
Hemet Sunrooms and Patios is your local sunroom contractor serving Hemet, CA with sunroom additions, four-season rooms, and patio enclosures - work that has been built for the San Jacinto Valley heat since 2015.
We pull permits from the City of Hemet Building and Safety Division on every project and respond to new inquiries within one business day.
Hemet homeowners lose months of backyard use every year to triple-digit heat. A properly built sunroom addition with insulated walls and solar-control glass gives you a shaded, cooled room you can sit in comfortably from May through October - and through every month in between.
In Hemet, where summer highs regularly push past 105 degrees, a standard room without real cooling becomes a heat trap. A four-season sunroom connects to your HVAC or uses a dedicated mini-split so the room is genuinely livable in August, not just in November.
Many Hemet ranch homes have covered concrete patios that sit unused through the summer. Enclosing that space with screened or glazed panels turns an underused slab into a protected room without tearing out what is already there.
Hemet homes vary from 1970s ranch floor plans to newer age-restricted community builds - no two rooflines, lot orientations, or HOA rules are the same. Custom sunroom design lets the room match your home exactly rather than looking like it was added as an afterthought.
Hemet evenings in spring and fall are some of the most pleasant in Southern California. A screen room lets you sit outside after sunset without fighting mosquitoes or the dust that blows in during Santa Ana wind events - without the full cost of an enclosed addition.
A solid patio cover drops the temperature under it by 10 to 20 degrees on a hot Hemet afternoon. For homeowners who want shade and weather protection without full enclosure, a properly attached cover is the most practical first step toward extended outdoor living.
Building a sunroom in Hemet is not the same as building one in San Diego or Los Angeles. The San Jacinto Valley sits at roughly 1,600 feet of elevation and sees summer highs that regularly push above 105 degrees from June through September. That kind of heat means every material choice - the glass, the insulation, the roof design, the cooling source - has to be made with the local climate in mind. A room that is comfortable in a milder California city can turn into an unusable oven in Hemet from early summer through late fall if it was not built specifically for this valley.
Hemet also has a wide mix of housing stock. A large share of the city's homes were built between the 1960s and the 1990s on concrete slab foundations that were never designed for additions. Before any sunroom work can begin, the existing slab and roofline need to be assessed carefully - and in neighborhoods with homeowners associations, like Seven Hills, the HOA architectural review runs on a completely separate timeline from the city building permit. Contractors who do not work here regularly miss those details, and homeowners end up paying to fix them later. Hemet also gets occasional winter freezes - temperatures below 32 degrees do happen - so the framing and glass choices have to handle both ends of the temperature range.
Our crew works throughout Hemet regularly, pulling permits from the City of Hemet Building and Safety Division and working on the single-story ranch homes that make up most of the city's residential neighborhoods. We know that Hemet homes often sit on slab foundations that need to be assessed before any addition is connected, and we know which communities require HOA architectural approval before a city permit can even be applied for.
Hemet is a city of about 90,000 people in the San Jacinto Valley, and residents here know their landmarks well. Whether your home is near Diamond Valley Lake on the south side of the city, in one of the older neighborhoods close to Hemet Valley Mall, or out toward the hills where the Ramona Pageant amphitheater sits, we have worked in those areas and understand the building stock. The valley gets over 280 sunny days a year, and that UV exposure degrades roofing materials, caulk, and exterior frames faster here than along the coast.
We also serve the city next door - San Jacinto shares the same valley conditions, and many homeowners in both cities compare notes on contractors. If you are farther east and closer to the pass, Beaumont is another area we serve regularly.
We ask about your home, goals, and rough size of the project. This is not a commitment - it is just enough to know whether a site visit makes sense. We respond within one business day.
We visit your property and check the foundation, roofline, and HOA status. You leave knowing what is possible, what it will realistically cost, and how we plan to handle the Hemet heat. No cost for this visit.
You receive a detailed written proposal before signing anything. Once you approve it, we apply for the City of Hemet building permit on your behalf. Plan two to four weeks for permit approval before work begins.
Foundation is prepared, framing goes up, glass and roofing are installed, and electrical is connected. The city inspects at foundation, framing, and final stages. You do not need to be present for inspections.
We serve Hemet and the San Jacinto Valley. No pressure, no vague quotes - just an honest site visit and a written estimate you can hold onto. Call or fill out the form and we will get back to you within one business day.
(951) 467-1314Hemet is a city of roughly 90,000 residents in the San Jacinto Valley, in Riverside County. It has been a draw for retirees and budget-conscious homeowners for decades, partly because of its affordable housing - median home values run well below the California statewide average - and partly because of its small-city feel with full services. The city has a strong owner-occupied homeowner base, and a large share of residents are 55 and older. The housing stock is mostly single-story ranch homes built from the 1950s through the 1990s, with stucco exteriors, concrete slab foundations, and modest backyards. Newer developments near the Diamond Valley Lake area and the eastern edges of the city include some planned communities with HOAs. You can read more about the city's history and character on Wikipedia.
Hemet is perhaps best known for the Ramona Outdoor Play, which has run in a natural hillside amphitheater above the city every spring since 1923 - one of the longest-running outdoor plays in the United States. Diamond Valley Lake, just south of the city, is the largest lake in Southern California and a landmark that nearly every Hemet resident can see from a distance. The city sits about 30 miles southeast of Riverside and connects to the larger Inland Empire via Highway 74 and State Route 79. Neighboring San Jacinto shares the valley floor directly to the north, and many residents in both cities use the same roads, schools, and services. Homeowners in the western Inland Empire, toward Perris, are also within our regular service area.
We serve Hemet and the full San Jacinto Valley. Free on-site estimates, permits handled, written proposals before you commit.