
Your deck is already there. We enclose it into a fully weatherproof, hurricane-rated sunroom - with permits, HOA support, and structural assessment included.

Deck-to-sunroom conversion in Boca Raton replaces an open outdoor deck with a fully enclosed, weatherproof room - removing or repurposing the deck structure, building walls and a roof system, installing hurricane-rated windows and doors, and connecting the space to your home's interior, with most projects running two to four weeks of active construction once permits are approved.
In Boca Raton's climate, an open deck is comfortable only a few months each year. From May through October, the combination of heat, afternoon thunderstorms, and insects makes regular use impractical. Enclosing it creates a room you can use every day. If your starting point is a patio slab rather than a raised deck, see our patio-to-sunroom conversion service - the process shares many steps but differs in how the foundation is handled.
Every deck-to-sunroom conversion in Boca Raton requires a building permit and plan review for wind and impact compliance. If your home is in an HOA community, architectural review approval happens before the city permit is submitted. These are not optional steps - they protect your home's value and make sure the finished room is covered by your homeowner's insurance.
In Boca Raton, intense summer sun, afternoon thunderstorms, and mosquitoes make open decks genuinely hard to use from May through October. If you find yourself avoiding it for most of the year, an enclosed sunroom gives you that outdoor connection without the exposure.
If your deck boards are warping, railings are loose, or the structure is showing its age, you are already facing a repair or replacement decision. Converting to a sunroom at that point often makes more financial sense than rebuilding a deck you will still struggle to use in the heat and rain.
If your family has outgrown the interior of your home but a full room addition feels like too large a project, a deck conversion is a practical middle ground. It adds a real, furnished room using a structure already attached to your house.
Many homeowners convert a deck specifically for a home office with natural light, a yoga or exercise room, or a casual dining space connected to the backyard. Having a clear vision makes the investment feel purposeful and helps the contractor design the right space.
The right enclosure type depends on how you plan to use the space. For year-round comfort in South Florida's climate, a four-season room with full insulation, low-heat-gain glass, and a mini-split or connected HVAC system is almost always the better long-term investment. For homeowners focused on Boca Raton's mild October-through-April season, a three-season enclosure provides screened or single-pane panels without climate control at a lower project cost. We also offer all season rooms as a year-round option whether you are starting from a deck, a patio, or bare ground.
Before any enclosure work begins, we assess your deck's structural condition - footings, posts, and framing - to determine what the existing structure can carry. This step matters because a weak foundation will cause problems after the room is finished. Florida's building code also requires that all enclosed structures meet wind and impact standards, which means the glass panels, framing, and roof connections must be rated for South Florida conditions. The National Sunroom Association provides industry standards that guide how these projects should be built and inspected.
Best for year-round comfort in South Florida - fully insulated with low-heat-gain glass and connected to climate control.
A more affordable option for homeowners who want to enjoy Boca Raton's mild fall and winter months without full HVAC.
For decks with aging footings or framing, we evaluate and reinforce the structure before any enclosure work begins.
We handle city permit applications and HOA architectural review submissions so you do not have to manage either process yourself.
Boca Raton's subtropical climate means that open decks have a short window of genuine usability. South Florida's rainy season runs roughly June through September, with intense afternoon thunderstorms that make outdoor furniture impractical to leave out. The flat, low terrain common across this part of Palm Beach County also means drainage around the base of any new enclosure needs careful attention - water pooling against the structure after heavy rain is a common source of problems when this step is skipped. Homeowners in Pompano Beach and Deerfield Beach face the same conditions and routinely choose enclosed rooms for the same reasons.
Boca Raton also has a high concentration of HOA-governed communities where exterior changes require architectural review approval before construction begins. Many associations specify approved materials, colors, and enclosure styles - constraints that need to be known before a contractor prepares drawings. A contractor experienced in this market knows what most Boca Raton associations look for and can prepare a submission that moves through review without unnecessary back-and-forth.
We respond within one business day to schedule your on-site visit. If your home is in an HOA community, let us know early so we can plan the submission timeline alongside the permit.
We inspect the deck structure, footings, and framing before quoting. You receive a clear written estimate that accounts for any reinforcement needed - no mid-project surprises.
We prepare construction drawings and submit them for city plan review and HOA architectural approval. Most homeowners do not have to make a single call to the permitting office.
Once permits are approved, construction typically runs two to four weeks. We schedule all building department inspections and do a final walkthrough before calling the job complete.
We assess your deck structure, manage permits, and handle HOA submissions. One clear written quote - no surprises mid-project.
(728) 777-1327We evaluate your deck's footings, posts, and framing before quoting. If reinforcement is needed, we tell you upfront - not after work has started and the cost has already grown.
Every window, door, and roofing panel we specify meets South Florida's wind and impact requirements. Your finished room is built to handle storm season, not just good weather.
We handle the city permit application and, where applicable, prepare your HOA architectural review package. Boca Raton's permitting process has specific requirements - we navigate them so you do not have to.
In South Florida, a poorly designed sunroom traps heat and raises your cooling bill. We specify low-heat-gain glass, plan for ventilation, and help you size climate control correctly for the room's orientation and size.
Deck conversions in South Florida are more complex than they look on paper - wind requirements, HOA rules, drainage, and structural assessment all need to be handled correctly. We have navigated these steps on projects throughout Palm Beach County and bring that experience to every job.
Fully enclosed rooms built for South Florida's year-round climate, available as new construction or converted from existing outdoor structures.
Learn MoreConvert an existing patio slab into a climate-controlled sunroom using your current foundation as the starting point.
Learn MorePermit review in Palm Beach County takes time - the sooner you are in the queue, the sooner you are using your new room. Call or submit a request today.