
Most Hemet patios go unused from May through September. A custom sunroom designed for this valley gives you comfortable, usable space all year long.

Custom sunrooms in Hemet are fully enclosed additions built to fit your specific home, match your roofline and exterior, and handle the San Jacinto Valley heat - most jobs take six to ten weeks from permit to completion, including two to four weeks for permit approval.
Unlike a kit room snapped together from stock parts, a custom sunroom is designed around your property - your foundation, your backyard orientation, and the way the sun moves across your yard. In Hemet, that means every glass panel and roofline decision accounts for summer temperatures that regularly climb past 100 degrees. If you have been putting off the project because your existing patio cover is aging or just never quite right, this is the upgrade that actually fixes the problem.
Many homeowners start by comparing a custom room to a sunroom construction package - and the difference usually comes down to how well the finished room fits the home. We can walk you through both approaches so you choose the one that makes sense for your space and budget.
If your back patio is too hot to use from May through September, a climate-controlled sunroom turns that wasted space into a room you actually enjoy. With the right glass and a small cooling unit, the space stays comfortable even when it is 105 degrees outside.
If you need a home office, a reading room, or a casual dining area but do not want to go through a full interior remodel, a sunroom is one of the most cost-effective ways to add usable square footage. It attaches to an existing exterior wall and can often be finished faster than a traditional room addition.
If the aluminum or wood cover at the back of your Hemet home is sagging, rusting, or letting in water, replacing it with a proper sunroom is a natural upgrade. You are already dealing with the space - a sunroom gives you something enclosed, weatherproof, and genuinely useful rather than another cover that will need replacing in a few years.
A permitted sunroom adds real square footage and visual appeal. Buyers in the Inland Empire respond well to homes with flexible bonus spaces, especially when they are move-in ready. An unpermitted addition, on the other hand, can actually slow down a sale - so the permit step matters.
Every custom sunroom project starts with a site visit where we measure your space, assess your foundation, and talk through how you plan to use the room. From there we handle the design drawings, the permit application, and all construction - including foundation work, framing, glass and roof installation, electrical rough-in, and interior finishing. If you are looking for a room that is purely decorative or something more structural, we also offer full sunroom construction services, and we can incorporate a dedicated sunroom design consultation into any project.
The glass type, roof style, and cooling options are chosen to match Hemet's climate rather than a generic Southern California spec. We also handle HOA submissions for homeowners in planned communities - a step that catches many projects off guard if it is left until the last minute.
Best for homeowners who want a fully insulated, climate-controlled space they can use every month of the year - including Hemet's hottest summer weeks.
A more affordable option for homeowners who primarily use their outdoor space in spring and fall and can live without heating and cooling.
For Hemet homes with a rear concrete patio in good condition - the existing slab may serve as the foundation, reducing cost and build time.
For properties without a usable slab, or where the existing concrete does not pass inspection - a fresh slab gives the room a proper long-term foundation.
Hemet sits in the San Jacinto Valley at about 1,600 feet elevation and regularly sees summer temperatures above 105 degrees. A sunroom built without heat-reflective glass and a properly insulated or ventilated roof will be unusable for four to five months of the year - essentially a greenhouse attached to your house. The right glass and roof choices are not optional upgrades in this climate; they are the baseline for any room worth building. We also account for the area's soil conditions, which can shift seasonally in parts of the valley, affecting how a slab foundation is prepared.
Homeowners in Menifee and Murrieta face similar climate and soil considerations, and we bring that same locally grounded approach to every project across the region. Hemet's housing stock also skews toward single-story ranch homes - many with existing rear slabs - which means the site conditions are often favorable for a sunroom project if the concrete is in reasonable shape. For homes in planned communities like Seven Hills, we handle the HOA submission process so that approval runs in parallel with the city permit rather than causing delays after the fact. For an authoritative overview of window and glass performance in hot climates, the U.S. Department of Energy publishes guidance on energy-efficient glazing options.
We respond within one business day to discuss your backyard space, your goals, and a rough budget range. No pressure - this first conversation helps both sides figure out whether the project makes sense before anyone drives out.
We come to your home to measure the space, inspect the existing slab or foundation area, and walk through design options. We look at your roofline, sun exposure, and exterior style. Most homeowners leave this visit with a clear picture of what the finished room will look like.
You receive a fixed-price written proposal before you commit to anything. Once you sign, we submit the permit application to the City of Hemet. Approval typically takes two to four weeks - use that time to finalize glass type and flooring choices.
Foundation work comes first, then framing, glass, and roof installation. A city inspector visits at key stages. When the room is finished, we walk you through everything - how windows and vents operate, what the warranty covers, and where to find the permit sign-off documents.
Free estimate. No obligation. We respond within one business day.
(951) 467-1314Every glass panel and roof choice we make is benchmarked against Hemet's summer temperatures, not coastal averages. A room that works fine in San Diego can turn into an oven here without the right specifications. We apply heat-management criteria specific to the San Jacinto Valley on every project.
We pull the permit, submit the drawings, schedule the inspections, and collect the final sign-off. You never have to manage the City of Hemet Building and Safety Division on your own. The finished room is fully documented - which matters if you ever sell. You can verify any contractor's license through the California Contractors State License Board.
Planned communities in Hemet - including Seven Hills and other newer developments - often require HOA architectural review before city permits are even issued. We are familiar with this process and prepare the required drawings and documentation so both approvals run in parallel rather than one blocking the other.
Parts of the San Jacinto Valley have expansive soils that swell when wet and shrink in dry heat. We assess the soil conditions at your specific property before recommending a foundation approach. That pre-build assessment is what prevents cracked floors and sticking doors a few years down the road.
Every project we take on in Hemet is managed from first call to final walkthrough by the same team - no hand-offs to subcontractors mid-build. The credentials and local experience we bring to each job are what make the finished room look and hold up the way it should.
Full sunroom construction services in Hemet - from foundation through final inspection, managed end to end.
Learn MoreProfessional sunroom design consultation to plan the layout, glass type, and roofline before a single board is cut.
Learn MorePermit slots fill up in spring - reach out now and we can have your project scoped and submitted before the busy season starts.