
Your existing patio is already most of the way there. We close it in, climate-control it, and hand you back a room you can actually use every day of the year.

Patio-to-sunroom conversion in St. Cloud takes your existing outdoor slab or screened enclosure and transforms it into a fully enclosed, climate-controlled room attached to your home - most projects run two to six weeks of construction time once permits are approved.
If your patio has a slab already poured, you have the hardest part done. We add insulated walls, sealed windows, a proper roof connection, and a cooling system so the space works like any other room in your house - not just when the weather cooperates. St. Cloud homeowners who want full year-round use often look at both patio conversion and enclosed patio rooms to understand the options before deciding.
The result is a room that feels like it was always part of your home - not a structure bolted on as an afterthought. Every conversion we do in St. Cloud is permitted through Osceola County and inspected at key stages.
If your patio goes unused all summer because the heat and humidity are unbearable, you are losing most of the year from a space you already own. In St. Cloud's climate, a screened enclosure is essentially a seasonal room. A climate-controlled sunroom changes that completely.
If your patio furniture fades every year, outdoor rugs get soaked in afternoon thunderstorms, or cushions grow mildew between uses, those are signs the space needs real protection. Central Florida's intense UV and near-daily summer rains are hard on anything left exposed. A properly enclosed sunroom solves both problems at once.
If you can see daylight through screen panels, feel drafts near door frames, or notice water stains on the ceiling after a storm, your current enclosure is no longer doing its job. These problems do not improve on their own in Florida's climate - moisture and insects find every gap. At that point, patching the old structure often costs nearly as much as converting it into something durable.
If your family has outgrown the inside of your home but a full room addition feels too large, a patio conversion is often the most practical path. The slab is already there, the roof connection already exists, and the footprint is already defined - which means the project is faster and less disruptive than building from scratch.
Our standard patio-to-sunroom conversion covers everything from the initial slab assessment through the final county inspection. That means walls, windows, roof, insulation, electrical, and a proper heating and cooling connection - all in one project, not a series of add-ons. If you are looking to convert your patio and also want the option to connect it to a larger outdoor structure, our deck-to-sunroom conversion page covers projects that involve a deck component alongside the patio.
For homeowners who want a lighter enclosure first - one with windows but not full HVAC - we also offer enclosed patio rooms as a middle option. These are built to a spec that allows for a full climate-control upgrade later without tearing out and rebuilding the walls. We walk through both options with you during the estimate visit so you can make the choice that fits your budget and how you plan to use the space.
Best for homeowners who want year-round daily use - this is a fully insulated, HVAC-connected room with sealed windows built to Florida's wind-resistance standards.
Best for homeowners who already have a screened enclosure and want to upgrade to glass walls, proper insulation, and a cooling connection without a full tear-down.
Best for homeowners with a limited budget now who want to add HVAC and full insulation in a later phase - we build to the spec that makes that upgrade straightforward.
St. Cloud sits in Osceola County, where summer heat index values regularly top 100 degrees and humidity stays high from May through October. A screened porch is essentially useless for half the year here. A properly built sunroom with quality insulated windows and a dedicated cooling system changes that math - you get a comfortable, livable room in all 12 months, not just 4 or 5. Florida's building code also requires that any new enclosed structure meet wind-resistance standards, which means the contractor you hire must know those requirements and build to them from the start. See Florida Building Commission for the standards that apply.
Osceola County's permit review process can add two to four weeks to your timeline before any construction begins, so starting early matters - especially if your goal is a finished room before summer. Homeowners in Kissimmee and Poinciana face the same county permit process and the same climate conditions - and we serve both communities regularly. If your home is in an HOA community, check with your architectural review board before signing any contract, since county approval and HOA approval are separate processes.
We schedule a time to visit your home and look at the existing patio in person - no reputable contractor gives a firm price without seeing the space. You will receive a written estimate within a few days, and getting two or three estimates is completely normal.
Once you sign an agreement, we prepare drawings and apply for your Osceola County building permit. Plan for two to four weeks of review time. If you have an HOA, get their written approval during this phase - your contractor can help you prepare the documentation.
We clear the patio, assess the slab, and handle any reinforcement needed before walls go up. Framing, windows, and the roof connection typically take one to two weeks. A county inspector checks the framing before walls are closed - that inspection is a good thing.
Insulation, drywall or paneling, flooring, electrical, and the HVAC connection complete the interior. A final county inspection closes out the permit. We walk through the finished room with you and address every item on your punch list before closing out the job.
We reply within 1 business day. No pressure, no obligation - just a straight answer about what your project would involve and cost.
(689) 214-9067We handle the entire Osceola County permit application and inspection process from start to finish. You get a legal, inspected room that adds real value to your home and protects you at resale - not a liability hiding in the paperwork.
If you live in one of St. Cloud's many HOA communities, we help you prepare the documentation your architectural review board needs. We have navigated HOA approvals in St. Cloud's planned communities and know what each process typically requires.
Every patio-to-sunroom conversion we build uses windows and framing methods that meet Florida's wind-resistance standards for Osceola County. That means your new room holds up through hurricane season, not just fair-weather use.
We give you a complete written estimate that covers structural work, windows, roofing, and climate control before a single nail is driven. If our site assessment finds something unexpected with the slab, we tell you upfront - not after work begins.
Every patio-to-sunroom conversion we complete in St. Cloud is fully permitted, inspected, and built to the wind-resistance standards Florida requires. You get a room that adds real value to your home and holds up through every summer and every storm season. National Association of the Remodeling Industry guidelines inform how we handle project documentation and homeowner communication throughout.
Converting a raised deck into an enclosed sunroom involves structural upgrades below the floor - see how that process differs from a patio conversion.
Learn MoreA lighter enclosure option with windows and weather protection that can be upgraded to full climate control in a later phase.
Learn MorePermit slots fill up fast in Osceola County - the sooner we submit your application, the sooner you are enjoying your new space. Call or request an estimate today.