Wellington Lanai Sunrooms & Patios is your local sunroom contractor in Royal Palm Beach, FL, building sunroom construction projects, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for the concrete block homes that make up most of the village's housing stock. We are licensed and insured, and we pull all Palm Beach County permits directly so you never have to manage the paperwork yourself.

Royal Palm Beach homes are mostly concrete block construction, and sunroom framing on CBS walls requires a different approach than on wood-frame houses. We build to Palm Beach County's impact and wind requirements on every project. Learn more about sunroom construction.
Many Royal Palm Beach homes already have a concrete slab patio sitting unused for half the year because of rain and mosquitoes. A patio enclosure turns that slab into protected living space without needing to pour a new foundation in most cases.
Screen rooms are a practical choice for Royal Palm Beach homeowners who want bug protection and airflow during the cooler months without committing to a fully enclosed space. They work especially well for families who use the backyard frequently from November through April.
Royal Palm Beach homes built in the 1980s and 1990s often lack an enclosed outdoor room, and adding one is one of the most cost-effective ways to gain usable square footage without a full interior renovation. Long-term owner-occupants here tend to invest in these additions rather than moving.
South Florida's heat runs from May through October, which means a room you can only use in cooler months is not worth much here. All season rooms with proper insulation and cooling stay comfortable year-round and actually get used, not just admired from inside the house.
Royal Palm Beach afternoon thunderstorms arrive fast and dump heavy rain with little warning. A properly built patio cover keeps the area dry and provides shade from the year-round UV exposure that fades furniture and damages exposed concrete finishes.
Royal Palm Beach developed quickly from the 1980s through the early 2000s, and most homes here are now 20 to 40 years old. The screened enclosures and patio covers built during that era used aluminum framing that corrodes in South Florida's humid air, and many of those structures are now rattling, leaking, or failing at the joints. Homeowners who have been in their houses for a decade or more are replacing those aging structures with properly built, impact-rated enclosures that handle both the daily afternoon rain and the occasional tropical storm.
The flat, low-lying terrain across Royal Palm Beach creates real drainage considerations for any work near a home's foundation. The water table in this part of Palm Beach County is high, and heavy summer rain can pool quickly if a new slab or enclosure footer is not graded correctly. Royal Palm Beach is also within Palm Beach County's wind zone, so any new enclosed structure must use impact-rated glass and framing - a requirement that affects both the design and the budget. A contractor who handles these conditions routinely will not be caught off guard by them on your job.
Our crew works throughout Royal Palm Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The village sits just north of Wellington along Southern Boulevard, and we cover both communities on the same permit schedule through Palm Beach County's Building Division. Many Royal Palm Beach subdivisions were built alongside HOA rules from the beginning, so architectural review is a routine part of almost every project we start here.
Neighborhoods near Royal Palm Beach Commons Park tend to have active HOAs with clear exterior guidelines. Homes further south toward the Wellington border and west toward the Acreage sit on larger lots where the outdoor footprint is more generous - and where jobs sometimes involve more foundation work than a standard suburban house in a tighter subdivision. Southern Boulevard connects the two communities, and we move between them regularly.
We also serve Loxahatchee Groves to the west, where properties are larger and less HOA-governed, and Wellington to the south, which is our home base. Across the western Palm Beach County corridor, we apply the same local permit knowledge and material standards.
Call us or submit a message online and we respond within 1 business day. We ask a few short questions about your project - size, location on the property, and whether you want cooling - so the site visit covers what matters and does not waste your time.
We come to your Royal Palm Beach home, inspect the existing slab or outdoor space, measure, and note any HOA requirements specific to your subdivision. Your written estimate arrives within a week and covers the full cost - there are no additions after work begins unless you request a change.
We handle the Palm Beach County permit application and, where required, prepare and submit your HOA architectural review packet. You do not need to manage either process. County review typically takes two to five weeks. We keep you updated so you are never left wondering where things stand.
Once permits are in hand, construction runs two to six weeks. County inspectors check the work at required stages - you do not need to be home. After the final inspection passes, we walk you through the finished room and hand over all permit documentation for your records.
We cover all of Royal Palm Beach, FL - from the subdivisions near Commons Park to the larger lots out toward the Acreage. Call or fill out the form and we respond within 1 business day.
(561) 576-0264Royal Palm Beach is a village in western Palm Beach County with a population of around 40,000 people. It developed as a planned community starting in the 1960s and grew rapidly through the 1980s, 1990s, and early 2000s. The housing stock is overwhelmingly detached single-family homes - mostly concrete block construction on concrete slab foundations - and the village has a high owner-occupancy rate, meaning most residents have a long-term stake in their properties. Neighborhoods are organized with clear subdivision boundaries, and many were established with HOAs from the beginning. The village sits just north of Wellington along Southern Boulevard, placing it squarely in the western Palm Beach County communities corridor.
The community character is suburban and family-oriented, centered around parks, schools, and local retail along Royal Palm Beach Boulevard and Southern Boulevard. To the west lies the Acreage and Loxahatchee - the rural, low-density residential areas where lots run an acre or more. Royal Palm Beach shares many of the same climate and construction realities as its neighbors: intense summer heat, daily afternoon rain from June through September, and year-round UV exposure that wears down exterior materials faster than homeowners from other states expect. We work regularly in both Royal Palm Beach and neighboring Loxahatchee Groves, where the same Palm Beach County permit standards apply and the concrete block construction is equally common.
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 send a message and we will be back in touch within 1 business day. We handle permits, HOA submissions, and all the coordination so your project stays on track.