
Your deck sits empty from May through October because of Florida heat and storms. We convert it into a finished, climate-controlled room you can use every month of the year.

A deck-to-sunroom conversion in Daytona Beach reinforces your existing deck frame, then encloses it with walls, impact-rated windows, and a weathertight roof to create a fully usable indoor space - most projects run eight to fourteen weeks from contract signing to final walkthrough, including permit review.
The key difference between a deck conversion and a patio conversion is the structural starting point. A deck sits above grade on posts and footings, so the first step is always assessing whether that frame can carry the added weight of walls and a roof. In many Daytona Beach homes built between the 1960s and 1990s, some reinforcement is needed - that is normal, and knowing the cost upfront is far better than a mid-project surprise. If your outdoor space is a concrete slab rather than a wood deck, a patio-to-sunroom conversion follows a similar process with a different structural starting point.
If you walk past your deck from late spring through early fall without using it because the heat and bugs make it unbearable, you are not getting value from that space. Daytona Beach's combination of intense summer sun and active mosquito season makes uncovered outdoor decks uncomfortable for much of the year. Enclosing the space and connecting it to your home's air conditioning turns a neglected deck into a room you actually use.
If you notice boards that flex underfoot, posts that feel loose, or wood that looks soft or discolored at the base, the deck may be reaching the end of its useful life. In Daytona Beach's humid climate, wood decks are particularly vulnerable to moisture damage and insect activity over time. Rather than replacing the deck with another deck, some homeowners find it makes more sense to convert that investment into a livable room.
If your family needs a dedicated office, a reading room, or a place to host guests but does not want the disruption of a full addition from scratch, a deck conversion is worth considering. You already have the footprint and the foundation - the conversion adds walls, a roof, and climate control to space that already exists. It is typically faster and less expensive than pouring a new foundation and building from the ground up.
Daytona Beach's coastal setting means many homes have genuinely beautiful views that are hard to enjoy when it is raining sideways or the afternoon sun is brutal. A sunroom lets you sit in that view in comfort, with natural light and a connection to the outdoors, without the heat, glare, or sudden afternoon thunderstorms that are a regular part of life here from spring through fall.
Every project starts with an honest structural assessment of your deck's frame and footings - not a sales pitch. We document what reinforcement is needed before a contract is signed, so you make decisions with full information. From there we handle framing, impact-rated window and door installation, roofing, electrical, and any HVAC integration you want from the start. For homeowners who want a fully finished living space rather than a basic enclosure, all season rooms represent the highest level of finish - fully insulated, climate-controlled, and finished to match your home's interior.
We manage the entire Volusia County permit process, including plan preparation, submission to the building department, and scheduling all required inspections. If your address falls within Daytona Beach city limits, that means working with the city's development services office instead of the county. Either way, you do not fill out paperwork or schedule inspections. If you are considering a different outdoor space transformation, patio-to-sunroom conversion follows the same process for concrete slabs and screened enclosures.
For decks whose existing posts, beams, or footings need upgrading before walls and a roof can be added.
Suits homeowners who want solid walls and protection from bugs and rain but plan to use the space mainly in Daytona Beach's cooler months.
Ideal for homeowners who want to use the room every month and are ready to connect it to their existing HVAC or add a mini-split.
For homeowners who want the converted space to feel like a true room addition, with flooring, insulated walls, and finished trim throughout.
Daytona Beach sits in a designated high-wind zone, which means Florida's building code requires impact-resistant windows and doors for any new enclosed room. This adds to the window cost compared to other states, and any quote that does not address this requirement should raise questions. Beyond wind requirements, the high humidity - regularly above 80 percent from June through September - means material choices matter. A contractor who works regularly in Volusia County knows which materials hold up in this climate and which ones will start showing wear after a few Florida summers. Low-emissivity glass, for example, meaningfully reduces heat gain and is worth asking about for any south-facing or west-facing room. The U.S. Department of Energy's guidance on window selection is useful context for that conversation.
We serve homeowners across the Daytona Beach area, including New Smyrna Beach and Edgewater, where older housing stock with aging deck structures is common. If your home is in a planned community or beachside neighborhood with an HOA, we handle the architectural review submission before the permit application goes in - because those are two separate approval processes and the HOA review comes first. Ask about this on your first call if you are unsure whether your neighborhood has review requirements.
Learn more about the Volusia County building permit and inspection process.
Reach out by phone or through the contact form and we will respond within one business day. We will ask a few basic questions about your deck's size, construction, and what you are hoping to get out of the space - so when we visit, we can assess it efficiently and give you a meaningful quote.
We visit your home to measure the deck, inspect the frame and footings, and assess what reinforcement is needed before walls go up. You receive a written estimate that breaks out structural work, materials, labor, permits, and any HVAC integration - nothing vague or bundled in a way you cannot read.
Once you sign a contract, we apply for the required permit through Volusia County or the City of Daytona Beach, depending on your address. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we handle the architectural review submission separately first. Plan for two to four weeks for permit review - we keep you updated throughout.
Construction begins with structural reinforcement if needed, then framing, roofing, windows, and electrical. County inspectors visit at required stages - we schedule those. When the work is complete, we walk you through the finished room, confirm everything operates correctly, and hand you permit documents and warranty information.
Free on-site estimate with honest structural assessment. We handle permits, HOA review, and inspections - no surprises on the final invoice.
(386) 278-1903We assess your deck frame and footings during the estimate visit and tell you exactly what reinforcement is needed before any contract is signed. A large share of Daytona Beach's older decks need some work before an enclosed room can safely be built on top. You know the full scope and cost upfront - not halfway through the project when changing course is expensive.
Every conversion we do uses impact-resistant windows and doors that meet Florida's coastal wind-resistance requirements. This is not an optional upgrade - it is how we build every job in Daytona Beach. It also matters for your homeowner's insurance: a properly permitted room with impact-rated glass is in a different category than one built without those standards. Florida Building Commission standards
We handle the permit application, plan preparation, and inspection scheduling through Volusia County or the City of Daytona Beach, depending on your address. You do not visit any office or manage any paperwork. The final inspection sign-off becomes part of your home's permanent record - which matters when you sell.
Many neighborhoods in and around Daytona Beach - especially planned communities and beachside developments - require architectural review board approval for exterior changes. We handle that submission before the permit application goes in. Getting HOA sign-off first prevents fines, forced reversals, and the cost of a redesign after you have already committed.
Every deck conversion we complete in Daytona Beach is permitted, inspected, and built to current Florida wind standards. That documentation stays with your home and protects your investment whether you plan to stay for decades or sell in a few years.
Explore the highest-finish option - a fully insulated, climate-controlled room that functions as true living space year-round.
Learn MoreThe same enclosure process applied to an existing concrete slab or screened porch instead of a raised deck.
Learn MorePermit slots in Volusia County fill up - locking in your start date now means your room is ready before storm season arrives. Call or submit a request today.