Most St. Cloud homeowners have outdoor space that sits empty from May through October. A properly built sunroom addition changes that - giving your family a comfortable, climate-controlled room that works even on a 94-degree August afternoon.

Sunroom additions in St. Cloud, FL are enclosed rooms attached to your home with large glass panels on most or all of the walls, connected to your air conditioning and built to Florida's hurricane standards - most projects take eight to fourteen weeks from contract to completion.
If you have a screened lanai or porch that only gets used in November and March, you already know the problem. St. Cloud's summers are long, hot, and full of mosquitoes - and an unenclosed outdoor space is just not usable for most of the year. A sunroom addition solves that by turning your outdoor-adjacent space into a real room with climate control, proper insulation, and glass that blocks Florida's intense heat before it builds up inside.
If you want a room that runs year-round with minimal energy costs, a four season sunroom is the right build for Central Florida's climate. It pairs proper insulation, energy-efficient glass, and a full HVAC connection so the room stays comfortable even in July.
If your porch is comfortable only a few months a year because of St. Cloud's heat and humidity, your outdoor space is not working for you. A sunroom addition turns that underused area into a room your family can enjoy every month of the year.
Kids need a homework space, you want a reading room, or you just need more breathing room. A sunroom adds usable square footage without a full interior renovation - and in St. Cloud's active market, it is often more cost-effective than buying a larger home.
Many St. Cloud homes have older screened enclosures that have developed rust on the frame, tears in the screen, or gaps where insects and weather get through. Rather than replacing screen with screen, a proper sunroom gives you insulation, climate control, and a finished living space.
Florida's bugs, afternoon storms, and intense summer sun keep many homeowners inside even when the view looks beautiful. If you find yourself wishing you could enjoy your yard without the heat or mosquitoes, a sunroom gives you that connection without the discomfort.
Not every homeowner wants the same thing. Some want a room that works in every season, with full insulation and a dedicated HVAC connection - that is a four season sunroom, and it is the most common choice in Central Florida's climate. Others want a straightforward structural addition with glass walls and a solid roof - that is what most people mean when they say "sunroom addition," and it is the starting point for everything else we build.
Every project begins with a proper foundation, permit-ready framing, and glass rated for Florida's wind-load requirements. From there, the scope expands based on your budget and how you plan to use the room. Whether you want a reading nook, a casual dining space, or a home office with natural light, the sunroom construction process is the same - we pull the permit, we do the work, we pass every inspection.
Best for homeowners who want a room they can use every day of the year, with full insulation and climate control that keeps up with Central Florida's heat.
A solid, permitted room with glass walls and a proper roof - a good starting point for homeowners who want the space and can expand the climate control later.
For homeowners who already have a screened lanai and want to convert it into a proper sunroom - adding glass, insulation, and a climate-control connection.
For homeowners with specific size, style, or use requirements who want a room designed around their lot layout, roofline, and HOA guidelines.
St. Cloud averages over 230 sunny days per year, and summer temperatures regularly push into the low-to-mid 90s with humidity that makes it feel even hotter. A screened porch or basic enclosure cannot handle that - so outdoor-adjacent spaces sit unused for five or six months of every year. The homeowners who get the most out of their sunroom additions here are the ones who built them with proper glass and climate control from the start, not as an afterthought. Central Florida's afternoon thunderstorms also make waterproofing at the roof connection point critical - and that detail separates a sunroom that lasts from one that leaks within the first rainy season. Homeowners in Kissimmee and St. Cloud face the same climate realities, and we build for both.
St. Cloud's newer subdivisions - including communities near Narcoossee Road and the Harmony area - almost all have HOA requirements that affect what your sunroom can look like from the street. That is not a problem if you plan for it upfront. We ask about your HOA before we finalize anything, and we help you prepare the architectural review submission so the design that gets approved is the design you actually want. Skipping that step is the most common reason St. Cloud homeowners end up with forced changes after construction has already started.
Call us and we will ask a few basic questions about size, location, and whether you want climate control. We will schedule a free visit to your home - usually within a business day - so we can see the space before giving you any numbers.
We measure the area, look at your home's attachment point, and walk through your options. You will receive a written quote that clearly breaks down what is included - foundation, glass type, roofing, interior finishing, and permit fees.
Once you sign a contract, we handle the permit application with Osceola County's Building Division. Approval typically takes two to four weeks. We manage the paperwork and keep you updated on timing.
We prepare the site, pour the foundation, frame the room, install the glass, and finish the interior. County inspectors check the work at key stages. Before we leave, we walk through the finished space together and address your punch list.
We will come to your home, measure the space, and give you a written quote with no obligation. Permit season fills up fast in Osceola County - the sooner we submit your plans, the sooner you are in your new room.
(689) 214-9067We hold an active Florida state contractor's license and carry full liability insurance and workers' compensation coverage. You can verify our license through the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation before you sign anything.
We submit every permit ourselves and schedule all required inspections. That means your addition is on the official record, your insurance stays valid, and you have full documentation if you ever sell or refinance.
We ask about your HOA requirements before finalizing any design. St. Cloud's newer subdivisions - Harmony, Turtle Creek, and similar communities - each have their own guidelines, and we know what they typically require before submitting for approval.
We use impact-resistant glass and reinforced framing that meet Florida's wind-load requirements - not because it looks good on paper, but because Central Florida's afternoon thunderstorms and hurricane season make anything less a liability.
A licensed contractor, proper permits, and materials built for Florida's weather are not extras - they are the baseline for work that holds up and protects your home's value. You can learn more about Florida contractor licensing requirements at the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation, or check permit requirements at the Osceola County Building Division.
A fully insulated, climate-controlled room that stays comfortable through every month of the year - the most practical choice for Central Florida's climate.
Learn MoreFull ground-up sunroom construction from foundation to finish, with every permit pulled and every inspection passed.
Learn MoreOsceola County permit slots fill up - calling now means your room is ready before next summer.