Your deck is too hot to use most of the year. We enclose it into a comfortable, air-conditioned room - fully permitted, hurricane-rated, and built on your existing structure after a thorough assessment.

Deck-to-sunroom conversion in Lake Worth Beach takes your existing outdoor deck and transforms it into a livable, climate-controlled room attached to your home. Walls, hurricane-rated windows, a proper roof, and cooling integration are added so the space works every day of the year. Most on-site construction takes two to four weeks, with the full timeline - including Palm Beach County permits - running two to four months.
If you are weighing a deck conversion against a patio-to-sunroom conversion, the core process is very similar. The key difference is that a deck sits elevated on a frame rather than a slab, so the structural assessment of your existing deck framing is one of the first things we look at - before any contract is signed.
If you step on your deck from late spring through early fall without actually spending time there because of the heat and humidity, that is a strong sign you would benefit from an enclosed, air-conditioned room. Lake Worth Beach summers are genuinely brutal outdoors. You already have the deck - converting it turns the space into something you will use every day.
Soft or springy boards underfoot, weathered gray wood, railings that wobble, or rust stains around screws and fasteners are signs a deck is aging. Rather than spending money to repair a structure that will need attention again in a few years, some homeowners find it makes more sense to invest in a conversion that replaces aging material with something built to last.
A full room addition requires digging a new foundation and framing walls from scratch. If you already have a deck in the right location, a sunroom conversion uses that existing footprint. It is typically faster, less disruptive, and less expensive than starting from nothing - and the result is a real room, not a porch.
In Lake Worth Beach's real estate market, buyers look closely at outdoor spaces. A deck that looks dated or underused can feel like a missed opportunity. A permitted, hurricane-rated sunroom conversion adds documentable value - the kind that shows up in an appraisal and does not create problems at a buyer's inspection.
We handle the full scope of a deck-to-sunroom conversion: structural assessment of the existing deck, any reinforcement work needed, wall framing, hurricane-rated windows and doors, roofing, insulation, and connection to your home's cooling system. Every project is permitted through Palm Beach County and inspected at key stages. For homeowners who want a permanent year-round room, we build on the same standard as our all season rooms - same materials, same code compliance, same permit discipline.
We also build patio-to-sunroom conversions for homeowners who have a slab rather than a raised deck. If you are not sure which starting point describes your space, we will clarify that during the initial site visit - it affects how the project is scoped and priced, and you should understand the difference before committing to anything.
Best for homeowners who want a climate-controlled room usable every day of the year, including Lake Worth Beach's intense summer months.
Suits homeowners who want protection from bugs and rain but prefer natural ventilation - ideal for fall through spring use.
For decks that need framing upgrades, new posts, or better anchoring before an enclosed structure can safely be built on top.
For communities with architectural review requirements - we manage HOA approval alongside the Palm Beach County permit application.
Lake Worth Beach averages high temperatures above 90 degrees for much of the year, and the humidity rarely lets up. A sunroom that is not properly insulated and connected to your home's air conditioning becomes an unusable oven by May and stays that way through October. At the same time, many homes in Lake Worth Beach were built in the 1960s through 1980s, and the decks attached to those homes may not have been designed to carry the weight of an enclosed room. Older deck framing, corroded fasteners, and posts not set in concrete are common findings during pre-construction assessments in this area. We walk through all of that before any contract is signed.
Homeowners in Boynton Beach and Delray Beach face the same South Florida climate and Palm Beach County permit requirements. The same storm conditions that make hurricane-rated windows essential in Lake Worth Beach apply across all of these communities. We work throughout Palm Beach County and know the local building department process well enough to avoid the back-and-forth delays that stretch timelines unnecessarily.
We ask about your deck's size, condition, and what you want the finished room to feel like. If you have an HOA, flag that early - it affects the timeline. You will hear back within one business day.
We visit your home to evaluate the deck framing, posts, and connection to your house. You receive a written estimate that clearly separates materials, labor, permits, and any structural reinforcement work - before you commit.
Once you sign the contract, we submit the permit application to Palm Beach County's Building Division. If your neighborhood requires HOA sign-off, we coordinate that at the same time. County review typically runs several weeks - we set that expectation from day one.
The crew works from the outside in - framing walls, installing the roof, setting hurricane-rated windows and doors, then finishing the interior. County inspectors visit at key stages. After final sign-off, we walk you through the completed room and hand over all permit records.
We assess the deck structure, handle the permits, and give you a written breakdown before any work starts - no surprises, no pressure.
(561) 954-1564We evaluate your deck's framing and connections during the site visit, not after you sign. If reinforcement is needed, you see the full cost in your written estimate - not halfway through construction. This is how we keep projects on budget.
Every window and door we install meets Florida's hurricane-impact standards. Palm Beach County falls within Florida's high-wind zone, and impact-rated glazing is required by law. We source compliant windows on every job - there is no version of our quote that uses substandard glass.
We pull the permit ourselves and submit complete applications to Palm Beach County Building Division to avoid back-and-forth delays. You receive copies of all permits and inspection records at the end of the project - documentation that protects your home's value and your homeowner's insurance.
We tell you upfront that Palm Beach County permit review adds several weeks to the schedule. A contractor who promises a very fast start without accounting for permit review is either skipping the permit or has not done many projects in this county. We set expectations correctly from the first conversation.
Every project is built to the Florida Building Code and permitted through Palm Beach County Building Division. You can verify our contractor license status in minutes at the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation. Permitted, inspected work is the only kind that protects your investment when it matters.
A fully insulated, year-round room addition built to Florida hurricane standards - the same level of construction used in a four-season deck conversion.
Learn MoreFor homeowners starting from a concrete slab rather than a raised deck - same permit process, same standards, different starting structure.
Learn MorePermit timelines in Palm Beach County mean the sooner you reach out, the sooner you are enjoying your new room. Call or request a free estimate now.