
Turn a screened porch that sits empty in summer into an air-conditioned room you use every month. Vinyl frames that never rust, insulated glass, and wind-rated systems built for Palm Beach County.

Vinyl sunrooms in Tequesta are fully enclosed additions built with a vinyl frame, insulated glass panels, and a solid roof - they create year-round living space with a typical installation timeline of one to two weeks once the foundation is ready, though permitting adds time before work begins.
Most homeowners in Tequesta come to us after spending a summer watching their screened lanai sit empty because the heat and daily thunderstorms made it unusable. A vinyl sunroom solves that problem by enclosing the space and making it air-conditionable. Vinyl framing does not rust or rot in coastal conditions, which matters in an environment as humid and salt-air-heavy as this one. If you are still deciding how much input you want over every design detail, compare this option with our sunroom additions page and our three season sunrooms page to see which approach fits your goals and budget.
We handle the permit application, HOA submittal if needed, foundation work, and installation - you do not have to manage any part of the process yourself.
If your lanai or screened enclosure is only usable from November through April, you are not getting value from that space most of the year. Enclosing it with vinyl framing and connecting it to air conditioning turns a seasonal porch into a room you use every day. Every summer you wait is another season of that investment sitting idle.
A vinyl sunroom adds real, finished living space at a lower cost and with less disruption than a full structural addition. Whether you need a home office, a room for entertaining, or a space for kids to play out of the direct Florida sun, a sunroom delivers that without months of interior construction.
Tequesta homeowners with views of canals, the Loxahatchee River, or lush landscaping often rarely sit and enjoy them because the heat and insects make outdoor time miserable. Large glass panels in a vinyl sunroom let you take in that view from a comfortable, air-conditioned room regardless of the weather outside.
Buyers in South Florida expect indoor-outdoor connection, and an air-conditioned sunroom stands out from a basic screened porch. A properly permitted vinyl sunroom adds documented square footage and genuine appeal that shows up in how quickly a home attracts interest - and in how it compares to similar properties without one.
We manage the entire project from first site visit through final inspection sign-off. That includes measuring your space, confirming what your lot's setbacks allow, producing permit-ready drawings, handling the HOA submittal if your community requires one, pouring or preparing the slab, assembling the vinyl frame and glass panels, and connecting the room to your home's electrical and cooling systems. One of the most critical steps is sealing the junction between the new sunroom roof and your existing roofline - this is where most long-term leaks start, and we take it seriously. If your existing AC system does not have the capacity to handle the added load, we can specify a dedicated mini-split unit that gives you independent temperature control in the new room. For homeowners who want to start with a thorough design plan before committing to a material or system, our sunroom additions service walks through that process in detail.
For clients who want more flexibility in size, roof style, or finish materials than a standard vinyl system offers, we also build three season sunrooms and fully custom enclosures. The right choice depends on how you plan to use the room, how much cooling capacity you need, and what your HOA permits. We talk through all of it at the estimate stage so you are not making decisions without full information.
Suits homeowners who want an enclosed, insulated space for mild-weather use without connecting to the home's HVAC system.
Suits homeowners who want a fully air-conditioned room usable year-round in South Florida's heat and humidity.
Suits homeowners with an existing patio slab in good condition who want to enclose the space quickly without new foundation work.
Suits homeowners building the addition in an area that requires a new slab or footing before framing can begin.
Tequesta sits in Palm Beach County at the northern edge of South Florida's tropical climate zone, where summers are long, humid, and punctuated by afternoon thunderstorms that roll in nearly every day from June through September. The case for a vinyl sunroom here is straightforward: you already have outdoor space, but it is only comfortable a few months of the year. Enclosing that space with vinyl framing and insulated glass, and connecting it to air conditioning, turns a seasonal liability into a year-round room. Vinyl framing specifically handles this climate well because it does not corrode in the salt air that comes off the Atlantic and the Intracoastal - a real consideration for properties in and around Tequesta. Homeowners in Jupiter, FL and Palm Beach Gardens, FL face the same coastal conditions and rely on the same low-maintenance material advantages when they choose vinyl.
Palm Beach County is also in a high-wind zone, and Florida's building code sets demanding wind-load requirements for any permanent addition in this region. The vinyl sunroom systems we install carry documentation showing compliance with those standards - this is not optional, and it directly affects your homeowner's insurance. Many Tequesta neighborhoods also have HOAs with exterior design restrictions that add a review step before permits can even be filed. We have navigated that process many times in Palm Beach County communities and know how to prepare submittals that get approved without unnecessary delays.
For background on Florida's building code requirements, visit floridabuilding.org.
We come to your home, measure the space, and talk through your goals - size, how you want to use the room, and whether you need it air-conditioned. We reply to all new inquiries within one business day and follow up the visit with a written proposal covering scope, materials, timeline, and price.
If your neighborhood has an HOA, we prepare the drawings and submittal package your board needs. Once that approval is in hand, we file the building permit application and manage the plan review process with the local building department.
We prepare the slab or pour a new one if needed, then assemble the vinyl frame, roof panels, and glazed walls - most frame installations take three to seven working days. We seal the roofline connection carefully; this is the detail that determines how the room performs in a Florida rainstorm.
The building department conducts a final inspection to confirm code compliance. Once the inspector signs off, we walk you through the finished room, explain how the windows and vents operate, and hand over permit documentation and warranty paperwork.
We measure your space, walk you through glazing and cooling options for South Florida's climate, and give you a clear written quote - no pressure, no obligation.
(561) 954-1589The vinyl sunroom systems we install carry engineering documentation showing compliance with Palm Beach County's wind-load requirements. We provide that documentation as part of the permit package - not something you have to chase down separately after the job is done.
The junction between a sunroom roof and an existing home's roofline is where most long-term water problems start. We treat this connection as the most critical step in the installation, using proper flashing and sealing methods that hold up through South Florida's heavy seasonal rain.
We have prepared submittal packages for homeowners in Palm Beach County communities with active architectural review boards. Knowing what a board typically asks for - and preparing for it the first time - saves weeks compared to a contractor who treats HOA approval as an afterthought.
From application through final inspection sign-off, we handle the permit process entirely. You receive a copy of the signed permit closure, which is important documentation for your home's records and any future sale. A contractor who asks you to skip the permit is a red flag in Florida.
We combine knowledge of Palm Beach County's permitting and HOA landscape with installation practices suited to South Florida's coastal climate. That is why homeowners in Tequesta and the surrounding area call us when they are ready to turn their underused outdoor space into something they can enjoy every day of the year.
Learn more about sunroom industry standards at nationalsunroom.org and verify Florida contractor licenses at myfloridalicense.com.
Full sunroom addition service for homeowners starting from scratch with no existing slab or enclosure.
Learn MoreAn enclosed, insulated sunroom without full climate control - a lower-cost option for homeowners who want year-round shade and bug protection.
Learn MoreOur team is ready to pull permits, handle your HOA paperwork, and get your new room built before the next storm season - call now to get on the schedule.