
Your sunroom should be usable year-round, not just when the weather cooperates. We replace failing glass, add climate control, and convert screened porches into comfortable, fully enclosed spaces.

Sunroom remodeling in Palm Coast means updating or expanding an existing glass-enclosed room attached to your home - replacing old windows or walls, improving the roof, adding heating and cooling, or converting a screened porch into a fully enclosed space. Most projects take one to three weeks depending on how much of the structure is being changed.
Most Palm Coast homeowners come to us because their sunroom has become unusable - too hot in summer, leaking in rain, or just not built for the way the family actually lives. Whether you need new low-e glass, a mini-split cooling system, or a full conversion from screened to enclosed, sunroom remodeling gives you back the square footage you already paid for. If you are starting from scratch rather than updating an existing room, our screen room installation service may be a better fit.
Palm Coast's subtropical climate makes the choice of glass, insulation, and cooling non-negotiable. A room that was built without those details in mind will not serve you for most of the year. We also handle Flagler County permit applications and HOA reviews as part of every project, so the work is documented and defensible when you sell.
If you stop using your sunroom the moment warm weather arrives, the room was not built for Florida's climate. A properly remodeled sunroom with the right glass and cooling connection should be comfortable even on a 92-degree August day. If you are avoiding the room for five or six months a year, you are not getting the value the space could provide.
Fogging between the panes means the seal has failed and the insulating layer is gone. In Palm Coast's humidity, failed window seals allow moisture to work into the frame and eventually into the wall or ceiling. This is not a cosmetic problem - left alone, it leads to mold and structural damage that costs far more to fix than a timely remodel.
The joint where a sunroom roof meets the main house is the most common place for water to get in, especially after Florida's heavy summer storms. If you see brown stains on the ceiling near that joint, or water on the floor after a hard rain, the flashing and seal at that connection point have likely failed. This is a repair that needs a licensed contractor, not caulk from a hardware store.
Many Palm Coast homes were built with screened porches that made sense decades ago but no longer serve the family. If your porch is collecting lawn furniture and boxes rather than being used as living space, a sunroom conversion can turn it into one of the most-used rooms in your home. The bones are already there - the remodel is about making the space actually work.
Every sunroom remodel starts with an honest assessment of what the room needs. For some homeowners, that is replacing failed glass panels with impact-rated, low-e units that keep the room cooler and meet Florida's wind requirements. For others, it means re-connecting the roof flashing to stop water intrusion, or adding a mini-split system so the room is actually livable from May through October. Our sunroom design team can help you map out exactly which changes will deliver the most improvement before any work begins.
Screened porch conversions are one of the most common projects we complete in Palm Coast. The existing slab, roof framing, and footprint are already in place - the remodel is about enclosing the space with glass panels and connecting it to a cooling source so it becomes a true year-round room. We also handle full-scope remodels where the goal is to bring an older sunroom up to current Florida building standards, including impact glass and proper anchoring. Whatever the scope, we pull the permit, manage the Flagler County inspection process, and give you a closed permit when the work is done.
Best for homeowners who have an existing screened porch and want to enclose it into a usable, weather-protected room.
Best for sunrooms with failed seals, fogging panels, or original single-pane glass that makes the room unusable in Florida heat.
Best for rooms that are structurally sound but have no cooling, leaving them empty from May through October.
Best for older sunrooms that need updated anchoring, a new roof connection, and upgraded glass to meet current Florida building standards.
Palm Coast was developed largely during the 1970s and 1980s, which means many of the sunrooms and screened porches in this city are now 30 to 50 years old. Glass seals from that era were not designed for Florida's humidity levels, and the anchoring and flashing methods used then do not meet today's hurricane wind requirements. If you own one of these older homes, there is a good chance your sunroom is overdue for real attention - not just paint or patching. We serve homeowners across Palm Coast, including the communities closest to Flagler Beach where salt air accelerates wear on glass seals and frame hardware.
Flagler County requires permits for any meaningful sunroom work, and the county actively enforces that requirement. Unpermitted additions create problems at home sales and insurance claims - and in Palm Coast, those problems surface more often than homeowners expect. We also serve the Bunnell area, where many homes share the same ITT-era construction profile as older Palm Coast neighborhoods. Every project we complete includes a Flagler County permit and final inspection, so you have the paperwork to prove the work was done right.
When you reach out, we ask a few basic questions about the room size, what you want to change, and whether the space is currently screened or enclosed. We will get back to you within one business day to figure out whether a site visit makes sense.
We come to your home before quoting a price, check the existing structure, and assess the roof and foundation connection. We also note HOA requirements and whether the project will need a Flagler County building permit - both affect the timeline and cost.
Once you sign a contract, we handle the Flagler County permit application on your behalf. Permit approval typically takes one to three weeks. During this time, materials are ordered and your project is scheduled with a clear start date.
Most sunroom remodels take one to three weeks on-site. The Flagler County building inspector will visit at key stages - this is a normal part of permitted work and confirms things are being done correctly. You receive a copy of the closed permit when the final inspection passes.
No obligation. We come to your home, assess the space, and give you a written quote. Permit costs and HOA review are always discussed upfront.
(386) 529-0493Every remodeling project we complete goes through the Flagler County permit and inspection process. That means county inspectors verify the work at key stages - not just at the end - so you have official documentation that protects your insurance coverage and your home sale.
We build to Florida's current wind-load and impact glass requirements for this coastal region. Your remodeled sunroom will use the right glass and anchoring from the start, so you are not facing expensive retrofits later or worrying about the room during hurricane season.
Many Palm Coast neighborhoods - including Grand Haven and Palm Harbor - require architectural review before any exterior remodeling. We handle the HOA submission as part of the project so you never receive a violation letter after the work is done.
You get a written contract that spells out exactly what is included, the total price, and what would trigger a change order - before anyone picks up a tool. Homeowners in Palm Coast have heard enough stories about runaway costs to deserve better than a handshake deal.
The National Association of the Remodeling Industry sets professional standards for contractors across the country, and the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation allows you to verify any contractor's license before you sign anything - we encourage you to use both. When you combine local accountability with the right permits, you get a remodel that holds up and a room you can actually be proud of.
Add a screened outdoor living space for a fraction of the cost of a full sunroom.
Learn MorePlan the layout, materials, and features of your new or updated sunroom from the ground up.
Learn MoreFall is the best time to schedule - beat next summer's heat and lock in your start date before our calendar fills up.