
Mosquitoes and no-see-ums are keeping you inside. A properly built, fully permitted screen room gives you back your outdoor space - year-round in Daytona Beach's climate.

Screen room installation in Daytona Beach means building an aluminum-framed, fully screened enclosure attached to your home, giving you fresh air and outdoor views without the bugs, harsh sun, or rain - most installations take two to five days of active work once the permit is approved.
Think of it as a porch that has been fully wrapped in screen so you can actually use it comfortably. In Daytona Beach's near-year-round outdoor season, that is a meaningful change in how you live in your home. Screen room installation is one of the more accessible ways to add livable space - less invasive and less expensive than a full patio enclosure conversion, but still a permanent structure that is fully permitted and built to Florida's coastal wind-load standards.
The aluminum frame is what gives the room its shape and strength. It is anchored to a concrete slab - either an existing patio or a new one we pour as part of the project - and supports both the screen panels and the roof. For homeowners who later decide they want solid walls and climate control, a screen room can often be upgraded into a patio-to-sunroom conversion without starting from scratch.
If your back patio sits empty most evenings because mosquitoes take over or the afternoon sun makes it unbearable, a screen room would change how you live in your home. Daytona Beach's warm, humid climate means mosquito season runs most of the year, and an open patio offers no real protection. A screen room solves both problems - it keeps insects out and, with the right roof, blocks enough sun to make the space genuinely comfortable.
If you already have a screened area but find bugs inside it, notice screen panels that sag or have holes, or see the frame separating from the wall of your house, the structure has reached the end of its useful life. Older screen enclosures in Daytona Beach - especially those built before Florida tightened its wind-load requirements - may not meet current standards and could be a liability in a storm. Replacing the structure rather than patching it repeatedly is often the smarter financial decision.
If you are treating your yard regularly but still cannot sit outside without being bothered by mosquitoes or no-see-ums, the problem is that an open patio simply cannot be made pest-free. No-see-ums - the tiny biting insects common along Florida's coast - can pass through standard window screen, which is why some Daytona Beach homeowners choose a finer mesh specifically designed to block them. A properly built screen room with the right screen material is the most effective long-term solution.
If your home feels cramped but a full addition is not in the budget, a screen room is a way to meaningfully expand your usable square footage at a fraction of the cost. It will not replace a climate-controlled room, but for a family that wants a place to eat dinner outside, let kids play, or entertain guests, it functions as a true extra room for most of the year in Daytona Beach's climate.
Screen rooms are not one-size-fits-all. The right design depends on how you plan to use the space, how much sun your yard gets, and what your budget looks like. We build both simple screen-only enclosures and more involved rooms with solid or insulated roof panels, ceiling fans, and coastal-rated hardware. For homeowners east of I-95 or near the beach, we specifically recommend hardware and fasteners rated for salt-air environments - a detail that makes a real difference in how the room holds up over the years. We also discuss screen material options so you end up with the right mesh for your situation. Homeowners who are still deciding between a screen room and a more substantial enclosure may want to review our patio enclosures page to compare the two options side by side.
For homeowners who want even more from their outdoor space - solid walls, year-round climate control, and a fully finished interior - a patio-to-sunroom conversion takes the screen room concept further. Below is a breakdown of the main screen room configurations we install.
Best for homeowners who want to enclose an existing patio quickly and affordably, keeping insects out while maintaining natural airflow and open-air feel.
Suited to homeowners who want shade and protection from afternoon sun and summer rain in addition to insect control - the most popular choice in Daytona Beach.
Ideal when the existing aluminum frame has outlived its useful life or no longer meets Florida's current wind-load standards and needs to be replaced entirely.
Right for homeowners who want to maximize comfort during Daytona Beach's summer months by keeping air moving through the space even on the hottest afternoons.
Unlike most of the country, Daytona Beach homeowners can realistically use an outdoor screen room in January and February without any heating. But the city's intense summer heat and humidity - combined with near-year-round mosquito and no-see-um pressure - mean that a well-designed screen room is almost essential for homeowners who want to actually enjoy their outdoor space. Daytona Beach sits in Volusia County, classified as a high-wind zone under Florida's statewide building code, so every frame, anchor, and hardware component we install meets the requirements for coastal areas. Homeowners in Ormond Beach and Port Orange face the same combination of year-round outdoor living potential and Florida weather realities, and we serve both communities regularly.
Salt air is also a real factor in Daytona Beach - especially east of I-95 and in beachside neighborhoods. Salt air accelerates corrosion on hardware and fasteners that are not rated for coastal exposure, which is why we ask about your home's location early in every project conversation. Many homeowners are also surprised to learn that no-see-ums - the tiny biting insects that are common along Florida's coast - can pass right through standard screen. The University of Florida's entomology extension has resources on Florida pest identification and management that can help you understand what you are dealing with before you choose a screen type.
We come to your home to measure the space and review your options for roof style, screen type, and any additional features. You leave that visit with a clear, itemized quote - most contractors will not give you a meaningful price without seeing the site in person.
Once you sign a contract, we prepare the drawings and file for a building permit with Volusia County or the City of Daytona Beach. Permit review typically takes one to four weeks - we keep you updated and schedule your start date as soon as approval comes through.
The crew sets the aluminum frame posts, attaches the roof structure, and installs all screen panels. Most standard-sized rooms are fully framed in one to two days. We respond to all questions within one business day throughout the build.
A building inspector from the city or county verifies that the structure meets Florida's requirements. Once the inspection passes, we do a final walkthrough with you - any screen panel adjustments or door tweaks are handled before you make your last payment.
Free site visit, written quote, permits handled start to finish. We respond within one business day.
(386) 278-1623Daytona Beach is close enough to the Atlantic that salt air is a real factor, especially east of I-95. We use hardware and fasteners rated for coastal exposure so the structure holds up without corroding - a detail that separates a long-lasting room from one that shows rust within a few years.
Every screen room we build is engineered to meet Volusia County's wind-load requirements for coastal areas. That means heavier framing, deeper anchor bolts, and hardware rated for high-wind conditions - verified by the permit inspection. You should not have to worry about your screen room every time a tropical storm is in the forecast.
We handle the entire permit process with Volusia County or the City of Daytona Beach Building Division, including the final inspection. You do not have to track down paperwork, schedule inspectors, or chase approvals. When we hand over the finished room, the permit is closed and the record is clean.
Standard screen keeps out larger insects, but no-see-ums are common along Florida's coast and require a finer mesh. We offer multiple screen types - including no-see-um mesh and solar-blocking screen - and walk you through the trade-offs for your specific home and yard orientation before you decide.
Building to the standard that passes inspection and holds up for decades is not a bonus - it is the baseline we commit to on every project. You can verify contractor license status through the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation before signing any contract - it takes about two minutes and tells you whether the person you are hiring is legally authorized to do this work in Florida.
Take your screen room further with solid walls, insulation, and year-round climate control - converting outdoor space into a true living room.
Learn MoreA step between a screen room and a full sunroom - solid panels on some walls, more weather protection, and a more finished interior feel.
Learn MoreDaytona Beach permit timelines can stretch - reach out today to get your application in early and lock in a start date that works for you.