Port St. Lucie mosquitoes and summer heat keep too many homeowners inside. A three season sunroom gives you a real, protected space to use your backyard every single day.

Three season sunrooms in Port St. Lucie are enclosed room additions with solid walls and real windows - built to keep out bugs, rain, and wind - but not designed to run on your home heating and cooling system, with most projects taking two to four weeks to build once permits are approved.
If your screened lanai is aging or you have been wishing your patio felt more like a real room, this is the most cost-effective path to get there. Port St. Lucie mild winters mean you can comfortably use a three season room for a large part of the year, especially in the evenings when the breeze comes through. Many homeowners find this style of room is the one they end up using most.
If you need full year-round air conditioning and heating, our patio enclosures and screen room installation options offer different trade-offs worth considering.
If you step outside in the evening and immediately retreat because of mosquitoes or no-see-ums, your outdoor space is not working for you. Port St. Lucie warm, humid climate means bug season is essentially year-round, and a glass-enclosed room changes how much time you spend outside. If your patio furniture is collecting dust because being outside is more frustrating than relaxing, that is a clear sign this addition would get real daily use.
Many Port St. Lucie homes from the 1980s and 1990s have aluminum-framed screened enclosures that are now showing bent frames, torn screens, or roofs that leak during afternoon thunderstorms. If you are already looking at repairs, it is worth comparing the cost of patching an old enclosure against upgrading to a proper three season room that will last much longer and add more value to your home.
If you have been thinking about a home office, a craft room, a spot to exercise, or a place for morning coffee without going fully outside, a three season sunroom creates that space without a full interior addition. The room feels connected to the outdoors but functions like a real room. This is often the most cost-effective way to get the extra space you have been thinking about.
Port St. Lucie averages around 55 inches of rain per year, most of it falling in intense afternoon storms from June through September. If your current outdoor space becomes unusable after rain - standing water, a leaking roof, or a floor that stays wet - a properly built sunroom with a solid roof and a graded slab solves that problem for good.
We build three season sunrooms from the ground up - foundation, framing, windows, roof, and electrical. Every project starts with a visit to your home, where we measure the space, check how water drains across your lot, and talk through what you want to use the room for. From there, we handle the permit application with St. Lucie County and your HOA if applicable. Our patio enclosures service is a strong option if you want a structure built over an existing slab, while our screen room installation covers screened-only builds at a lower cost.
Every window and glass panel we install meets Florida wind and pressure requirements for St. Lucie County. We also handle drainage planning so your new slab sheds water away from your home rather than toward it - a step that matters a lot on Port St. Lucie flat, low-lying lots. Once the county inspection is passed, we do a full walkthrough with you before we pack up.
Best for homeowners who want to convert open yard space into a fully enclosed, permitted room addition.
Best for homes with an existing aluminum screened enclosure that needs upgrading to solid walls and real windows.
Best for homeowners with a covered patio who want to add walls and windows without starting from scratch.
Best for any build where storm protection and long-term durability are the top priorities.
Port St. Lucie averages over 230 sunny days a year, and the winters here are genuinely mild - which means a three season room is usable for a larger portion of the year than it would be almost anywhere else in the country. From October through May, temperatures are comfortable and the evenings are pleasant. That is a long stretch of time to have a space you actually want to sit in. The challenge is summer: without air conditioning, afternoons from June through September can get warm, and that is something to plan for when choosing materials and ventilation.
A large share of Port St. Lucie homes - especially in older neighborhoods near US-1 and in newer communities like Tradition - were built with screened enclosures that are now 20 to 30 years old. Homeowners in Port St. Lucie who are already dealing with torn screens, bent frames, or a leaking roof often find that upgrading to a three season room costs only a little more than a full repair - and delivers a much better result. Florida wind zone requirements mean everything gets built to a higher structural standard here anyway, so you end up with a room that is genuinely built to last.
We reply within one business day. Our first conversation is a short call to understand your space, your goals, and whether you have an HOA - so we come to your home already prepared.
We visit your home, measure the space, check your existing slab or foundation, and walk you through design options. You leave with a clear written estimate - no vague ballpark numbers.
We submit the permit application to St. Lucie County on your behalf and manage HOA paperwork if needed. This typically takes two to four weeks - we keep you updated so you are never left wondering.
Once permits are approved, most builds take two to four weeks. A county inspector signs off on the finished work, and we do a full walkthrough before we leave so you know exactly how everything works.
Free written estimate. Permits handled. No surprise costs. We reply within one business day.
We are state-licensed and fully insured sunroom contractors. Every project we build is permitted through St. Lucie County, which means a county inspector - not just us - signs off that the structure is safe and code-compliant. That matters when it comes time to sell your home.
Every window and glass panel we install meets Florida wind pressure requirements for St. Lucie County. We do not cut corners on storm resistance - this is Port St. Lucie, where the weather is real. The Florida Building Commission sets the standards and we build to them.
We have worked in HOA-governed neighborhoods throughout Port St. Lucie, including Tradition and PGA Village. We ask about your HOA at the first call and handle the architectural review submission - so you are not caught off guard after signing a contract.
Port St. Lucie flat lots require careful attention to how water moves across your yard. We assess drainage before finalizing any design and grade every new slab to shed water away from your home - not toward it. This is a step many contractors skip and homeowners only notice after a storm.
We are a local contractor who works specifically in Port St. Lucie and the surrounding Treasure Coast. You can verify our Florida contractor license at myfloridalicense.com and review St. Lucie County permit requirements at the St. Lucie County Building and Code Regulation office. Wind construction standards for our area are published by the Florida Building Commission.
Turn an existing patio into a protected living space with a fully permitted enclosure built for Florida weather.
Learn MoreA screened room keeps bugs and debris out while letting in the Treasure Coast breeze at a lower cost than a glass enclosure.
Learn MorePermit slots fill up fast before summer. Call us now or submit a request and we will get back to you within one business day with a free written estimate.