
Stop losing your patio to summer heat. We enclose your existing concrete slab into a climate-controlled room you can use every month of the year - fully permitted, built for Inland Empire conditions.

Patio-to-sunroom conversion in Hemet means building walls, windows, and a proper roof over your existing concrete slab, then connecting the space to your home for heating and cooling - most jobs completed in two to five weeks of physical construction once permits are approved, turning a surface that goes unused for months into a room you live in year-round.
Hemet patios sit empty from June through September for a lot of households. A well-built, climate-controlled conversion changes that. You already have the slab - the most expensive part of any room addition - so the project is more affordable than starting from scratch and far less disruptive than a full home addition.
If you want a fully enclosed room with more glass coverage, our deck-to-sunroom conversion service follows a similar process for raised deck platforms. And if you are comparing options that include a simpler enclosure without full climate control, our enclosed patio rooms page covers that alternative.
If you look out at your patio in July and know you will not use it until October, you are losing four months of outdoor-adjacent space every year. A properly built, climate-controlled sunroom solves that problem directly - it lets you enjoy the view and the light without the brutal Hemet valley heat that makes your existing patio unusable.
If your family has outgrown the square footage but you do not want to move, a patio conversion is one of the most cost-effective ways to add real livable space. It uses a foundation you already have, costs less than a ground-up addition, and creates a room that functions as a home office, playroom, or year-round gathering space.
If your aluminum patio cover is rusting, your wood pergola is sagging, or the structure is starting to let in rain, you are already facing a replacement cost. Converting to a proper sunroom at that point often makes more financial sense than replacing the cover - you get a fully enclosed, insulated room instead of just a repaired shade structure.
Hemet sits in a valley that sees strong Santa Ana wind events in fall and winter, and the dry air sends fine dust onto furniture and into respiratory systems. A sunroom gives you the light and the view with a sealed, filtered environment - you can watch the San Jacinto Mountains without the dust storms that come with them.
We handle every part of the conversion - from slab inspection and permit filing through framing, windows, roofing, and HVAC connection. The first thing we do is inspect your existing concrete slab. In Hemet, older slabs from the 1970s and 1980s sometimes need leveling or reinforcement before a room can be built on top of them. We identify this during the estimate visit so the cost is on your written quote before any work starts, not discovered midway through the project.
Homeowners who want to compare this service to a different type of conversion can look at our deck-to-sunroom conversion work, which follows the same general process for wood deck platforms. If you are still deciding between a basic enclosure and a fully insulated room, our enclosed patio rooms page explains the difference in practical terms for Hemet homeowners.
Suited for homeowners who want shade and bug protection but plan to use the room primarily during Hemet's mild spring and fall months.
Suited for homeowners who want to use the room all year, including Hemet's hot summers and occasional winter cold snaps.
Suited for homeowners who want maximum natural light with glass panels on the roof as well as the walls, and are willing to invest in quality heat-blocking glazing.
Suited for homeowners with an aging or cracked concrete slab who need structural foundation work before the room can be built.
Hemet regularly sees summer temperatures above 105 degrees, and the San Jacinto Valley location means heat builds up with limited coastal breeze to moderate it. That combination makes the typical Hemet patio genuinely unusable for a large part of the year - not just uncomfortable, but hot enough to be a health concern for older residents and young children. A sunroom built with heat-blocking glass and a proper cooling system changes the math entirely: the room becomes one you live in rather than one you walk past. The U.S. Department of Energy notes that low-emissivity glass significantly reduces solar heat gain - a detail that matters far more in Hemet than in a coastal city.
We serve Hemet and the surrounding valley, including Perris and Menifee. Both communities share Hemet's heat challenges, the same Riverside County permit framework, and a housing stock that skews toward single-story homes with large rear patios - the ideal starting point for this type of conversion. HOA approval requirements are common across all three cities, and we factor that review into the project schedule from the first conversation.
We ask about your patio size, whether you have an HOA, and what you want to use the room for. You hear back within one business day. No sales pitch - just enough information to schedule a site visit.
We come to your home, measure the patio, check the slab condition, and review how the space connects to your exterior wall. A written estimate follows within a few days and breaks down labor, materials, slab work if needed, and permit fees.
We submit a permit application to the City of Hemet Building Division. If you have an HOA, we help you prepare that submission at the same time so the two reviews run in parallel. Permit review typically takes one to three weeks.
Once permits are in hand, we begin - slab prep first if needed, then framing, windows, roof, and finishing. A city inspector visits during construction and at completion. We walk you through the finished room and leave you with copies of all permit and inspection records.
We handle permits, HOA submissions, and all the paperwork. Free estimate, no pressure.
(951) 467-1314We inspect your existing concrete slab during the estimate visit and include any repair costs in the written quote. You know the full price before you commit - no cost surprises after construction begins.
We specify heat-blocking glass and proper insulation on every conversion because Hemet's summer temperatures leave no margin for a poorly insulated room. We ask how you plan to use the room in July, not just October - and we build accordingly.
When the project is done, we give you copies of the permit, the inspection records, and any warranty documents. These matter when you sell your home - a properly documented sunroom is a selling point, not a question mark.
We manage the City of Hemet permit application and help you prepare the HOA submission so both processes run at the same time. Verify our license at any time with the California Contractors State License Board.
When the project is done, we give you copies of the permit, the inspection records, and any warranty documents. These matter when you sell your home - a properly documented sunroom is a selling point, not a question mark.
Every patio conversion we complete in Hemet is permitted, inspected, and documented. That combination - honest scoping, local climate knowledge, and a clean paper trail - is how we protect your investment from the first conversation through the final walkthrough.
Convert a raised wood deck into a fully enclosed, climate-controlled room using the same permit-first process.
Learn MoreA more straightforward patio enclosure option for homeowners who want walls and a roof without full HVAC integration.
Learn MoreHemet summers are too hot to leave that space empty. Reach out today and we will schedule your free on-site estimate before the permit queue fills up.