
Your screened porch sits empty six months of the year. An all season room gives you a fully enclosed, climate-controlled space you can actually use - every day, rain or shine, summer or winter.

All season rooms in Daytona Beach are fully enclosed additions with insulated walls, a proper roof, and a heating and cooling system, so the temperature inside stays comfortable year-round. Most projects take two to six weeks of active construction after permits are approved. Think of it as a glass-walled bonus room that brings the outdoors in without the bugs, the August heat, or the afternoon thunderstorms.
If you have been looking at your unused porch and wondering whether it is time to do something better, an all season room is the most permanent and practical upgrade available. Unlike a basic enclosed patio room, a true all season room is built to the same standard as the rest of your house - it adds real, livable square footage that works every month of the year.
Daytona Beach summers are long. The stretch of genuinely hot, humid days runs from late April through early October. A space that fails you for six months of the year is not a space worth keeping.
If you walk out to your porch on a summer afternoon and walk straight back inside because the heat is unbearable, your current outdoor space is not working. Daytona Beach summers are long, and a screened porch simply cannot fight that heat. An all season room with real climate control gives that space back to you.
If you spend part of every hurricane season worrying whether your screen enclosure or aging porch structure will survive the next big storm, that anxiety is a sign your setup is not built to the standard your home deserves. An all season room built to Florida's wind-resistance requirements is engineered to handle what this coastline throws at it.
If your home feels too small but you do not want to move, an all season room is one of the most cost-effective ways to add genuinely livable square footage. Because it is fully enclosed and climate-controlled, it functions as a real room - not just a porch with windows - that can serve as a home office, hobby room, or sitting area.
If you have an older sunroom or screen enclosure and you notice water stains on the ceiling, soft spots in the floor, or glass panels that look foggy from the inside, those are signs the structure has reached the end of its useful life. In Daytona Beach's humid climate, water intrusion in an older enclosure tends to get worse quickly.
Every all season room we build starts with a clear conversation about how you want to use the space. From there we design around your home, your yard, and your Florida climate requirements - choosing the right insulated glass, the right roof system, and the right cooling approach for your budget. If you are starting fresh, we handle everything from the foundation slab through the final inspection. If you already have a four season sunroom or an older enclosure that needs a full rebuild, we can assess what is worth keeping and what needs to go.
For homeowners who want something between a basic enclosure and a full all season room, we also build enclosed patio rooms that are weatherproofed and comfortable without the full climate-control infrastructure. We will walk you through the differences honestly so you can make the right call for your home and your budget.
Best for homeowners starting from scratch who want a fully permitted, climate-controlled addition built to Florida's latest wind standards.
Suited to homeowners with an aging screen room or three-season porch who want to upgrade it to a fully enclosed, year-round space.
Ideal for homeowners who want the new room to feel like an extension of the house, tied into the existing heating and cooling system.
A practical option for homeowners who want independent climate control in the new room without modifying their existing HVAC ductwork.
Daytona Beach averages more than 230 sunny days per year, and summer humidity regularly pushes the heat index well above 100 degrees. That means the glass, insulation, and HVAC system in your all season room need to be chosen specifically for a hot, humid coastal climate - not the same products used in a room addition in Georgia or the Carolinas. Daytona Beach also sits in a coastal wind zone where the state building code requires all additions to be engineered to withstand hurricane-force winds. Both of these factors shape how we design and build every project here. For homeowners in Port Orange and Ormond Beach we carry that same approach across the entire service area.
A significant portion of homes in Daytona Beach were built between the 1950s and the 1980s. Homes of that age sometimes have foundation conditions, electrical panels, or rooflines that need to be evaluated before an addition can be attached. A thorough site assessment before the first board goes up is especially important here - surprises discovered mid-project are always more expensive than surprises caught upfront. We account for all of this before we give you a written number.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form and we will get back to you within one business day. We ask a few basic questions about the space, your HOA status, and what you want to use the room for - so the site visit is focused, not a discovery session.
We visit your home, assess the existing foundation or slab, and check how the addition will connect to your roofline and exterior walls. We take measurements and walk through size, glass options, and how you want the room to feel - and we flag any potential complications before you have committed to anything.
After the site visit, we prepare a written proposal with a clear scope and fixed price. Once you sign, we handle the Volusia County permit application. Plan for several weeks of permit review time - we build this into your timeline upfront so there are no surprises.
Construction runs two to six weeks depending on size. County inspectors verify the work at key stages - not just our crew. We finish with a full walkthrough where you point out anything that needs attention before we close out the job.
Free estimate. No pressure. We pull all permits and handle HOA documentation.
(386) 278-1903Every all season room we build meets Volusia County's permit requirements and Florida's wind-resistance engineering standards. You can verify this through the final inspection record - an independent county inspector signs off, not just our crew.
We handle the permit application, plan submission, and inspection scheduling from start to finish. Homeowners who have worked with contractors who skip or bungle this step know exactly what that costs - delays, required teardowns, and problems at closing.
We choose glass systems, insulation, and HVAC approaches specifically for Daytona Beach's heat and humidity - not off-the-shelf options built for a milder climate. The U.S. Department of Energy recommends high-performance glazing for hot, humid climates, and we follow that guidance on every project.
Many Daytona Beach homes were built in the 1950s through 1980s and have foundation or roofline conditions that affect how an addition connects. We assess this before we give you a price - not after work has already started.
These are not selling points - they are the minimum standard for building a room addition correctly in Daytona Beach. We hold to them on every project because shortcuts in this climate, with these wind loads, create problems that show up within the first storm season. Learn more about Florida's energy-efficient glazing standards from the U.S. Department of Energy, and verify contractor licensing through the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation.
A weatherproofed outdoor room that gives you comfort and protection without the full climate-control infrastructure of an all season room.
Learn MoreA glass-forward addition designed for year-round use, with maximum natural light and a connected, open feeling from every seat.
Learn MoreVolusia County permit timelines vary - the sooner we apply, the sooner your room is ready. Call us or request a free on-site estimate today.