
A prefab kit does not fit your house. A custom sunroom is designed around your specific yard, roofline, and how you actually plan to use the space - and built to handle Florida's heat, rain, and storm season.
A prefab kit does not fit your house. A custom sunroom is designed around your specific yard, roofline, and how you actually plan to use the space - and built to handle Florida's heat, rain, and storm season.

Custom sunrooms in Port Orange are fully enclosed glass additions designed specifically for your home - not a kit, not a standard module - with most projects taking ten to sixteen weeks from contract signing to a finished, permitted room you can use year-round.
Most homes in Port Orange have a roofline, a yard boundary, or an existing concrete slab that a prefabricated room simply will not work around cleanly. A custom build starts with your house, your lot, and how you plan to use the space - reading nook, home office, casual dining room - and designs everything around those facts. The result sits flush with your home the way it was meant to be there, not like something grafted on.
Homeowners who want to understand the full construction process before committing often start with our sunroom construction page, which walks through every phase from foundation to final inspection.
If you walk out to your existing porch on a July afternoon and can only last a few minutes before the heat drives you back inside, a screen alone is not solving the problem. Port Orange summers run long, with heat index values above 100 degrees being common for months at a stretch. A custom sunroom with insulated glass and climate control turns that space into a room you reach for in August, not one you avoid.
Port Orange gets about 50 inches of rain per year, most of it in fast, heavy afternoon storms. If afternoon thunderstorms or the spring love bug season regularly push you off your patio, that outdoor space is not really working for you. A custom sunroom gives you the light and the view without the weather and the insects - and does it in a space that actually fits your home.
Many screen enclosures built in Port Orange in the 1990s and early 2000s are at or past the end of their useful life. UV exposure, salt air from the Intracoastal corridor, and repeated storm seasons break down frames, panels, and seals faster here than in cooler climates. If your enclosure is already needing repairs, replacing it with a proper custom sunroom is often the smarter financial decision.
If you want a home office, a reading room, or a casual living area but a full interior addition feels like too much cost and disruption, a custom sunroom is often the practical middle ground. It adds real usable square footage, connects to your outdoor space in a way a standard room does not, and is less invasive to build than tearing into interior walls.
Every custom sunroom we build starts with a site visit and a conversation about how you plan to use the space. From there, we handle design, HOA submission if needed, permit application, and every phase of construction through final inspection. If you want year-round comfort with full climate control, the design process draws from the same principles we use for our sunroom construction work, where we walk through the full build in detail. Homeowners who want a more design-forward conversation about layout and materials often find our sunroom design page useful before committing to a specific configuration.
Glass selection is one of the most important decisions in a custom build for Port Orange's climate. We specify low-emissivity glass that reflects solar heat back outside while maintaining natural light - a critical difference between a room you use all year and one that sits empty in summer. All framing, fasteners, and roof panels are specified to meet Volusia County's wind-load requirements, which means your room is genuinely built for hurricane season, not just the mild months.
Best suited for homeowners who want a room they can use comfortably every day of the year, including Port Orange's hottest and most humid months.
Best suited for homeowners replacing an aging screen enclosure who want to convert the same footprint into a fully enclosed, weatherproof space.
Best suited for homeowners building from scratch on a new concrete slab or footings where no prior outdoor structure exists.
Best suited for homeowners with a specific use in mind - a plant room, a home gym, or a hobby studio - that requires a particular layout, ventilation, or glass configuration.
Port Orange has a building code environment that is more demanding than most of the country, and for good reason. Florida's statewide requirements for wind resistance mean every sunroom built here - custom or otherwise - must use glass, framing, and fasteners rated for the wind speeds common to Volusia County's coastal zone. This is not optional, and it pushes material costs above what national price guides show. A contractor who quotes you a price that looks low compared to everything else you have seen is almost certainly not accounting for these requirements. For homeowners in planned communities like Spruce Creek, there is also the HOA approval layer that has to happen before a permit application can even be submitted.
The soil under most Port Orange lots is sandy coastal material that does not carry weight the same way clay or compacted fill does. This matters for a custom sunroom because the foundation has to be designed for your specific lot's conditions, not a generic standard. We serve homeowners across Port Orange and into neighboring communities - from South Daytona to Ormond Beach, and we factor in the soil and wind conditions for each specific location when designing a foundation.
You will hear back within one business day. We schedule a visit to your home to look at the space and talk through how you want to use the room - the price genuinely depends on what we find, so we never quote a number before seeing your property.
After the site visit, we put together a written proposal with a design, material list, and total cost. This is the time to ask questions about the glass rating, the payment schedule, and what happens if the permit takes longer than expected. We do not pressure you to sign the same day.
We handle the permit application with the City of Port Orange Building Division. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we help you prepare the submission - HOA approval has to come before the permit application goes in, so this step can add two to four weeks depending on when your board meets.
Foundation, framing, roof, glass, and finish work happen in sequence over two to four weeks of active construction. City inspections happen at key stages. When the final inspection passes, we walk through the finished room with you before you make the last payment - and you keep a copy of the permit and inspection records.
No obligation - we visit your home, walk through your options, and give you a written estimate. Most homeowners hear back within one business day.
(386) 284-1782We design every custom sunroom around Port Orange's specific climate - the summer heat, the daily thunderstorms, the salt air near the Intracoastal, and the sandy soil that affects how foundations need to be built. A room designed for these conditions performs and lasts differently than one designed to a generic national standard.
We handle the entire permit process with the City of Port Orange Building Division, and we help you navigate HOA approval in communities like Spruce Creek and Cypress Head. Both approvals are in place before a single shovel goes in the ground - no surprise stop-work orders or fines after the fact.
Every custom sunroom we build uses glass and framing rated for Volusia County's required wind loads. This is a code requirement here, but it is also the difference between a structure that holds through a named storm and one that becomes a liability every June. The Florida Building Commission sets the standards, and our builds meet them.
We handle design, permits, foundation, framing, glass, roofing, and interior finish ourselves. You have one point of contact and one accountable contractor from the site visit through the final city inspection - not a general contractor subcontracting most of the work to people you have never met.
These are not just selling points - they are what separate a custom sunroom that holds up for decades from one that needs repairs in a few years. When you call us, you get an honest conversation about what your specific home and lot require, not a pitch built around a standard package.
The complete build process explained step by step - from foundation and framing through final county inspection.
Learn MoreLayout, glass, and configuration planning for homeowners who want a design conversation before settling on a build approach.
Learn MorePermit timelines in Volusia County fill up - the sooner you reach out, the sooner you are enjoying your new room. Call or request a free estimate today.