
San Jacinto Sunrooms & Patios designs and builds custom sunrooms, patio enclosures, and four season rooms for Murrieta homeowners, with direct experience across the city's planned community subdivisions. We have served Southwest Riverside County since 2016 and manage permits and HOA documentation from start to finish.

Murrieta's housing stock is mostly tract homes built between the 1990s and early 2000s - stucco exteriors, concrete tile roofs, covered rear patios, and HOA rules that govern what you can add. We know this city's neighborhoods and what it takes to get a project approved and built here.
Many Murrieta homes - especially in neighborhoods near the eastern hills and in Greer Ranch - have lot shapes, grade changes, or existing structures that prefab sunroom kits cannot fit. Our custom sunrooms are designed around the specific dimensions, roofline, and setback requirements of each individual property, so the finished room looks like it was always part of the house.
The covered rear patio is a standard feature on most Murrieta tract homes, and it is usually the most practical starting point for an enclosure. The existing cover and footings do most of the work - we add insulated glass, a proper roof tie-in, and weather sealing to turn that covered slab into a room that holds up through Murrieta's hot summers and the occasional cold winter night.
Murrieta summers regularly push into the high 90s and low 100s, and winter nights can drop to the upper 20s on the coldest evenings. A four season room with insulated walls, low-E glass, and a dedicated HVAC system handles that full range, making the space usable in every month rather than just the mild weeks in spring and fall.
Murrieta has genuinely comfortable weather in the spring and fall, and a screen room captures those months at a lower cost than a full glass enclosure. Homes near California Oaks Sports Park and other open space areas also benefit from the bug and pollen barrier a screen room provides, especially during the Santa Ana wind season when the air carries a lot of debris.
In Murrieta's HOA-heavy subdivisions, the design and material choices you make have to pass architectural review before you can even apply for a city permit. We help Murrieta homeowners work through the design process with HOA compliance in mind from the first conversation, so the drawings you submit to your association already meet the standard requirements for color, materials, and roofline.
Murrieta homeowners who want a low-maintenance addition often choose vinyl framing for its resistance to UV fading and corrosion. At an elevation of about 1,000 feet in an inland climate, the sun intensity is noticeably higher than at the coast, and UV-stabilized vinyl holds its color and structural integrity significantly longer than painted materials in this environment.
Most of Murrieta was built during the city's rapid growth years from the early 1990s through the late 2000s. That means the majority of homes are now between 15 and 35 years old - the window when original roofing, exterior coatings, and concrete flatwork start showing their age. Covered patios added during original construction were often designed with minimal footings and basic cover structures, because the original builders were not engineering them for future enclosure. Attaching a sunroom to a cover that was not built to carry the load requires a proper structural review, not just a nail gun and a material list.
Clay soil movement is a real factor in Murrieta, just as it is throughout much of Riverside County. The expansive clay beneath many properties contracts in the long dry summer and expands again when winter rains saturate the ground. The U.S. Geological Survey identifies this shrink-swell cycle as a leading cause of structural damage to homes in the region. We assess the slab condition and footing requirements before quoting, so there are no surprises when construction starts.
Our crew works throughout Murrieta regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom work here. The city's planned communities - Greer Ranch, Spencer's Crossing, California Oaks, and the neighborhoods near Murrieta Hot Springs Road - were built by major tract developers and share consistent construction details. Stucco exteriors, concrete tile roofs, and covered rear patios are on nearly every street. That consistency means we rarely encounter surprises on the job, and we can quote confidently because we know what is behind the wall before we open it.
Interstate 15 runs straight through Murrieta and is the main route connecting the city to San Diego to the south and the Inland Empire to the north. Most of the city's neighborhoods sit on either side of that corridor, with California Oaks Sports Park marking the western edge of the I-15 activity belt. The city's Community Development Department at murrietaca.gov handles building permits, and we submit applications and manage the process there directly.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring Temecula just to the south, where similar HOA structures and climate conditions apply, and in Lake Elsinore to the north - both cities where we work on a regular basis.
We respond within one business day - usually the same day. Describe what you have in mind and we schedule a time to visit the property. You do not need to be ready with a complete plan - that is what the site visit is for.
We inspect the existing patio cover structure, slab condition, and roof tie-in point before quoting. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we note the review requirements and factor them into the timeline. You receive a written, itemized estimate - not a range with a vague scope.
Where HOA approval is required, we prepare compliant drawings and product specifications for the architectural review committee first. Once clearance is received, we submit the permit application to the City of Murrieta Community Development Department and track the review process on your behalf.
We build the room, coordinate the required city inspection, and walk through the finished space with you before closing out the project. All permit records and the finaled inspection report are handed to you at the end.
We work across all of Murrieta's neighborhoods - Greer Ranch, California Oaks, Spencer's Crossing, and beyond. No obligation. One business day response guaranteed.
(951) 910-7048Murrieta is a family-oriented city in southwest Riverside County, sitting along Interstate 15 about 30 miles north of San Diego. Named after the historic hot springs that once drew visitors from across Southern California, the city grew rapidly from the 1990s onward and is now home to around 130,000 residents. The overwhelming majority of its housing stock is single-family owner-occupied homes arranged in planned subdivisions - Greer Ranch, California Oaks, Spencer's Crossing, and communities near Murrieta Hot Springs Road are among the most recognizable. You can read more about the city's development and geography at the Murrieta Wikipedia article. Most homes feature stucco exteriors, concrete tile roofs, and covered rear patios - the standard Southern California tract package - built largely between 1990 and 2010.
The city draws a mix of families who commute toward San Diego or the Inland Empire and longtime residents who chose Murrieta for its schools, open space, and more affordable land prices compared to the coast. California Oaks Sports Park on the west side of the city and the open hillside areas to the east are landmarks that most residents know well. Neighboring Menifee to the north shares a similar housing profile and climate, and many homeowners in both cities deal with the same clay soil and heat-related maintenance questions.
Glass solariums that maximize sunlight and indoor-outdoor connection.
Learn MoreWe build throughout Murrieta and the surrounding Southwest Riverside County. Call now or submit your project details and we will respond within one business day.