Wellington Lanai Sunrooms & Patios serves Boca Raton, FL, building vinyl sunrooms, screen enclosures, and custom sunroom additions for homeowners throughout the city - including gated communities like Boca West, Broken Sound, and Woodfield Country Club. We manage Palm Beach County permit submissions and HOA architectural review packages, and we respond to every inquiry within one business day.

Boca Raton's stucco exteriors, HOA color standards, and Florida's intense UV make vinyl framing a practical choice - it comes in a wide range of colors, does not require repainting, and holds up to the humidity and heat that degrades other frame materials over time. A vinyl sunroom designed to match your existing exterior passes HOA review and keeps its appearance for years without extra maintenance. Learn more about vinyl sunrooms.
A large share of Boca Raton single-family homes already have or once had a screened lanai around the pool. Replacing an aging screen enclosure with new aluminum framing and heavy-gauge screen fabric is one of the most common projects in this city, and many HOA communities in Boca Raton have a streamlined review process for screen room replacements on existing footprints.
Homes in West Boca communities and newer master-planned neighborhoods often have larger lots, tile roofs, and higher baseline expectations for exterior additions. A custom sunroom here needs to match the roofline cleanly and use materials that hold up to the 60-plus inches of annual rainfall and daily UV exposure that Boca Raton sees every year.
Many of Boca Raton's 1970s and 1980s homes have rear patios that face south or west and get punishing afternoon sun from May through October. A patio enclosure turns that space into something usable without requiring a full room addition, and it protects the concrete slab and any outdoor furniture from the rain-and-dry cycle that cracks and fades surfaces quickly here.
For Boca Raton homeowners whose properties have room to expand, a new sunroom addition on a poured slab creates permanent, permitted square footage in a market where home values are high enough to justify the investment. We confirm setbacks and HOA restrictions before the design phase so nothing needs to be reworked after drawings are submitted.
An insulated aluminum patio cover is the most cost-effective way to make a Boca Raton rear patio usable during the rainy season and through the hottest summer months. Many HOA communities in Boca Raton approve patio covers readily when the material color and roof profile match the home - we confirm that before the project goes on the schedule.
Most of Boca Raton's housing stock was built between the 1970s and the 1990s, which puts the majority of homes in the 30-to-50-year age range. At that age, original stucco finishes are typically showing cracks, caulked joints around windows are failing, and roofs may be on their second or third replacement. Any enclosure project built against a home in this condition needs to account for the existing exterior before it is treated as a clean foundation. Beyond the building age, Boca Raton gets roughly 60 inches of rain per year - nearly all of it during the May-through-October rainy season. Flat lots throughout the city, particularly in older eastern neighborhoods near the coast, drain slowly, and standing water at the base of an enclosure frame is a reliable source of early structural problems. Proper grading at installation is not optional here.
The HOA layer defines sunroom work in Boca Raton more than in most other Palm Beach County cities. Gated and deed-restricted communities here - from the large country club neighborhoods in the west to the condo associations along the eastern coast - have architectural review requirements that go beyond the Palm Beach County building permit process. Getting through both review tracks without correction notices requires submitting complete documentation the first time: accurate drawings, product approvals for glass and framing systems, and material specifications that match HOA standards. Palm Beach County Building Division handles permits for Boca Raton, and their residential sunroom review requires full engineered drawings for any new enclosed structure. Homeowners can review Palm Beach County Building Division permit requirements directly on the county website.
Our crew works throughout Boca Raton regularly, and we submit permits through the Palm Beach County Building Division, which handles all residential permitting for the city. We know the plan review checklist for sunroom and enclosure projects in this jurisdiction, the product approval documentation the reviewers expect, and the inspection sequence for enclosed structure permits. That familiarity cuts correction notices and keeps the permit review timeline close to the three-to-five-week target rather than stretching it.
Glades Road runs east to west through the middle of the city and is the main dividing line between the northern and southern halves of Boca Raton. The areas south of Glades Road toward Palmetto Park Road include some of the older established neighborhoods and the historic resort district near the Boca Raton Resort and Club. The areas to the west - sometimes called West Boca - have newer construction, larger lots, and tile-roofed homes in master-planned communities. Mizner Park and downtown Boca anchor the eastern side, and Florida Atlantic University sits near Glades Road. We work across all of these areas and know what each neighborhood's housing stock looks like.
We also serve Delray Beach to the north and Wellington to the northwest, so our crew covers a wide stretch of Palm Beach County with no travel surcharges across service areas.
Call us or submit the estimate form and we reply within one business day. We ask about your property, the project you have in mind, and whether you are in a community with HOA requirements so we can prepare accordingly.
We visit your Boca Raton property to measure the space, check drainage at the perimeter, review HOA documentation if applicable, and confirm setbacks. You receive a written itemized estimate with no line items that appear later as surprises.
We submit the Palm Beach County building permit application and any HOA architectural review package at the same time. Construction starts once both approvals are in hand - most installations take two to four weeks on site depending on scope.
We schedule and pass the Palm Beach County final inspection before the job is closed out. You walk through the finished space with us, and any punch-list items are resolved before we leave your property.
We serve Boca Raton homeowners from the gated communities in West Boca to the older neighborhoods near Mizner Park. Call us or submit the form and we will respond within one business day.
(561) 576-0264Boca Raton is a city of roughly 97,000 residents at the southern end of Palm Beach County, bordered by Delray Beach to the north and Deerfield Beach to the south. It is one of the wealthiest cities in Florida, with a median home value well above the state average and a housing stock that skews toward owner-occupied, well-maintained single-family homes. The city developed quickly from the 1970s through the 1990s and now has an enormous range of residential character - from the older neighborhoods near downtown and Mizner Park in the east, to the newer master-planned communities in West Boca. Gated country club communities like Boca West and Broken Sound are landmarks in their own right, with thousands of homes governed by HOAs that set detailed standards for exterior work. You can read more about the city's history on Wikipedia.
The built environment reflects the city's prosperity - stucco homes, tile roofs, paver driveways, and screened lanais around in-ground pools are the norm rather than the exception in most Boca Raton neighborhoods. Townhome and condo communities are concentrated along the eastern part of the city closer to the Intracoastal Waterway, where buildings from the 1970s and 1980s are in various stages of renovation. Florida Atlantic University near Glades Road adds a distinct character to the areas around campus, with a higher density of apartments and rental units compared to the residential neighborhoods elsewhere. We serve Boynton Beach to the north and Delray Beach between them - all three cities share similar building stock and climate conditions, and our crew works across all of them without added travel cost.
Keep insects out while enjoying fresh air in a screened outdoor room.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio slab into a fully enclosed sunroom.
Learn MoreTurn your deck into a comfortable enclosed room you can use year-round.
Learn MoreClimate-controlled rooms designed for comfortable use every day of the year.
Learn MoreEnclose your patio with walls and windows for a protected outdoor room.
Learn MoreFloor-to-ceiling glass solariums that maximize natural light in your home.
Learn MoreDurable patio covers that provide shade and weather protection outdoors.
Learn MoreCall us today or submit the form - we respond within one business day and serve all of Boca Raton, from West Boca communities to the neighborhoods near the coast.