
Bugs, direct sun, and desert heat keep most San Jacinto patios empty by 9 a.m. A properly installed screen room gives you shade, airflow, and insect protection - without closing off the outdoors.

Screen room installation in San Jacinto means building an aluminum-framed enclosure around your existing patio, anchored to the slab and attached to your home, with screen panels on all sides and a roof system above. Most installations take two to five days once permits are approved.
A screen room sits between an open patio and a full enclosed room. It keeps insects out and blocks a meaningful amount of sun and debris while letting air move through - which matters more in San Jacinto than in most markets. If bugs and direct sun are your main complaints, a screen room solves both problems at a fraction of the cost of a full patio enclosure.
If you think you might want a fully conditioned room down the road, we can design the screen room so a future upgrade to a patio-to-sunroom conversion is straightforward rather than a full tear-down and rebuild.
If you retreat indoors by 9 or 10 a.m. from June through September because the heat and direct sun make your patio unbearable, your outdoor space is not working for you. A screen room with a solid roof panel and solar screen walls extends your usable hours significantly.
The San Jacinto Valley's warm evenings and proximity to agricultural land create conditions where mosquitoes and gnats are active from dusk onward. A fully enclosed screen room lets you enjoy those evenings - breeze coming through - without a single bug getting in.
If your current patio cover is warping, rusting, or pulling away from the house, that is a natural moment to replace it with a properly permitted, structurally sound screen room - better protection and a longer-lasting solution.
UV exposure and wind-blown dust in San Jacinto are hard on patio furniture left in the open. If furniture fades and cracks quickly or you find yourself constantly moving it inside, a screen room protects your investment while keeping the space open and airy.
We build aluminum-framed screen rooms anchored to your existing patio slab and attached to your home's structure. The frame goes up first, followed by the roof system, then screen panels on all sides and a door. Every panel is stretched taut and secured at every edge - no sagging, no gaps where insects can enter.
Screen material choice matters in San Jacinto's climate. We offer standard fiberglass screen for insect protection, solar screen to block heat and glare for summer use, and pet-resistant screen for homes with dogs or cats. For homeowners who want more than a screen room can offer, we also handle patio-to-sunroom conversions and full patio enclosures with solid walls and climate control.
Best for homeowners whose primary goal is insect protection and shade, with the lowest upfront cost.
Best for homes with west- or south-facing patios where direct afternoon sun makes the space too hot to use.
Best for homeowners who want the screen room to stay cooler and reduce radiant heat from above during summer.
Best for households with dogs or cats - heavier screen material resists tears from claws and rough handling.
The Inland Empire receives intense year-round sun, and San Jacinto is no exception. Standard screen materials degrade faster here than in coastal or shaded climates, which means the panels may need replacement sooner than national averages suggest. Choosing UV-resistant solar screen and a powder-coated aluminum frame - rather than painted steel - extends the life of the structure in this environment. We factor that into every recommendation we make.
Santa Ana wind events are another real consideration. Gusts of 50 to 70 miles per hour roll through the valley every fall, and a screen room that was not built with proper anchoring can suffer frame damage or torn panels after the first serious event. We anchor every frame to the slab and your home's structure, and the roof and panel systems we use are designed for high-wind conditions common to this region. Homeowners in Moreno Valley and Beaumont face the same wind and UV conditions, and we serve both communities.
Call or submit online - we respond within one business day. We ask about your existing patio, your goals, and any HOA requirements you are aware of. No commitment at this stage.
We come to your home, measure your patio, and review your goals - screen type, roof option, door placement. You receive a written estimate within a few days of that visit.
We prepare permit drawings and submit to the City of San Jacinto Building Division on your behalf. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we provide the documentation they need. This window is typically two to four weeks.
Once permits are in hand, framing and roofing go up in one to two days. Screen panels and the door follow. We coordinate the city inspection and walk you around the finished room before closing out.
Free estimate. We handle permits and HOA submissions so you do not have to manage the paperwork.
(951) 910-7048We anchor every frame to the existing slab and home structure using fasteners and methods rated for the high-wind conditions common to the San Jacinto Valley. Your screen room will not shift or lose panels after the first major wind event of the season.
We routinely recommend solar screen for San Jacinto patios with significant sun exposure. It blocks a meaningful portion of heat and glare, which can make the difference between a room you use through summer and one you avoid until October.
Every screen room we build goes through the city permit and inspection process. Your project is documented and on record - which protects you at resale and confirms the structure was built correctly by someone whose job is to check.
Many of San Jacinto's newer neighborhoods have HOAs with strict rules about exterior structures. We have navigated this process for local homeowners and know what documentation the architectural review committees in this area typically require.
Local knowledge matters on a project like this - the permit timeline, the wind anchoring requirements, the right screen for this specific climate. That combination of details is what separates a screen room that holds up for 20 years from one that needs repairs after the first fall wind event.
For guidance on screen materials and standards, the Screen Manufacturers Association publishes detailed information on screen types and performance ratings. You can also verify any California contractor license at cslb.ca.gov before signing anything.
When you want to go further than screening - fully enclose and condition your patio as a year-round living space.
Learn MoreA step up from a screen room - solid panels and climate control for a patio that feels like part of the main house.
Learn MorePermit slots fill up as spring approaches - the sooner you request an estimate, the sooner you are enjoying bug-free evenings on your patio.