
San Jacinto Sunrooms & Patios designs and builds custom sunrooms, patio enclosures, and four season rooms for Temecula homeowners, with direct experience across the city's HOA-governed communities, hillside lots, and wine country estates. We have served Southwest Riverside County since 2016 and manage HOA documentation and city permits from first drawing to final inspection.

Temecula is a city with wide variation in its property types - planned tract communities with strict HOA oversight on one end, and wine country lots with larger footprints and unique terrain on the other. The right approach depends on which of those situations applies to your home.
Temecula has a wider range of lot shapes and property configurations than most Inland Empire cities - from tight subdivision lots in Redhawk to half-acre hillside pads in Crowne Hill and large parcels in the De Luz area. Our custom sunrooms are designed to fit each specific property, accounting for slope, setbacks, and the roofline of the existing home so the addition looks like it was always there.
Covered rear patios are standard on most Temecula tract homes, and they are usually the most cost-effective starting point for a sunroom project. We tie into the existing cover and slab, add insulated glazing and weatherproofing, and connect the new space to your home's roofline in a way that satisfies both the city inspector and your HOA's architectural reviewer.
Temecula summers push well into the 90s and above, and valley-floor neighborhoods can drop near freezing on the coldest winter nights. A four season room with insulated walls, low-E glass, and a dedicated mini-split system handles both extremes, giving you a usable space twelve months a year rather than just the comfortable weeks in March and November.
Temecula's spring and fall weather is genuinely pleasant, and a screen room is the most affordable way to make the most of it. For properties near open space, vineyards, or the rolling hills on the city's eastern edge, the screen enclosure also keeps out the pollen and debris that Santa Ana winds carry across the valley during late fall.
In Temecula's HOA communities, material and color choices have to clear architectural review before you apply for a city permit - and reviewers in areas like Paloma del Sol, Harveston, and Wolf Creek have specific requirements. We work through design decisions with HOA compliance in mind from the first meeting, so the package you submit to your association is already in the right format.
UV-stabilized vinyl framing is a practical choice for Temecula's climate. Months of intense inland sun accelerate paint fade and oxidation on aluminum or wood-framed structures, while quality vinyl holds its color and structural integrity through the heat cycle. It is also low-maintenance, which matters on vacation-adjacent properties and wine country homes where owners are not always on site.
Most of Temecula was built during the city's rapid growth period from the early 1990s through the mid-2000s. That means the majority of homes are now between 20 and 35 years old - right in the window when original roofing, exterior caulk, and flatwork commonly start showing wear. Covered patios from that era were rarely engineered to carry future room additions. Before we attach anything structural to an existing cover, we evaluate what is actually there - because a patio roof that was fine as a shade structure may not be adequate as the attachment point for an enclosed room.
Clay soil movement is an ongoing factor throughout the Temecula Valley. The ground swells with winter rain and shrinks in the long dry summer, and that cycle puts real stress on concrete slabs, footings, and retaining walls over time. Homes on hillside lots or graded pads can also have drainage patterns that redirect water toward the house - something that becomes a serious concern once you enclose a patio and change how water flows off the structure. We assess drainage and soil conditions as part of the pre-quote visit, not as an afterthought.
Our crew works throughout Temecula regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Temecula's planned communities - Redhawk, Paloma del Sol, Harveston, Wolf Creek, and the neighborhoods along Margarita Road - were built by large tract developers and share consistent construction details. Knowing the typical framing, foundation depth, and patio specifications for these communities means we can assess a project accurately from the first visit rather than discovering structural surprises mid-build.
The Rancho California Road corridor connects most of Temecula's wine country estates and is the main reference point for the city's western properties. Old Town Temecula along Front Street marks the historic core of the city, and neighborhoods near there tend to have older, more varied construction. The City of Temecula handles building permits through its Community Development Department, and we submit permit applications and manage inspections directly with that office.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring Moreno Valley to the north, and in Murrieta just next door - both areas where our crew works on a regular basis.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form and we will get back to you within one business day. We ask a few basic questions about your property and what you are hoping to build so we can schedule an on-site visit without wasting your time.
We visit your property, assess the slab, existing structure, roofline, and any drainage or grade considerations. The estimate we provide covers all materials, labor, permits, and HOA documentation costs - no line items added after you sign.
If your community requires HOA review, we prepare the drawings and product samples in the correct format and submit on your behalf. Once HOA clearance is confirmed, we file with the City of Temecula and schedule the project start around the permit timeline.
Construction typically runs two to four weeks once we break ground. We coordinate all city inspections and walk you through the completed space before we leave. You receive all permit records and the finaled inspection report for your insurance and future resale documentation.
We serve all of Temecula - from Redhawk and Paloma del Sol to the wine country and Old Town. No pressure, no obligation. Just a straight answer on what your project will take and what it will cost.
(951) 910-7048Temecula was incorporated in 1989 and grew quickly through the 1990s and early 2000s into one of Southwest Riverside County's most established cities. Most of its residential neighborhoods - Redhawk, Paloma del Sol, Crowne Hill, Wolf Creek, and Harveston - were built during that growth period as master-planned communities with HOA governance. The result is a city that looks consistent across most neighborhoods: stucco exteriors, concrete tile roofs, and covered rear patios on nearly every block. Old Town Temecula along Front Street is the historic core, a well-known shopping and dining district with buildings dating back to the late 1800s. The city's western corridor along Rancho California Road is home to more than 40 wineries, making Temecula Valley one of Southern California's primary wine destinations.
The housing mix in Temecula skews strongly toward owner-occupied single-family homes, with high-value detached properties making up the bulk of the city's residential stock. Property values here are well above regional averages, and homeowners tend to be invested in maintaining and upgrading what they own. Nearby Murrieta to the north shares much of the same suburban character and HOA culture, while Menifee further north has seen its own wave of newer development that often brings homeowners to us for the first time.
Glass solariums that maximize sunlight and indoor-outdoor connection.
Learn MoreWe are taking new projects in Temecula now - call or send a message to get on the schedule before the season fills up.