
Stop giving up your backyard to mosquitoes and summer storms. A three season sunroom gives you a protected, comfortable space you can actually use for most of the year.

Three season sunrooms in Daytona Beach give you a protected, panel-walled room between your home and your backyard - most jobs take one to three weeks of on-site work after permits are approved, with a full project window of six to twelve weeks from first contact to finished room.
If you have been looking for a way to get more use out of your outdoor space without the full cost of a climate-controlled addition, a three season sunroom is the answer. Unlike a screened enclosure that lets rain and wind right through, solid panels let you choose when to let the breeze in and when to close things up. Many Daytona Beach homeowners also consider patio enclosures depending on how much weather protection they need.
Daytona Beach's mild winters and long spring and fall seasons mean a three season room gets used far more months of the year than it would in a northern state. It is not a luxury here - it is a practical way to add livable square footage without the complexity of a full home addition.
If mosquitoes and no-see-ums drive you inside every evening from May through October, a three season sunroom solves that directly. You get a protected outdoor-feeling space where you can sit with the panels open on a breezy evening or close them when conditions turn.
Daytona Beach averages about 50 inches of rain per year, much of it in sudden afternoon storms. If your current screened porch soaks through every time a squall passes, upgrading to solid panels gives you real weather protection without giving up the open-air feel.
A three season sunroom adds meaningful square footage at a fraction of what a fully conditioned addition costs. It does not require the same level of insulation, HVAC work, or structural complexity, which keeps the price significantly lower for most homeowners.
If you have an older concrete patio or a screened enclosure showing its age - cracked screens, rusted frames, a settled slab - replacing it with a three season sunroom is often only marginally more expensive than a straight repair. You end up with something far more functional.
Our three season sunroom builds use solid panels - glass, vinyl, or a combination - that open and close so you control ventilation and weather protection. Most rooms sit on an existing concrete slab or a new poured slab and attach directly to your home with proper flashing at the roofline. For homeowners who want a fully conditioned space usable on the hottest Daytona Beach afternoons, we also build patio enclosures with climate control options.
We also offer screen room installation for homeowners whose primary goal is bug protection at a lower price point. Each project is sized and designed around your specific patio, your HOA requirements if applicable, and Volusia County's wind-load standards - which are among the most demanding in the state for coastal construction.
Best for homeowners who want full weather protection and a finished, room-like feel year-round.
Suits those who want flexibility - open screens for ventilation, close glass panels during storms.
A practical choice for bug protection on a tighter budget, with the option to upgrade panels later.
Daytona Beach averages around 234 sunny days per year, and winter temperatures rarely drop below the mid-40s. That means a three season room here gets used far more months than it would in a northern state. But the real driver for most homeowners is the combination of mosquitoes, no-see-ums, and afternoon rain that makes uncovered outdoor spaces genuinely miserable from late spring through early fall. A solid-panel room changes that equation completely. Homeowners in Port Orange and Ormond Beach face the same seasonal conditions and are among the most common areas we serve.
Volusia County's wind-load requirements add some cost to any sunroom project in this area, but they also mean your room is built to handle what coastal Florida actually throws at it. Structures built to these standards - with proper flashing at the roofline, impact-rated or protected glazing, and anchoring engineered for local wind speeds - perform very differently in a serious storm than structures built without permits. We handle the entire Volusia County permit process on your behalf, including HOA submissions for the many planned communities throughout Daytona Beach.
We will ask about your space, your existing patio or slab, and what you want to use the room for. You will hear back within one business day with a rough cost range so you know if the project fits your budget before anyone drives out.
We visit your home, measure the space, assess the existing foundation, and walk through your panel and roofline options. The visit takes 30 to 60 minutes and ends with a written estimate that includes permit fees.
After you sign a contract, we submit the permit application to Volusia County Building and Zoning on your behalf. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we help prepare the approval request. Plan for four to eight weeks for this stage - we keep you updated throughout.
Foundation and framing take two to four days. Panel installation and finishing follow over three to five more days. A county inspector visits before we close out the permit, and we walk you through the finished room before final payment is due.
Free on-site estimate. Permit fees included in your written quote. No obligation.
(386) 278-1623We submit and manage the entire permit process with Volusia County Building and Zoning on your behalf. You will have a closed permit in hand when the job is done - which protects your investment at resale and confirms the work was inspected.
Every room we build meets Volusia County's wind-load requirements for coastal construction. That means impact-rated or properly protected glazing, heavier framing profiles, and anchoring engineered for the storms that regularly affect this coastline.
Many Daytona Beach neighborhoods - including communities near LPGA International, Pelican Bay, and Latitude Margaritaville - require HOA architectural review before any exterior addition. We walk through that process with you before a single post is set.
Any contractor working on your home in Florida should hold a current state license - you can verify ours on the Florida DBPR website. A current license means we carry required insurance and are accountable to a state licensing board if anything goes wrong.
Every one of these commitments comes back to the same thing: a room that performs in Florida's climate, is documented correctly with the county, and adds real value to your home. That is what separates a project you will be happy about for twenty years from one you will regret in five.
More questions? Call us or send a message and we will give you a straight answer.
Convert your existing patio into a fully enclosed room with walls, a roof structure, and the option for climate control.
Learn MoreA screen room gives you bug protection and shade at a lower price point, with the option to upgrade panels later.
Learn MoreThe sooner you start, the sooner you are enjoying your new space. Reach out today for a free estimate with permit fees included.