
Stop losing your evenings to mosquitoes and afternoon storms. A screened or glass three season sunroom gives you a comfortable outdoor room you can actually use - nine or ten months of the year in Palm Coast.

Three season sunrooms in Palm Coast are enclosed porch additions designed for comfortable use during spring, fall, and mild winter days - and with the right panel setup, you can realistically use yours nine to ten months of the year. The walls use screened or glass panels set in aluminum frames, and the structure ties into your existing patio slab or a new pour. Most projects run one to three weeks of active construction once permits are approved. If you are already thinking about a patio enclosure or a screen room, a three season sunroom is often the next level up - giving you more weather protection without the full cost of a climate-controlled four season addition.
The biggest advantage in Palm Coast specifically is the climate. Our shoulder seasons - October through May - are genuinely pleasant, and a sunroom lets you be outside for them without fighting bugs, afternoon storms, or the direct afternoon sun that makes open patios uncomfortable. For canal-facing and preserve-facing homes, this is especially valuable.
For details on Flagler County building requirements, the Flagler County Building Services office handles all permits for Palm Coast sunroom additions.
Palm Coast's canals, retention ponds, and warm nights create ideal mosquito breeding conditions from spring through late fall. If bugs are driving you inside every evening, your outdoor space is not working for you. A screened three season sunroom gives you that time back without the bites.
If your current screen enclosure has torn mesh, rust stains, or a roof that leaks when it rains, patching it further may cost more than replacing it. Florida's sun and salt air degrade screen enclosures faster than most states, and a structure over 15 years old is often past its useful life.
Palm Coast summers are hot and humid, but the shoulder seasons from October through May are genuinely pleasant. If heat and afternoon thunderstorms are keeping you inside for most of the year, the right sunroom configuration can extend your usable outdoor season significantly.
Many Palm Coast homes back up to canals or nature preserves - beautiful views that also mean more insects, more wind off the water, and more direct afternoon sun. A three season sunroom lets you enjoy that view in comfort instead of squinting through a screen door.
We build three season sunrooms across the full range of panel options - from simple screen enclosures that let in the breeze to glass-panel rooms that keep rain and wind out during heavy afternoon storms. If you are considering a patio enclosure, we can walk you through how the two compare in terms of cost, usability, and what Flagler County requires for each. For homeowners who want a simple, lower-cost entry point, a screen room installation may be the right starting point before deciding on full glazing.
Every project starts with a free on-site estimate where we assess your existing slab, discuss panel options in detail, and give you a written quote that breaks out materials and labor separately. We handle all Flagler County permit filings and HOA submissions - you do not fill out any forms.
Best for homeowners who want maximum airflow and the lowest entry cost.
Ideal for homeowners who want rain and wind protection year-round.
Suits homeowners who want flexibility - glass on the windward side, screens on the sheltered sides.
For patios without an existing slab or with a slab that needs replacement.
Palm Coast sits on Florida's northeast Atlantic coast, where hurricane season is a real consideration - not just a headline. Any sunroom addition must be built to Florida's wind-load requirements, which are stricter than most other states. The framing, anchoring, and panel systems we use are rated for high-wind conditions, and we provide documentation before work begins. Homeowners near Flagler Beach and the Intracoastal Waterway should be especially aware that salt air accelerates wear on standard aluminum hardware - we specify corrosion-resistant and powder-coated materials as a baseline, not an upgrade.
Palm Coast also has one of the highest concentrations of HOA-governed neighborhoods in Flagler County, and the permit process through Flagler County Building Services adds its own timeline. Homeowners in communities like Grand Haven or those near Bunnell who are considering this project should plan for two to six weeks of permit and HOA review before construction begins. Our team handles both filings at the same time so you are not waiting longer than necessary.
The National Association of Home Builders notes that enclosed outdoor additions consistently rank among the highest-returning home improvement investments, which reflects what we see in the Palm Coast market.
We respond within 1 business day. In the first conversation, we ask about your patio size, your goals, and whether your neighborhood has an HOA - so we show up to the estimate prepared.
We visit your home, measure the space, assess the existing slab, and walk you through screen vs. glass options with a written itemized quote. No verbal estimates.
We submit your Flagler County permit application and, if needed, your HOA architectural review at the same time - saving you several weeks compared to doing them in sequence.
Construction typically takes one to three weeks. A county inspector signs off on the finished work, and we walk you through the room before we consider the job complete.
We respond within 1 business day. There is no obligation and no pressure - just a conversation about what you want and a free on-site estimate. After you submit, someone from our office will call to schedule a time that works for you.
(386) 529-0493Every sunroom we build is engineered to meet Florida's high-wind requirements for Flagler County. We provide documentation on the framing and panel systems before work begins - not after.
Many Palm Coast neighborhoods require architectural review before construction. We prepare and submit HOA paperwork and run it parallel to the county permit so you are not waiting weeks longer than necessary.
Palm Coast's proximity to the Intracoastal and the Atlantic means salt air is a real factor. We specify powder-coated aluminum framing and marine-grade hardware - not an upgrade, a necessity in this environment.
You receive a written, itemized quote before a single permit is filed. Any change to scope is agreed to in writing. The number you approved at the start is the number you pay at the end.
Our combination of Florida wind-load compliance, HOA experience, and coastal material knowledge means fewer surprises after the project starts. Every job is permitted, inspected, and documented - so your sunroom shows up correctly in county records when you sell.
A patio enclosure converts your existing slab into a protected living space - a practical first step before committing to a full sunroom build.
Learn MoreA dedicated screen room keeps bugs and rain out while maintaining the open-air feel - a cost-effective option when full glazing is not needed.
Learn MoreSpring and fall slots fill quickly in Palm Coast - reach out now to get your project on the schedule before the next season gets away from you.