
Turn your empty patio into a shaded, bug-free space you can actually use. Built on your existing slab in most cases, with solar mesh for Hemet summers.

Screen room installation in Hemet means building a fully enclosed outdoor room with screen panels instead of glass walls - giving you shade, airflow, and protection from insects, most projects completed in two to five days on an existing slab once permits are in hand.
A screen room is less expensive than a fully glazed sunroom and is a strong choice for homeowners who want fresh air and shade rather than year-round climate control. In Hemet, where evenings cool down noticeably even after hot days, a well-built screen room with solar mesh extends your outdoor season without sealing you inside.
If you want something that works in all weather and can be heated and cooled, take a look at our patio-to-sunroom conversion service. And if your existing patio enclosure needs enclosing rather than rebuilding, our patio enclosures work covers that path too.
If your backyard sits unused because stepping outside feels like opening an oven, a screen room with solar-blocking mesh can give you shade and airflow without sealing you indoors with the air conditioning. In Hemet, where summer temperatures routinely push past 100 degrees, even a well-shaded enclosed patio changes how much time you spend outside.
Hemet's dry, windy climate means fine dust and windblown debris settle on outdoor furniture almost daily, especially during Santa Ana wind events. If you spend more time cleaning your patio chairs than sitting in them, a screen room would eliminate most of that work by keeping the space enclosed. Your furniture stays cleaner and lasts longer.
Many Hemet homes have a simple aluminum patio cover that provides shade but leaves the sides wide open. If you are still getting bitten by mosquitoes in the evening or dealing with flies during dinner, your current setup is not doing the job. Enclosing those open sides with screen panels - and adding solar mesh on the sun-facing side - solves both problems.
If you have a solid concrete slab in good condition that nobody uses, you already have the most expensive part of a screen room project. A contractor can build directly on an existing slab in most cases, which significantly cuts both cost and timeline. An unused slab is one of the most cost-effective foundations for a screen room you can have.
We build screen rooms from the ground up - framing, roof structure, screen panels, door, and trim. Most projects in Hemet start with an existing concrete slab, which we assess during the estimate visit to confirm it can carry the new structure. If it needs repairs or a new pad, we handle that first. The frame is typically aluminum, which holds up better than wood in Hemet's dry heat and requires no ongoing sealing.
Homeowners who want to take the next step toward a fully enclosed room have a clear path: our patio-to-sunroom conversion service adds glass panels and climate control to an existing screen room structure. And if you are comparing options that include a solid enclosure with windows, our patio enclosures page covers what that step up involves.
Suited for homeowners with a solid existing patio pad who want the fastest, most cost-effective path to an enclosed space.
Suited for homeowners without an existing slab or with a damaged pad that cannot support a new structure.
Suited for Hemet homeowners who want the room to be genuinely comfortable during the hottest months, not just technically enclosed.
Suited for unusual patio shapes or homeowners who want a specific door placement, ceiling height, or panel configuration.
Hemet gets over 280 sunny days per year, and the San Jacinto Valley's dry climate means dust accumulates faster than in most parts of Southern California. Standard fiberglass screen does almost nothing to reduce heat gain, which is why most Hemet homeowners who want a room they can actually use in summer should ask specifically about solar-blocking mesh. According to the National Association of Home Builders, outdoor living spaces consistently rank among the features buyers most want in warm-weather markets - which makes a quality screen room a meaningful investment in Hemet's real estate context.
We install screen rooms throughout the area, including Lake Elsinore and Perris. Both communities share the same warm, dusty Inland Empire conditions, the same city permit requirements, and the same demand for outdoor spaces that stay usable through the summer. If your neighborhood has an HOA - common in Hemet's newer Domenigoni Parkway corridor subdivisions - we factor that review into the project timeline from day one.
We ask about your existing patio, slab condition, and what you want to use the space for. You hear back within one business day. This is not a sales call - it is just enough information to schedule a site visit.
We come to your home, measure the space, assess your slab, and note which direction the patio faces - important in Hemet because afternoon western sun is intense. You leave with a written estimate and no pressure to decide on the spot.
We submit plans to the City of Hemet Building and Safety Division and apply for the required permit. Plan review typically takes two to four weeks. We handle this step completely - you do not need to file anything or follow up with the city.
Once permitted, the crew installs framing, screen panels, and the door - most jobs take two to five days on an existing slab. A city inspector reviews the finished work, then we walk you through the room and hand over your permit and inspection records.
No obligation. We respond within one business day and come to your home to measure.
(951) 467-1314We handle the permit application with Hemet Building and Safety on every project. The inspection record we hand you at the end is documentation that your room was built correctly - which protects you at resale and with your homeowners insurance.
We recommend and install solar-blocking screen mesh on south- and west-facing panels because that is what makes the difference in Hemet's intense afternoon sun. It costs more than standard fiberglass screen but turns a technically enclosed room into one your family actually uses.
We use aluminum framing on our screen rooms because it outlasts wood in dry, high-UV conditions without needing periodic sealing. In Hemet's climate, that means less maintenance and a structure that looks right years after installation.
Many of Hemet's newer subdivisions have HOA architectural review requirements for exterior additions. We ask about your HOA at the very first call, factor the review timeline into your schedule, and help you prepare the submission so the county permit and HOA approval land close together.
Every screen room we install in Hemet is built to pass inspection, specified for the local climate, and backed by straightforward communication from the first call to the final walkthrough.
The next step up from a screen room - glass panels and climate control for a fully enclosed, year-round space.
Learn MoreSolid-panel patio enclosures for homeowners who want weather protection and privacy beyond what screen alone provides.
Learn MoreFall and spring slots fill up fast - contact us today and we will confirm your start date.