
Hemet Sunrooms and Patios is your local sunroom contractor serving Perris, CA with patio-to-sunroom conversions, screen rooms, and enclosed patio rooms built to handle the Inland Empire heat.
We respond to new inquiries within one business day and handle the City of Perris permit process on your behalf from start to finish.
Many Perris homes were built in the 1990s and 2000s with large rear concrete patios that sit exposed to 100-degree summers. Converting that existing slab into a fully enclosed sunroom with solar-control glass gives you a room you can actually use in August, not just on the handful of mild days each year.
Perris spring and fall evenings are pleasant, but mosquitoes and the dust that blows in during inland wind events make sitting outside uncomfortable. A screen room lets you enjoy the outdoors after sunset without the bugs or dust, at a lower cost than a fully enclosed addition.
In Perris, where summer temperatures regularly exceed 100 degrees, a room without real insulation and a dedicated cooling source becomes unusable for months. A four-season sunroom connects to your existing HVAC or uses a mini-split so the room stays comfortable even in mid-July.
Perris tract homes from the 1990s and 2000s often have covered concrete patios attached to the back of the house. Enclosing that covered area with screened or glazed panels adds a protected outdoor room without demolishing what is already there, which keeps costs down.
Vinyl frames hold up better than wood in the dry heat of the Inland Empire, resisting the warping, cracking, and paint failure that wood frames often develop in Perris summers. For homeowners who want a durable low-maintenance addition, vinyl is a practical choice for this climate.
Some Perris homes already have older enclosed rooms or additions that were built without proper insulation or heat-control glass. Remodeling an existing sunroom to add solar-control glazing and better insulation can turn a sweltering room into a genuinely comfortable space without starting over from scratch.
Perris sits in the Inland Empire, roughly 75 miles from the Pacific coast, and the distance matters. Summer temperatures here regularly climb above 100 degrees and sometimes past 105. That sustained heat is brutal on standard building materials - exterior caulk dries out and cracks, standard residential glass turns a sunroom into an oven by mid-morning, and roofing underlayment degrades faster than it would at the coast. Any contractor you hire for a sunroom addition in Perris needs to make material choices specifically for this climate - not simply use the same glass, insulation, and frame specifications they would in a milder city.
The soil beneath most Perris homes adds another layer of complexity. Much of the Perris Valley sits on expansive clay that swells when wet and contracts when dry, putting continuous stress on concrete slabs and foundations. Homes built in the 1990s and 2000s - which make up the majority of Perris residential neighborhoods - have concrete slab foundations that can settle or crack from this movement. Before adding any sunroom or enclosing any patio, the existing slab must be inspected. A contractor who skips that step is setting up the homeowner for leaks and structural problems within a few years. Perris also experiences occasional winter freezes, so framing and glass must handle both ends of the temperature range, not just the heat.
Our crew works throughout Perris regularly, and we pull permits through the City of Perris Development Services Department on every project. Perris has a mix of housing stock - older homes near downtown and along D Street that date back to the early 1900s, and large tracts of newer construction on the north and west sides of the city built from the 1990s through the 2010s. The newer homes are primarily stucco-sided, single-story or two-story tract homes on concrete slab foundations, and those slabs are now at the age when they begin to show the effects of Inland Empire heat cycles and expansive clay movement. We know what to look for before any work begins.
Perris residents know their city well. The area near Lake Perris State Recreation Area on the east side of town is a landmark most locals reference, and the neighborhoods off Ramona Expressway and near the newer subdivisions on the north end have become some of the most active areas for home improvement work. We have worked in all of those neighborhoods and understand how the homes are built and what they need.
We also serve neighboring cities. Homeowners in Menifee to the south share many of the same housing types and climate conditions as Perris, and we work there regularly. If you are closer to the freeway corridor to the north, Moreno Valley is another area we serve consistently.
We ask about your home, the space you want to convert or enclose, and your general goals. No commitment required - we just need enough to decide whether a site visit makes sense. We respond within one business day.
We visit your Perris home, inspect the existing slab or patio, check the roofline, and look at your site conditions. You leave with a clear picture of what is possible, what it will cost, and how we plan to handle the local heat and soil conditions. No charge for this visit.
You receive a detailed written proposal before signing anything. Once you approve it, we apply for the City of Perris building permit on your behalf. Expect two to three weeks for permit review before construction can begin.
Foundation prep, framing, glass, and roofing go up in sequence with city inspections at key stages. The build typically runs three to five weeks. We walk you through the finished room before we consider the job complete.
We serve Perris and the surrounding Inland Empire. Free on-site estimate. No pressure, no obligation - just honest answers about what your project will take.
(951) 467-1314Perris is a city of over 80,000 people in Riverside County, located in the heart of the Inland Empire about 75 miles east of Los Angeles. The city has grown significantly since the 1990s, with most of that growth happening in large residential subdivisions built on the north and west sides of the city. These neighborhoods are dominated by stucco-sided, single-story and two-story tract homes with concrete tile roofs and generous rear yard spaces - exactly the type of housing stock where patio conversions and sunroom additions are a natural fit. Older homes near downtown and the historic core along D Street were built in an earlier era and have their own distinct character and construction methods. Perris has also become a significant logistics hub for the region, with major distribution centers operating on the city's edges and providing steady employment to working families throughout the area.
The city is perhaps best known outside the region for Skydive Perris, one of the largest and most recognized skydiving facilities in the United States, which draws visitors from across the country. Locally, residents identify strongly with Lake Perris State Recreation Area to the east, which is a popular boating, fishing, and camping destination throughout the year. The city sits along the I-215 corridor, which connects it to Moreno Valley to the north and Menifee to the south, both of which we also serve.
We serve Perris and the entire Inland Empire region. Reach out now and we will respond within one business day.