
Vinyl frames resist the rust and rot that South Florida humidity causes in other materials. Add impact-rated glass and a proper cooling plan, and you have a sunroom that holds up and stays comfortable - every month of the year.
Vinyl frames resist the rust and rot that South Florida humidity causes in other materials. Add impact-rated glass and a proper cooling plan, and you have a sunroom that holds up and stays comfortable - every month of the year.

Vinyl sunrooms in Wellington, FL are fully enclosed additions attached to your home, built with vinyl framing and large glass panels - providing a weatherproof, year-round living space with minimal upkeep, typically installed in two to five days once permits are in hand.
The reason vinyl works well in Wellington comes down to maintenance. Aluminum can pit and corrode in South Florida's humidity. Wood rots. Vinyl does not rust, does not need painting, and holds up in the combination of heat, rain, and humidity that wears out other frame materials in a few years. For homeowners comparing options, a sunroom addition can use several framing materials - vinyl is the right pick when long-term low maintenance is the priority. If you want to start with a full design consultation before choosing materials, our three-season sunroom and four-season options are also worth comparing based on how you plan to use the space.
If your existing screened enclosure turns into an oven from May through September, you are losing months of potential living space every year. Wellington's heat and humidity make open-air porches impractical for much of the year, and a vinyl sunroom with proper glazing solves that problem - keeping the heat out while keeping the light in.
Wellington's summer afternoons bring both heavy rain and aggressive mosquito activity. If you find yourself retreating inside every afternoon or avoiding your outdoor space during rainy season, a fully enclosed sunroom gives you a protected space that works regardless of what the weather is doing.
If the screen panels on your current enclosure are torn, the frame is corroding, or the space just feels tired and dated, that is a natural moment to consider upgrading. Rather than patching an aging structure, many Wellington homeowners use that moment to invest in something that will last decades and add real value.
If your home feels cramped but a full addition feels like too much disruption and expense, a sunroom is a practical middle ground. It adds real, usable square footage without the same level of construction involved in extending your home's interior - and vinyl framing keeps the project timeline tight.
We install vinyl sunrooms as fully enclosed, permitted additions attached to your home. Every project starts with a site visit to measure your space, assess your existing slab or patio, and confirm how the new structure will attach to your exterior wall. Vinyl frames are available in white, tan, and select custom colors that work with Wellington's HOA communities - many of which restrict frame colors visible from the street. The glass panels we specify meet Palm Beach County's wind-load requirements, which means impact-rated glass is standard on every installation we complete. For homeowners comparing vinyl to other materials, the National Association of Home Builders recommends asking your contractor specifically how each framing material performs in your local climate - a question worth asking before you commit.
If your goal is a fully climate-controlled room you can use every day of the year, we pair the vinyl frame with heat-reflective glass panels and walk you through cooling options including mini-split systems. For homeowners comparing a full vinyl sunroom addition against a lighter-touch option, a three-season sunroom may be the right answer if you primarily use your outdoor space during Wellington's mild winter months. We handle permit submission, HOA documentation, and the county inspection from start to finish - you should not need to chase paperwork at any point in the project.
Best for homeowners who want bug and rain protection primarily in the cooler months and want a lower entry price than a fully climate-controlled build.
The right choice for Wellington homeowners who want a room they can use year-round, with heat-reflective glass and a cooling solution specified in the plan.
For homeowners with an existing screen enclosure that is aging or insufficient - replaces the old structure with a fully enclosed, long-lasting vinyl sunroom.
Sized and configured to fit your specific patio footprint, roofline connection, and any HOA restrictions on exterior additions.
Wellington sits in Palm Beach County, where summer temperatures regularly exceed 90 degrees and UV exposure is among the highest in the continental United States. In that environment, frame material matters - aluminum develops surface corrosion over time, wood rots, and painted finishes chalk out in the sun. Vinyl does none of those things. The frame stays clean, does not need repainting, and holds its color for years longer than comparable alternatives. That low-maintenance quality is not just a convenience - it is a real cost difference over a 20-year ownership horizon. Wellington's rainy season also affects project scheduling. South Florida's rainy season runs roughly June through September, with heavy afternoon storms that can halt exterior work. Homeowners in Wellington who want their sunroom ready before the winter entertaining season do best starting the planning process in late winter or early spring - giving permits and HOA approvals time to clear before summer construction windows close.
Wellington's construction is almost entirely slab-on-grade, which simplifies the foundation work on a sunroom addition. In most cases we tie into your existing concrete patio slab rather than pouring a new one, which keeps the project more predictable in cost and timeline. That also holds true for homeowners in nearby Royal Palm Beach, where the same South Florida slab construction is standard. HOA requirements are another Wellington-specific consideration - many of the village's planned communities require pre-approval for exterior additions, and the color and placement of a sunroom can be subject to architectural review. We review your HOA documents before submitting a single permit application.
You tell us about your space, how you want to use it, and your general budget. We ask about your HOA and your existing patio. Good questions upfront mean no wasted visits. You will hear back from us within one business day.
We come to your home, measure the space, check the slab, look at how the sunroom will attach to your exterior wall, and discuss vinyl color and glass options. You leave this visit with a clear picture of what is involved and a written estimate covering materials, labor, and permit fees.
We submit the permit application to Palm Beach County and handle your HOA architectural review submission if you are in a governed community. This step takes two to six weeks depending on the county's workload and your HOA's schedule. You should not have to chase any paperwork yourself.
Once permits are approved, installation takes two to five days. After the crew finishes, a Palm Beach County inspector confirms the work meets code. We walk through the finished room with you, show you how any operable windows or doors work, and answer any questions before we leave.
Written quote before any permits are pulled. We handle HOA submissions and Palm Beach County permitting from start to finish.
(561) 576-0264Every vinyl sunroom we install is engineered to meet Palm Beach County's wind-load requirements - among the strictest in the country because of the region's hurricane exposure. This is not a premium option. It is the standard, and it is what your homeowner's insurance will want to see documented.
We have worked with homeowners associations across Wellington's planned communities and know what a complete architectural review submission looks like. We review your HOA documents before we file anything, which means fewer revision rounds and a smoother path to approval.
Florida's building code requires impact-resistant glass in all new sunroom installations in Wellington's wind zone. We specify it on every project as a baseline - not as an add-on. The U.S. Department of Energy's guidance on low-e glazing is a useful read if you want to understand how heat-reflective glass works before your consultation.
Your estimate covers materials, labor, permit fees, and any slab or foundation work your property requires. Every line item is spelled out before a single permit application is filed. If the scope changes, we tell you before the work changes - not after the invoice arrives.
A vinyl sunroom is a long-term investment in your home's livability and value. The homeowners who call us tend to refer their neighbors because the process goes the way we say it will - on time, at the quoted price, with all the paperwork done right.
You can verify any contractor's Florida license through the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation and check glass energy performance standards through the U.S. Department of Energy.
Full sunroom additions for Wellington homes that want more enclosed living space - available in a range of frame materials and glass configurations.
Learn MoreA lower-cost enclosed option for homeowners who use their outdoor space primarily during Wellington's comfortable winter and spring months.
Learn MorePermit slots in Palm Beach County fill up - locking in your start date now means your sunroom is ready before the next summer heat arrives.