
TrueView Daytona Beach Sunrooms installs three season sunrooms, screen rooms, and patio enclosures throughout New Smyrna Beach - permitted through the City of New Smyrna Beach and built with materials that hold up to Atlantic salt air, summer storms, and Florida coastal wind-load requirements.

New Smyrna Beach has a long, comfortable season from October through May when temperatures stay mild and outdoor living is at its best - and a three season sunroom lets you enjoy that weather protected from rain and insects without paying for full air conditioning. Our three season sunroom installation uses vinyl or aluminum-framed window panels rated for the coastal conditions that New Smyrna Beach properties face.
New Smyrna Beach is one of the top surf spots on the East Coast, and a lot of homeowners here want to spend time outside without battling mosquitoes and no-see-ums that come off the Intracoastal at dusk. A properly framed screen room with marine-grade mesh lets you sit outside year-round while the salt air comes through, without the insects or blowing debris.
Many homes near the historic Canal Street district and in the older beachside neighborhoods have unprotected back slabs that have been exposed to salt air and UV for 40 or 50 years. A patio enclosure with a solid roof puts a stop to that ongoing weathering and gives you a sheltered outdoor space that works even when New Smyrna Beach's afternoon thunderstorms roll in off the Atlantic.
New Smyrna Beach's rising home values have drawn buyers who want to maximize every square foot of their property. A fully insulated four season sunroom tied into your existing HVAC gives you a true climate-controlled room - comfortable during July's heat and humidity as well as the cooler winter months when the Atlantic breeze can be chilly after dark.
The older vacation cottages and mid-century homes throughout New Smyrna Beach often have smaller floor plans that feel tight once a family settles in. A sunroom addition built off the back of the house adds real square footage that is permitted and properly tied to the existing structure - something that shows up correctly when you sell or refinance.
New Smyrna Beach properties that have had a screen room or patio cover for 20 to 30 years show the toll that salt air, UV, and tropical storm seasons take on aluminum framing and screen mesh. A targeted remodel that replaces corroded components and upgrades the screen to a modern pet-resistant or solar mesh extends the life of the structure without the cost of a full teardown.
New Smyrna Beach is split into two distinct areas: the barrier island beachside to the east and the mainland to the west, connected by bridges over the Intracoastal Waterway. The housing stock and the conditions each side faces are genuinely different. On the beachside, a large share of homes were built in the 1950s through 1980s using concrete block construction, and they sit close to the Atlantic or the Intracoastal - which means persistent salt air, coastal wind-load requirements, and FEMA flood zone considerations that do not apply a few miles inland. A contractor who has not worked in this environment will not automatically know to specify marine-grade fasteners, coastal wind-rated glazing, or the proper slab prep for a beachside foundation that may have been affected by shifting sandy soil over the decades.
The mainland side of New Smyrna Beach has a different set of conditions. Newer subdivisions built in the 2000s and 2010s have more recent construction, but they still deal with the same summer storm intensity, high humidity, and insect pressure that affect the whole Volusia County coast. Florida's building code, administered through the Florida Building Commission, requires wind-load compliance on all attached structures throughout the state. Whether your home is on the beachside or the mainland, the permit process and material requirements mean that a sunroom or screen room here is not a simple weekend project - it requires a licensed contractor who knows the City of New Smyrna Beach permit office and what the local inspectors look for.
Our crew works throughout New Smyrna Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The city has a notably high share of owner-occupied homes for a coastal Florida market, which means most homeowners we work with have a real stake in keeping the property in good shape and want the job done right rather than just done fast. We pull permits through the City of New Smyrna Beach Building Department and are familiar with what their plan reviewers require on coastal construction documents.
New Smyrna Beach runs along A1A and US-1 as its main corridors, with Canal Street at the center of its historic downtown. Homes near Canaveral National Seashore to the south sit at the edge of one of the most protected stretches of Florida coastline, and homeowners in that part of the city face the most direct salt air and wind exposure. Farther north on the mainland side, the Turnbull Bay area and the neighborhoods off Indian River Boulevard see more typical inland conditions with better tree cover and more protection from the Atlantic. We have worked on properties throughout these areas and know how the location within New Smyrna Beach changes what a sunroom or screen room project actually requires.
We also serve homeowners in nearby Titusville to the south and Edgewater to the north, both of which share the waterfront and CBS construction characteristics that are common across this stretch of Volusia and Brevard counties.
Contact us by phone or through the estimate form on this page. We reply within one business day and schedule your free on-site visit at a time that works for you - we do not require you to sit through a sales presentation before seeing a number.
We visit your property, measure the space, check the existing slab or foundation, and note any beachside or flood zone factors that affect the design. You get a fixed-price written estimate that covers everything - no estimate ranges, no open-ended line items that grow mid-project.
Once you approve the design, we submit the permit application to the City of New Smyrna Beach and order your materials concurrently so permit review time does not add to your total waiting period. Permit review typically takes two to four weeks.
Most projects in New Smyrna Beach take one to three weeks of construction time. We schedule the required city inspections, walk the finished project with you before we consider the job complete, and leave the site clean. You get the permit card and inspection records for your files.
We serve homeowners throughout New Smyrna Beach - beachside and mainland. Call us or fill out the form below for a free estimate. We reply within one business day.
(386) 278-1903New Smyrna Beach is a coastal city of about 28,000 residents in southern Volusia County, situated on Florida's central Atlantic coast. The city is divided by the Intracoastal Waterway into the mainland side to the west and the barrier island beachside to the east. The beachside is home to a walkable historic district centered on Canal Street, lined with galleries, local restaurants, and older commercial buildings that date to the early 1900s. New Smyrna Beach has earned a national reputation as one of the top surf destinations on the East Coast and is also recognized for its arts community. Home values in the city have risen sharply since 2020, drawing buyers from larger Florida cities and out of state, and a high share of housing units are owner-occupied compared to many Florida coastal markets.
The housing stock in New Smyrna Beach reflects the city's development history. Concrete block homes built from the 1950s through the 1980s make up a large portion of the beachside and older mainland neighborhoods, while newer subdivisions on the mainland west side contain wood-frame and CBS homes built in the 2000s and 2010s. Older beachside vacation cottages - some of them small, wood-frame structures that have been updated piecemeal over decades - add a distinctive character to the barrier island neighborhoods near Canaveral National Seashore and the surf zone. Nearby Edgewater sits just five miles north and shares many of the same lagoon-front and CBS construction characteristics, while Port Orange to the north is a larger suburban city with a different mix of housing ages and types.
Whether your home is on the beachside near Canal Street or in a mainland neighborhood off US-1, we know New Smyrna Beach and we are ready to start your project. Call today or submit the form - we reply within one business day.