
Your existing patio is the foundation. We add the walls, roof, and panels that turn it into a protected space you can actually use - screen or glass, permitted and built for Florida's coastal conditions.

Patio enclosures in Daytona Beach turn your existing outdoor patio into a protected, usable room by adding aluminum framing, a roof structure, and either screen mesh or glass panels - a straightforward screen enclosure on an existing slab usually takes three to seven days of construction once permits are approved.
The right type of enclosure depends on how you want to use the space and how much you want to spend. A screen enclosure is the most popular and cost-effective choice in Florida's climate - it keeps insects out while letting air move freely, and with a ceiling fan it is comfortable for most of the year. For homeowners who want a space that works even on the hottest summer days, a glass sunroom option with climate control is worth exploring. If you are weighing those choices, our custom sunrooms page covers fully designed options.
Every patio enclosure we build in Daytona Beach goes through Volusia County's permit process - no shortcuts. That protects your investment, ensures the structure meets Florida's coastal wind standards, and keeps things clean if you ever sell.
If your outdoor space goes unused for most of the year because mosquitoes are unbearable and the afternoon sun makes it too hot, a screen enclosure can change that. Daytona Beach's warm climate means mosquito season runs nearly year-round. A properly screened enclosure with a ceiling fan becomes genuinely comfortable for most of the year - and you stop losing months of your outdoor space to bugs.
The combination of intense Florida sun, salt air, and afternoon rain showers is hard on outdoor furniture and patio surfaces. If you are replacing cushions or resealing your patio every year or two, an enclosure protects that investment and cuts ongoing maintenance costs. This is especially common for homeowners within a mile or two of the beach.
A patio enclosure uses your existing slab and roof overhang as a starting point, which keeps costs significantly lower than building a full room addition from scratch. If your home feels cramped but a major addition isn't in the budget, this is often the most practical way to add a functional room for dining, a home office, or a sitting area.
Older screen enclosures in Daytona Beach - particularly those built before current wind-resistance requirements - often show wear as sagging screens, frames that flex in wind, or rust around fasteners. If your enclosure is more than 15 to 20 years old, it may not meet current standards. Leaving it as-is means it could fail in a serious storm without any insurance protection.
We build both screen enclosures and glass sunroom enclosures, and we help you decide which one fits your goals before you commit to anything. During the site visit we assess your existing slab condition, measure the space, and walk through design options including roofline style, panel configuration, and interior features like ceiling fan rough-ins and lighting. All work is permitted through Volusia County and built to Florida's coastal wind load engineering requirements.
For homeowners who want to go beyond a standard enclosure, we also build custom sunrooms designed around your specific roofline and layout, and enclosed patio rooms that feel more like a finished interior room than an outdoor structure. The right path depends on your budget and how you plan to use the space.
Best for homeowners who want bug protection and shade at the most accessible price point, with comfort for most of the year in Florida's mild climate.
Suits homeowners who want a fully weatherproof space - usable even during Daytona Beach's summer rainstorms and comfortable on the hottest days with climate control.
The right starting point when there is no existing foundation or when the current patio surface is cracked, uneven, or too thin to anchor framing correctly.
The most cost-effective option for homeowners who already have a sound concrete patio and are ready to enclose it without a full foundation replacement.
Daytona Beach sits on the Atlantic coast, and the combination of high humidity and salt-laden air is hard on aluminum frames, screen mesh, and fasteners. The grade of aluminum and the type of hardware your contractor specifies matters more here than it would in an inland city. Ask specifically whether the framing and fasteners are rated for coastal exposure - a contractor who knows this market will answer without hesitation. We work across the service area, from South Daytona to Ormond Beach, and we specify coastal-grade materials on every job.
Volusia County's wind load requirements for coastal additions are among the most demanding in the state. This means the aluminum profiles and anchoring hardware used here are heavier and more expensive than what you might see in national cost guides - but it also means a properly permitted structure is genuinely built to handle the tropical storms that move through this area every few years. A significant share of Daytona Beach's housing stock was built using concrete block construction, and attaching an enclosure to a block wall requires specific anchoring methods. A contractor unfamiliar with block construction may use techniques designed for wood-frame homes, which can fail under wind load.
When you first contact us, we will ask about your patio size, what you want to use the space for, and whether you have an existing slab. We respond within one business day. We need to see the space in person before giving you a meaningful price - be cautious of anyone who quotes a firm number over the phone without visiting your home.
During the site visit we measure your patio, assess the slab condition, check how the enclosure will attach to your home, and walk you through design options. You will receive a written estimate before we leave or within a day or two - including permit fees, with no hidden add-ons.
After you sign a contract, we submit the Volusia County permit application on your behalf. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we provide the drawings for your architectural review submission. Plan for two to six weeks before any physical work begins - this is normal and protects you at every step.
For a screen enclosure, framing and screening typically take three to seven days. A county inspector visits during construction and again for the final inspection. We walk you through the finished space, show you how everything operates, and hand you a copy of the closed permit before we leave the job.
We handle permits, HOA submissions, and slab assessment - you just show up to the final walkthrough.
(386) 278-1903Every enclosure we build goes through Volusia County Building and Zoning. You receive a copy of the closed permit when the job is done, which protects you at resale and ensures your insurance coverage applies if the structure is damaged in a storm.
We specify framing and fasteners rated for Daytona Beach's coastal salt-air environment. That means heavier aluminum profiles and stainless hardware designed to resist the corrosion that accelerates on beachside properties - not the same materials used inland.
A large share of Daytona Beach homes are concrete block construction. We use anchoring methods designed for block walls, not wood-frame techniques that can fail under wind load. This is one of the most overlooked failure points in enclosures added to older Florida homes.
Many Daytona Beach neighborhoods have active architectural review committees. We walk through HOA submission before any work begins, using the drawings your association needs to evaluate the project. You will not face a violation notice or a demand to modify a finished structure.
Building a patio enclosure in Daytona Beach is not the same as building one in an inland city. The coastal wind requirements, the permit timelines, and the concrete block construction common in this area all require a contractor who understands this market. Since 2025, TrueView has built every project to the same standard - permitted, inspected, and ready for what Florida weather brings. Review Florida's wind resistance standards at the Florida Building Commission.
For permit status and inspection records, visit Volusia County Building and Zoning. For coverage guidance on permitted additions, see the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation.
Design a sunroom from scratch around your home's layout, your roofline, and exactly how you plan to use the space.
Learn MoreA fully finished enclosed room that feels like an extension of your home's interior rather than an outdoor structure.
Learn MoreDaytona Beach winters bring peak demand - reach out now and we will lock in your project date before the busy season starts.