
Apex Point St Cloud Sunrooms provides sunroom contractor services in St. Cloud, FL, including sunroom additions, screen rooms, and patio enclosures - serving the area since 2023 with permits handled and no unpermitted shortcuts.

St. Cloud homeowners have a lot of underused screened lanais and patios that sit empty for most of the year because of the heat. A sunroom addition converts that wasted space into a climate-controlled room you can use from January through December, with hurricane-rated glass required under Florida code.
St. Cloud sits in Osceola County, where mosquitoes and no-see-ums are a fact of life from spring through fall. A properly installed screen room lets you enjoy your backyard without the bugs or the direct afternoon sun, and it works well with the breezier months when you do not need air conditioning.
Many St. Cloud homes, particularly in the newer subdivisions along Narcoossee Road and Canoe Creek Road, have open concrete patios that offer no protection from afternoon thunderstorms. Enclosing that patio adds covered living space without a full room addition, and most enclosures qualify for a faster permit process than full sunrooms.
A four-season room is fully insulated and tied into your home's air conditioning, which is not optional in St. Cloud if you want to use the space in July. These rooms add genuine square footage that shows up on an appraisal and appeals to buyers in Osceola County's competitive market.
St. Cloud's older CBS homes near East Lake Toho often have large covered patios built decades ago that no longer meet today's wind or energy standards. Converting that existing structure into a proper sunroom with current-code framing and insulated glass is often more cost-effective than tearing it down and starting over.
HOA communities in St. Cloud often have rules about exterior materials and roof styles that standard catalog sunrooms do not accommodate. A custom sunroom designed from the start to match your home's exterior and HOA guidelines avoids costly revisions after construction has already begun.
St. Cloud sits in Osceola County, where Florida's statewide building code requires that any new room addition be built to withstand the wind speeds this region can experience during tropical storms and hurricanes. That means the glass, framing, and roof attachment on any sunroom here must meet specific wind-resistance standards - not because contractors want to upsell, but because the code requires it and your homeowner's insurance may depend on it. Contractors who do not build in this area regularly often underestimate these requirements or omit them to stay competitive on price.
Beyond wind requirements, St. Cloud's subtropical climate means your new sunroom must handle daily afternoon thunderstorms from June through September and summer temperatures regularly in the low-to-mid 90s. The sandy soils that characterize much of Osceola County can also shift under a poorly designed foundation over time, creating cracks and gaps that let in water and pests. A contractor who works in this area consistently knows how to design foundations and roof connections that hold up through the first few summer storm seasons, not just the first few months.
Our crew works throughout St. Cloud regularly, and we pull permits through Osceola County's Building Division for room addition projects here. We know that permit timelines in this office run a few weeks during normal seasons and can stretch longer during busy construction periods, so we factor that into project schedules from the start.
Most of St. Cloud's housing stock is concentrated in the subdivisions that grew up in the 2000s and 2010s along Narcoossee Road, Canoe Creek Road, and the Harmony community on the southern edge of the city. These are concrete block and stucco homes on modest lots, and most are in HOA-governed communities that require architectural approval before any exterior work begins. We know what these neighborhoods expect and build that review step into the process.
The older streets near East Lake Tohopekaliga and St. Cloud Lakefront Park have a different housing type - some older wood-frame bungalows and masonry homes that need more care at the attachment point when adding a sunroom. We also serve the growing neighborhoods near Kissimmee and the communities along US-192. If you are not sure whether your address is inside our service area, call us - St. Cloud and Osceola County are where we work every week.
Reach out by phone or through the estimate form and we will respond within one business day. We ask a few quick questions about where on your home you want the sunroom and whether you want climate control, so we can show up to the site visit prepared.
We visit your home, measure the space, review the attachment point to your existing structure, and check for HOA requirements if your neighborhood has them. You leave the meeting with a clear picture of options and a written quote before any commitment.
Once you approve the quote, we file the permit with Osceola County's Building Division on your behalf and give you a realistic construction start date that accounts for permit review time. You do not have to manage any of the paperwork.
We build the room, pass all required county inspections, and walk through the finished space with you before calling the job complete. If anything on your punch list needs attention, we handle it before we leave.
Call us or submit the form and we will get back to you within one business day. No obligation, no pressure - just a straight conversation about what your home needs and what it will cost.
(689) 214-9067St. Cloud is a growing city in Osceola County with a population that has grown steadily for two decades, sitting around 65,000 to 70,000 residents according to recent Census estimates. The city sits just south of Kissimmee and about 25 miles from downtown Orlando, connected to the metro by US-192 and the Florida Turnpike. Most of the housing stock was built after 1990, with the newest subdivisions concentrated along Narcoossee Road and Canoe Creek Road on the southern and eastern edges of the city. These are primarily single-family concrete block homes on modest lots, many of them in HOA-governed communities.
The older part of St. Cloud sits near East Lake Tohopekaliga and the St. Cloud Lakefront Park, where some homes date back to the early 1900s. This waterfront area has a distinct character from the newer subdivisions and draws residents who want a quieter, established neighborhood feel. Homeownership rates in St. Cloud are above the Florida state average, meaning most residents here have a real stake in keeping their homes in good shape. We also serve homeowners in nearby Kissimmee and the communities between the two cities along US-192.
Keep bugs out and breezes in with a professionally installed screen room.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio into a year-round enclosed sunroom.
Learn MoreEnclosed patio rooms that add living space without major construction.
Learn MoreWe serve St. Cloud and all of Osceola County. Call now or submit the form and hear back within one business day - summer project slots fill quickly.