
San Jacinto Sunrooms & Patios serves San Jacinto homeowners with sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen rooms. We have been building in the San Jacinto Valley since 2016, and we pull all required city permits so you are protected from day one.

Every service is designed for the specific conditions in the San Jacinto Valley - extreme summer heat, clay soils, and the City of San Jacinto permit process.
San Jacinto summers push past 105 degrees, and an open patio becomes unusable for months. A properly insulated sunroom addition gives you back that outdoor living space by adding a fully enclosed, cooled room that works year-round - even in July.
San Jacinto winters are mild but do drop below freezing on some nights, and summers are intense. A four season sunroom is built with insulated walls, roof, and glass so the room is comfortable from January to December, not just in spring and fall.
If you have an existing covered patio, enclosing it is often the most cost-effective path to adding usable square footage. We work around the existing slab and structure wherever the soil conditions allow, which is a common scenario in San Jacinto's single-story ranch-home neighborhoods.
When Santa Ana winds roll through the San Jacinto Valley each fall, they carry dust and debris that makes open patios miserable. A screen room keeps insects and blowing debris out while letting fresh air and natural light through - at a lower cost than a full enclosure.
Raised wood decks in San Jacinto take constant UV abuse from the desert sun, and many homeowners want to convert them into something more protected and usable. Converting a deck to an enclosed sunroom requires structural assessment of the existing posts and footings - we handle that evaluation before any price is quoted.
Older homes near downtown San Jacinto often have architectural details that a prefab kit cannot match. Custom-framed sunrooms let us design the room to fit the existing roofline, window placement, and exterior finish - so the addition looks like it has always been part of the house.
The San Jacinto Valley sits at roughly 1,600 feet elevation, and that combination of altitude, desert heat, and proximity to the San Jacinto Fault creates a set of conditions that generic contractors miss. Summers here regularly hit 105 degrees or higher, which means a sunroom built with standard single-pane glass becomes a furnace from June through September. Insulated glass and a proper cooling solution are not optional add-ons for this climate - they are the difference between a room you use every day and one you avoid for half the year.
The clay-heavy soils throughout the valley expand when wet and contract when dry, and that seasonal movement puts stress on concrete slabs and foundations. Many of the ranch-style homes built here in the 1970s and 1980s already show cracking in driveways and patios because of soil movement - adding a sunroom on a compromised slab without addressing the soil conditions first will shorten the life of the new structure. San Jacinto also requires building permits through the City of San Jacinto Building and Safety Division for any room addition, and a contractor who knows that process avoids the delays that slow down projects handled by crews unfamiliar with this municipality.
Our crew has been pulling permits through the City of San Jacinto Building and Safety Division for years, and we know how to submit a complete application the first time - which keeps your project moving instead of sitting in a back-and-forth correction cycle. We work throughout San Jacinto regularly, from the older neighborhoods near historic downtown to the newer subdivisions on the east side of the city.
Mt. San Jacinto College sits right in the city, and many of the families we work with are long-term residents who chose this valley for its affordability and its mountain backdrop. The San Jacinto Mountains rise steeply just east of town, and that geography creates wind patterns and temperature swings that affect how we design for each property. Homes on the north side of town that face the prevailing desert wind need different anchoring than homes tucked closer to the hills.
We also serve homeowners in nearby Hemet, which sits just a few miles west along Highway 74 and shares many of the same soil and climate conditions as San Jacinto. If you are considering a project in either city, we are the same crew and the same process.
We reply within one business day - usually the same day. No lengthy voicemail chains. You tell us what you have in mind, and we set a time to visit the property.
We visit your property, inspect the existing slab or foundation, and assess soil and drainage conditions. You get an itemized estimate before any commitment - no vague ballpark numbers.
We submit the permit application to the City of San Jacinto Building and Safety Division on your behalf. Once approved, we schedule the build around your availability.
We complete the work, coordinate the city inspection, and walk you through the finished room before we leave. You keep all permit documents for your records and for any future sale.
We serve San Jacinto and the surrounding valley. No pressure, no obligation - just a straightforward conversation about what you need and what it will cost.
(951) 910-7048San Jacinto is a city of roughly 35,000 to 40,000 people in the San Jacinto Valley in Riverside County, about 90 miles east of Los Angeles. The city grew steadily through the postwar decades and saw significant residential development in the 1980s and 1990s, leaving a housing stock that is mostly single-story ranch-style homes on lots of 6,000 to 10,000 square feet. Newer subdivisions have been added on the city's east side over the past two decades. The dominant exterior finish throughout the city is stucco, and most homes sit on concrete slab foundations - both of which are important context for any sunroom or patio project. Mt. San Jacinto College, one of the largest employers in the valley, anchors the city's identity as a genuine community rather than just a bedroom suburb.
The San Jacinto Mountains rise dramatically to the east, giving many neighborhoods views of peaks that reach above 10,000 feet. That mountain backdrop also means the city sits in a geographic corridor where wind, dust, and seasonal temperature swings are a real part of daily life. The area around historic downtown has some of the oldest homes in the city - a handful date to the early 1900s - while the west side of town connects to neighboring Hemet. For homeowners across the valley, from downtown San Jacinto to the newer streets near the MSJC campus, outdoor living improvements are one of the most practical ways to get more from their homes.
Glass solariums that maximize sunlight and indoor-outdoor connection.
Learn MoreWe serve San Jacinto homeowners with free on-site estimates. Slots fill up fast in spring - reach out now to get on the schedule.