
South Florida's heat, humidity, and insects make most patios uncomfortable for half the year. A vinyl sunroom gives you a protected, light-filled space between your home and your backyard - one that holds up in this climate without constant upkeep.

Vinyl sunrooms in Greenacres are enclosed additions attached to your home that use vinyl-framed walls and large glass panels to create a livable space between the house and backyard - keeping out rain, bugs, and humidity while still letting in natural light, with most installations completed in five to ten business days once the permit is approved.
The frame material matters here more than it does in cooler, drier states. Vinyl does not rust, rot, or need painting the way wood or aluminum can over time - and in Greenacres, where the combination of salt air, high humidity, and intense UV exposure breaks down exterior materials fast, that durability translates into real savings in maintenance over the years. A vinyl sunroom is also a meaningful step up from a screened enclosure: it keeps out not just insects but rain and humidity, making the space genuinely comfortable in months when a screened porch is not. Homeowners planning a full addition who want help choosing between structure types often start with our sunroom additions service, which covers the full range of options side by side.
Most Greenacres homeowners who call about vinyl sunrooms have a simple goal: a space they can actually use every day, not just during the few comfortable months South Florida gives us. A well-built vinyl sunroom - designed with the right glass and a clear cooling plan - delivers exactly that.
If you find yourself avoiding your back porch from May through October because of the heat, bugs, or afternoon thunderstorms, your current outdoor space is not working. A vinyl sunroom with proper insulation and cooling can turn that same space into a room you use every day of the year. In Greenacres, where the weather is either beautiful or brutal with very little in between, an enclosed sunroom makes the difference between a space you enjoy and one you ignore.
Palm Beach County receives some of the heaviest summer rainfall in the continental United States, with afternoon downpours that can drop several inches in under an hour. If rain regularly forces you inside and cuts your outdoor time short, a sunroom gives you a protected space where you can still see and feel the outdoors without getting soaked. Many Greenacres homeowners describe this as the single biggest quality-of-life improvement they made to their home.
South Florida is home to mosquitoes, no-see-ums, and other biting insects that make unscreened outdoor spaces uncomfortable, especially at dawn and dusk. If you are not using your patio in the evenings because of bugs, a fully enclosed vinyl sunroom solves that problem completely. Unlike a screened enclosure, a vinyl sunroom also keeps out the fine insects that screens alone cannot stop.
If your concrete patio has visible cracks or has started to tilt or settle unevenly, that is a sign the foundation needs attention before any enclosure is built on top of it. In Greenacres, the flat terrain and high water table can cause slabs to shift over time - especially in older neighborhoods. A good contractor assesses the existing slab during the design visit and tells you honestly what needs to be addressed before building begins.
We install vinyl sunrooms across the full range - from straightforward three-season rooms for homeowners who want a screened-in upgrade, to fully insulated four-season additions that function as climate-controlled living space year-round. For homeowners who want to grow the project into something completely custom, our three-season sunrooms service is a strong starting point that covers the entry-level vinyl enclosure in detail. Homeowners who already know they want full insulation, a dedicated cooling system, and a room that works in August are usually better served by looking at sunroom additions as a framework for what the full-build scope looks like.
Every vinyl sunroom we install in Greenacres is permitted through Palm Beach County and built to meet Florida's wind-load requirements - which in practical terms means impact-rated or wind-rated glass, reinforced framing connections, and a roof attachment that goes through inspection before the permit is closed. The Florida Building Commission sets those standards, and the Palm Beach County Building Division inspects the work at key stages before the project closes.
Best for homeowners who want a protected, light-filled enclosure at a lower price point and are comfortable with the room being warm during South Florida's peak summer months.
Suited to homeowners who want full insulation and a dedicated cooling system, making the room as comfortable in August as any other room in the house.
A good fit for homeowners who already have an open patio and want to enclose it with vinyl framing and glass without demolishing the existing slab.
Ideal for homeowners who want ceiling fans, a mini-split unit, or lighting built in from the start - far easier to plan during installation than to add after the walls are up.
Greenacres falls within Palm Beach County's high-velocity hurricane zone under Florida's statewide building code, which means any sunroom built here must be engineered for significantly stronger winds than most other states require. That translates to higher material costs - particularly for wind-rated glass and reinforced framing - and a more detailed permit review process. Year-round heat is the other major factor: Greenacres averages over 2,800 hours of sunshine per year, and a vinyl sunroom without proper roof insulation and a cooling plan will be unusable from May through October. We talk through that before any design is finalized. Homeowners across Lake Worth Beach face the same hurricane-zone requirements and summer heat challenges, and we apply the same approach on every project in this part of Palm Beach County.
The flat terrain and high water table that are typical in Greenacres also affect how the foundation is built. Older slabs in this area sometimes settle or crack over time, and a new slab needs to be elevated and graded properly so that Greenacres's 62-plus inches of annual rainfall drains away from both the sunroom and your home. We assess the existing slab during the initial site visit and tell you plainly what needs to happen before framing starts. HOA rules are common in Greenacres neighborhoods as well - we review your association guidelines before finalizing any design. Homeowners in Riviera Beach deal with similar drainage and HOA considerations, and the same upfront process applies there.
We ask about your space, your HOA situation, and what you want to use the room for. This takes ten minutes and helps both of us figure out whether a vinyl sunroom is the right fit before anyone drives to your home. We respond to all new inquiries within one business day.
We come to your home, measure the space, and check the condition of your existing slab. In Greenacres, we also ask about your HOA and walk through how the room will be cooled - those are not optional conversations here. You receive a written proposal within a few days of this visit.
Once you approve the design and sign a contract, we submit the permit application. Plan review in Palm Beach County typically takes one to three weeks. We handle everything with the county - you do not need to do anything except keep your contact information current in case we have a quick question.
With the permit approved, construction typically runs five to ten business days. The county inspector visits to verify the work. After everything passes, we walk you through the finished room, show you how to operate windows and vents, and hand over your permit paperwork and warranty documents.
We come to your home, assess the space, and give you a written quote that covers permits, foundation, and cooling - no pressure, no obligation.
(561) 903-1614We use vinyl sunroom systems that are rated for Palm Beach County's wind requirements - not generic national-standard materials applied to a hurricane zone. You can ask us for the product approval information for the system we recommend, and we will show you how to verify it. That is not a conversation every contractor is willing to have.
A sunroom that becomes an oven by noon is one of the most common complaints South Florida homeowners have about contractors who did not design for the climate. We make cooling - whether a mini-split unit, operable windows, or insulated roof panels - part of every design conversation before any contract is signed. You will not discover this problem after the fact.
Every vinyl sunroom we install is permitted through Palm Beach County and passes all required inspections before we close the job. That gives you an official record of compliant work that protects you if you ever sell, refinance, or need to file an insurance claim. The National Association of the Remodeling Industry's standards at nari.org reflect the same commitment to properly documented work.
We have been building sunrooms in Greenacres and surrounding Palm Beach County communities since 2019. We know the local permit process, the inspectors, the soil conditions, and the HOA review timelines that affect how these projects move. That experience means fewer surprises for you and a smoother path from signed contract to finished room.
Every one of those points comes back to the same outcome: a vinyl sunroom that works in Greenacres's climate, built by a contractor who knows what that actually requires and can prove it with permitted, inspected work.
Full sunroom addition planning and construction for homeowners who want to add a permanent, permitted room to their home.
Learn MoreA lower-cost enclosure option for homeowners who want bug and rain protection without a full climate-control system.
Learn MorePermit slots in Palm Beach County fill up - the sooner we start the paperwork, the sooner you have a room you can use.