
A sunroom designed around your specific home, yard, and Florida lifestyle - not a cookie-cutter kit pulled off a shelf.

Custom sunrooms in Daytona Beach are fully enclosed, climate-controlled additions designed around your specific home and yard, with hurricane-rated glass and framing - most projects run four to fourteen weeks from contract to completion depending on permit timing and room size.
Unlike a prefab screen enclosure or a kit-built room, a custom sunroom is engineered to match your house exactly - the roofline, the foundation, the way it connects to your existing HVAC system. If you have been living with an underused porch or a dark back room, this is how you turn that space into somewhere you actually want to spend time. Many homeowners in Daytona Beach find they end up using their sunroom more than any other room in the house.
The process starts with a visit to your home and a written proposal - no guessing, no generic quotes. If you are weighing your options, our sunroom construction page walks through what the full build process looks like from foundation to final inspection.
If your back porch or lanai is comfortable in January but unbearable from May through September, Daytona Beach's heat and humidity are the reason. A custom sunroom with heat-blocking glass and air conditioning turns that same footprint into a space you can enjoy twelve months a year. You are not adding a room - you are reclaiming time you are already losing.
Screen enclosures near the Daytona Beach coast have a limited lifespan - salt air corrodes aluminum framing and bends screen panels faster than most homeowners expect. If you are seeing rust stains, water pooling inside, or rattling in the wind, repairs are only a short-term fix. Many homeowners find replacing the enclosure with a proper sunroom costs less than expected and delivers far more livable space.
If you need a home office, a reading nook, or a quiet morning coffee spot but every room is already spoken for, a sunroom adds that space without the full cost of a traditional interior addition. It adds real square footage and keeps the connection to natural light that makes the space feel different from just another room.
If you are turning on lights during the day because your home does not get much natural light, a sunroom on the south or east side can change the entire feel of your living space. Daytona Beach's sunshine is one of its best qualities - a well-placed sunroom lets you bring that light inside without the heat and humidity of an open-air space.
Every custom sunroom project starts with a design that fits your specific home - not a standard floor plan adjusted to fit. We handle the full scope: foundation, framing, glass selection, roofing, and finishing details like flooring and trim. If you want the room connected to your existing air conditioning, we coordinate that work too. For homeowners who want the full year-round experience, our sunroom construction service covers the complete build from permits to final inspection walkthrough.
Design choices matter in Florida's climate more than anywhere else. The glass you choose, how the roof is flashed, and how the room seals against wind and rain all affect how the space performs ten years from now. We also offer dedicated sunroom design planning for homeowners who want help thinking through layout, glass options, and how the room will work with their existing home before committing to a full build.
Best for homeowners who want a comfortable space during Daytona Beach's cooler months - enclosed and weather-protected, but not connected to your home's HVAC.
Fully insulated and climate-controlled - the right choice if you want to use the room comfortably during Florida's summer months.
Designed as a dedicated work-from-home or creative space with natural light and separation from the rest of the house.
Converts an existing screen enclosure into a proper enclosed, climate-controlled room - often more cost-effective than starting from scratch.
Daytona Beach averages over 230 sunny days a year and sits in a wind zone where Florida's building code requires all new additions to meet hurricane-force wind-resistance standards. A sunroom built to the national average will not hold up here - the glass panels, framing connections, and roof structure need to be engineered specifically for this area. The local permit office at Volusia County Building and Zoning reviews every structural addition against those standards before and during construction. Homes close to the Atlantic also need frames and hardware chosen for salt-air exposure, or you will see corrosion within a few years of installation.
We work throughout the Daytona Beach metro. Homeowners in Port Orange often ask about screen-to-sunroom conversions on existing lanais, while clients in Ormond Beach frequently want a full four-season room that connects to their home's HVAC. The right design depends on your specific location, your lot, and how you plan to use the space - which is why every project starts with a visit to your home, not a phone quote.
The Florida Building Commission sets the wind and structural standards your sunroom must meet, and the Volusia County Building and Zoning office handles the local permit review. We are familiar with both.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form. We reply within one business day. No commitment required - just a conversation about what you have in mind.
We visit your home, look at the space, assess your existing structure, and take measurements. You receive a written proposal with itemized costs - no lump sums, no guessing.
Once you sign, we submit your permit application to Volusia County on your behalf. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we help you prepare the documentation. Permit review typically takes two to four weeks.
With permits in hand, foundation work begins - the loudest phase, usually three to five days. Then framing, glass installation, and finishing. We walk you through the completed room before we consider the job done.
Free estimate, no obligation. We handle permits and HOA paperwork for you.
(386) 278-1903Every custom sunroom we build meets Florida's hurricane-force wind-resistance requirements. That means the glass panels, frame connections, and roof structure are engineered for the real conditions in Daytona Beach - not a national average.
We handle the full Volusia County permit process on your behalf, including scheduling the required inspections. A permitted, inspected addition protects your insurance coverage and documents your investment correctly for resale.
We know what the local building department requires and submit complete applications the first time. That matters because a rejected or incomplete submittal adds two to four weeks to your project timeline before a single board is cut.
Many Daytona Beach neighborhoods have active HOAs with specific rules about exterior additions. We help you prepare the documentation the HOA typically requires, which avoids the back-and-forth that can delay a project by months. For added verification, the Florida DBPR license lookup at myfloridalicense.com lets you confirm any contractor's current license status before you sign.
Every one of these points adds up to a simpler, more predictable experience for you - from the first estimate through the final inspection. A custom sunroom is a real investment, and you deserve a contractor who treats it that way.
Full-scope sunroom construction from foundation pour to final county inspection, including all Volusia County permitting.
Learn MoreDedicated design planning to help you choose the right layout, glass, and materials before committing to construction.
Learn MorePermit slots fill up - the sooner we submit your application to Volusia County, the sooner you are enjoying your new room. Call or request a free estimate now.