
San Jacinto Sunrooms & Patios brings sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen room installation to Hemet homeowners. Our crew has served the San Jacinto Valley since 2016, and we handle permits through the correct jurisdiction so your project is protected and properly documented.

Hemet homes were built primarily in the 1950s through 1990s - a building stock that responds well to patio enclosures, screen rooms, and sunroom additions when the work is designed for valley conditions.
Hemet regularly hits 105 degrees in summer, and an open patio becomes useless for four months of the year. A fully insulated sunroom addition with a dedicated cooling unit gives you a room that works in July just as well as it does in March.
Many older Hemet ranch homes have a covered patio that already has a slab and a roof - enclosing that existing structure is usually the most cost-effective way to add livable square footage. We assess the slab condition first, since Hemet soils can cause cracking over time, and recommend repairs before building on top.
Hemet sits near the Santa Ana wind corridor, and those fall wind events push dust and insects across open patios. A screen room is a lower-cost way to make your patio usable again - it keeps the bugs and debris out while staying open to the breeze on Hemet's nicer days.
Hemet winters can drop below freezing on cold nights - an all season room is built with the insulation and heating capacity to stay comfortable year-round, not just in the mild months. Retirees in Hemet who spend more time at home particularly benefit from a climate-controlled room that extends their usable living space.
Converting an existing patio into a full sunroom is one of the most popular projects in Hemet's older neighborhoods, where covered patios are common but rarely insulated. We assess the existing slab, roof connection, and drainage before quoting - so there are no surprises once work begins.
Hemet's intense UV exposure breaks down wood and aluminum frames faster than in cooler climates. UV-stabilized vinyl framing holds up to the desert sun without painting, staining, or regular refinishing - a practical choice for Hemet homeowners on a fixed income who want low ongoing maintenance.
Hemet's housing stock is older than most homeowners realize - the bulk of single-family homes here were built between the 1950s and the 1990s, which means original slabs, original patios, and original structural connections that are now 30 to 70 years old. Enclosing a patio or adding a sunroom to a home in that age range requires a different level of assessment than new construction. A slab that has been sitting under Hemet's clay-heavy soil for 40 years may have shifted, cracked, or become uneven in ways that are not visible until you start the work - and a contractor who skips that inspection is setting you up for problems.
Hemet also has a significant proportion of retirees and fixed-income homeowners who have been in their homes for decades. That means deferred maintenance is common, and it also means the cost conversation needs to be honest and itemized from the start. We price every job in writing before any work begins. On the climate side, Hemet gets over 280 sunny days a year and summer temperatures that push past 100 degrees regularly. Any sunroom we build for a Hemet address is designed for that reality, with glass and insulation specifications matched to the heat load - not the national average.
Our crew works throughout Hemet regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom and patio work here. Hemet addresses can fall under either the City of Hemet Building Department or Riverside County Building and Safety, depending on whether the property is within city limits or in an unincorporated area - and confusing the two causes permit delays. We confirm your jurisdiction before submitting anything.
The Ramona Pageant grounds sit in the hills above Hemet, and Diamond Valley Lake - one of Southern California's largest reservoirs - is just south of the city. These landmarks orient us when we talk about which part of Hemet a homeowner is calling from. We work in neighborhoods ranging from the older streets near downtown Hemet to the newer developments south toward Diamond Valley. The building stock and soil conditions shift depending on which part of the valley you are in, and we factor that into every estimate.
Hemet connects to the broader region through State Route 74, which runs east toward San Jacinto and west toward the Santa Ana Mountains. We also serve homeowners in Beaumont, which sits north of the valley along Interstate 10 and has its own building department process and housing stock. If you are comparing projects across these cities, we can advise on permit and cost differences.
Call or submit the online form and we respond within one business day. You describe what you are thinking - a patio enclosure, a new sunroom, a screen room - and we set a time to come to your Hemet address for a look.
We visit the property, inspect the existing slab, patio cover, and roof connection, and check drainage and soil conditions. You receive a written itemized estimate before any decision is made - no verbal ballparks that change later.
We confirm whether your address falls under the City of Hemet or Riverside County, then submit a complete permit application. Starting with the right jurisdiction saves weeks of back-and-forth that slows other projects down.
We complete the work, coordinate the required inspection, and walk through the finished room with you before leaving. All permit documentation is yours to keep for your records and for future resale.
We serve Hemet homeowners with free on-site estimates and a written itemized quote before any work begins. No pressure, no obligation.
(951) 910-7048Hemet is a city of about 90,000 people in the San Jacinto Valley in Riverside County, situated at roughly 1,600 feet elevation. The city has long been known as a retirement destination in Southern California, and a large share of its residents are older adults who own their homes and have lived in them for many years. The housing stock is predominantly single-story ranch-style homes on modest lots with stucco exteriors and slab foundations - most of it built between the 1950s and 1990s. A significant number of mobile home parks and age-restricted communities also make up the housing landscape, particularly on the west side of the city. The Ramona Outdoor Play, one of the longest-running outdoor dramas in the United States, takes place each spring in the hills above Hemet and is one of the most recognized institutions in the area.
Diamond Valley Lake, a large reservoir just south of Hemet managed by the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, is a well-known local landmark and recreation area. Hemet Valley Mall serves as the main commercial hub for the valley. The city's affordability compared to most of Southern California has made it attractive to retirees and working families, many of whom are budget-conscious when it comes to home improvements. Neighboring Beaumont sits north of the valley along Interstate 10 and is one of the faster-growing cities in the region, with a different building stock and a newer HOA landscape than Hemet's older neighborhoods.
Glass solariums that maximize sunlight and indoor-outdoor connection.
Learn MoreSpring is the best time to start a sunroom or patio project in Hemet - before the summer heat arrives. Reach out now and get on the schedule.