues as part of the same project.
Daytona Beach gets over 230 sunny days per year, and summer humidity regularly sits above 80 percent. That combination makes open or lightly screened patios nearly unusable for four to five months every year. Florida's building code also requires that new sunroom windows in coastal areas like Daytona Beach meet specific wind-resistance standards - impact-rated or storm-rated glass that can withstand hurricane-force winds. This is not a contractor upsell; it is a legal requirement that also protects your home and keeps your insurance coverage intact. Homeowners who have seen national cost guides online are often surprised by the price difference, but that gap is almost entirely explained by the window requirements that apply here.
Many Daytona Beach homes - particularly those built in the 1950s through 1980s - have concrete slabs that have settled or cracked over the decades due to the area's sandy soil and proximity to the water table. Before a sunroom can be built on top of an existing patio slab, we assess whether that slab is structurally sound enough to support walls and a roof. If you live closer to the coast, near Edgewater or the beachside neighborhoods, salt air also accelerates wear on framing materials, which is why we use materials proven in this specific climate. Homeowners in communities like Port Orange often have HOA requirements on top of county permits - we are familiar with both and handle them as a standard part of the project.
We reply within one business day. You tell us the size of your patio, whether it has an existing slab or screen enclosure, and what you hope to use the space for - that is all we need to schedule a visit and give you a realistic sense of scope.
We come to your home, measure the space, check the slab condition, and look at how the patio connects to your exterior wall. You receive a written quote - broken down clearly - within a few days of the visit, with no obligation to move forward.
Once you sign a contract, we submit the project plans to Volusia County and handle HOA architectural review if needed. Plan review typically takes one to three weeks - use that time to clear the patio and finalize any decisions about finishes or air conditioning.
Work begins with framing, then windows, roofing, electrical, and interior finishing. County inspectors check the work at key stages - that is a normal, required part of the process. When it is done, we walk through the finished room with you and hand over your permit documentation.
Free on-site estimate. Written quote within days. We handle permits, HOA review, and every step of the Volusia County process.
(386) 278-1623We handle plan submission, inspector scheduling, and final sign-off through Volusia County Building and Zoning from start to finish. That means no forms for you to fill out, no office visits, and no risk of a failed inspection because of incomplete paperwork.
Every sunroom we build uses windows rated for Florida's coastal wind zone. This is required by the Florida Building Commission and it is also the difference between a sunroom that holds up through a hurricane season and one that does not. We never substitute standard windows to lower a bid.
A large share of Daytona Beach homes have older slabs that have shifted over the years because of the area's sandy soil and high water table. We check the slab before we price the job - if it needs repair or leveling, you know about it in the written quote, not partway through construction.
Many Daytona Beach, Port Orange, and Ormond Beach communities require architectural review before exterior changes are approved. We are familiar with the HOA approval process in the area and handle the submission as part of every project, so a board letter does not catch you off guard after construction has started. You can verify any contractor's active Florida license at the Florida DBPR license lookup.
Permit compliance, honest structural assessments, and materials that hold up in Florida's climate are the foundation of every conversion we deliver. When the project is complete, you have a sunroom with a clean permit record and documentation you can hand to a buyer when the time comes to sell.
If you have a deck rather than a concrete slab, we assess the existing frame and convert it into a fully enclosed, year-round room using the same permit-compliant process.
Learn MoreA finished enclosed patio room designed to function as true living space - with insulation, electrical, and climate control built in from the start.
Learn MorePermit timelines in Volusia County mean the sooner you reach out, the sooner you are in your new room - call us or request a free estimate today.