
A vinyl sunroom holds up against Fort Lauderdale's salt air, humidity, and storm season without the painting and rust maintenance that comes with other frame materials.

Vinyl sunrooms in Fort Lauderdale are fully enclosed additions built with a durable vinyl frame and mostly glass or insulated panel walls - sealed, weatherproof rooms you can use year-round, with most installations taking one to three weeks of construction once permits are approved.
Vinyl is a particularly practical choice for Fort Lauderdale homes because it does not rust, rot, or need repainting - a real advantage in a coastal city where salt air and humidity wear down wood and metal frames faster than most homeowners expect. The frame material is only part of the equation, though. The glass, the cooling solution, and the foundation prep all matter just as much in this climate.
If you want to explore the full range of design options for your room before settling on materials, our sunroom additions service walks through the complete process from planning to construction.
If your screened porch or lanai sits empty most of the year because afternoon thunderstorms roll in without warning or mosquitoes make it unbearable after dusk, a vinyl sunroom solves exactly that problem. Fort Lauderdale's rainy season runs roughly June through September - a fully enclosed sunroom means you never have to scramble inside or abandon an outdoor meal.
If your family has outgrown your living space but you love your neighborhood and your mortgage, a vinyl sunroom addition gives you a new room without the disruption of a full interior renovation. Fort Lauderdale homeowners use sunrooms as second living rooms, home offices, playrooms, and dining spaces - flexible square footage that adapts to how your household actually lives.
Many Fort Lauderdale homes have aluminum-framed screen enclosures installed decades ago, and the salt air here accelerates corrosion on aluminum frames and screen mesh. If you are seeing rust streaks, torn screens, or frames pulling away from the house, you are already spending money on repairs - and that is a natural moment to consider upgrading to a sealed, weatherproof vinyl sunroom instead.
In Fort Lauderdale's real estate market, outdoor-connected living space is a genuine selling point - buyers moving here from colder climates specifically look for it. A permitted, well-built vinyl sunroom adds usable square footage that shows up favorably in a listing and holds up to a buyer's inspection.
We handle the full vinyl sunroom project - site assessment, foundation prep, permit application through Broward County, frame assembly, glass installation, and the final inspection. Every room is built with impact-rated glass and anchoring that meets Broward County's high-velocity wind zone requirements. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we ask about their process on the first call and help you prepare the approval submission. Our sunroom additions service covers the complete project scope for homeowners who want a dedicated room for a specific purpose - whether that is a home office, a family room, or an all-season entertaining space.
Homeowners who want a three-season approach - a lighter structure used mainly during Fort Lauderdale's cooler months - can explore our three season sunrooms service. That option involves a different insulation and glass specification that suits a more seasonal-use scenario.
Suits homeowners who want a new room connected directly to the house, accessed from the main living area.
Suits homeowners who want the room climate-controlled and comfortable all year - including Fort Lauderdale's hottest months.
Suits homeowners who want a lighter enclosure primarily for use during the cooler October through April window.
Suits homeowners with an existing concrete patio slab who want to enclose the space without a full foundation project.
Fort Lauderdale averages over 3,000 hours of sunshine per year, and the combination of intense UV exposure, coastal humidity, and salt air makes material selection more important here than in most other parts of the country. Vinyl frames do not corrode, do not need painting, and quality vinyl profiles resist UV-related fading for decades. Much of Fort Lauderdale's residential housing stock was built between the 1950s and 1980s on concrete block slab foundations, and attaching a vinyl sunroom to an older slab home requires careful structural assessment - a step experienced local contractors account for during the site visit. The Broward County Permitting, Licensing and Consumer Protection office handles all permit applications and inspections for sunroom projects in this area.
Broward County's wind zone requirements mean the glass and frame connections in every vinyl sunroom must be engineered for hurricane conditions - a standard that costs more than what you see in national price guides but genuinely protects your home. Homeowners in Hollywood and Deerfield Beach face the same wind zone and permitting requirements, and we apply the same construction standards to every project regardless of city.
Call or submit the form and we reply within one business day. We will ask about the space you want to enclose, how you plan to use the room, and whether you have an HOA - those answers shape the project before we visit your home.
We visit your home, measure the space, look at the existing wall connection point, and assess the foundation. In Fort Lauderdale, we also note your home's sun orientation - a west-facing room gets very different afternoon heat than an east-facing one, and that affects glass selection.
Before any physical work begins, we prepare the drawings and apply for the Broward County building permit. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we help you prepare their submission as well. Permit review typically takes several weeks - we track it and keep you updated.
Once permits are approved, work begins with the foundation slab, then frame assembly, glass panels, roof, and finishing. A county inspector visits to verify the completed work before we hand over the finished room and warranty documents.
Free written estimate. No pressure. We reply within one business day.
(754) 243-8239Every vinyl sunroom we build uses impact-rated glass and frame connections engineered for Broward County's high-velocity wind zone. We provide documentation showing the products comply - not just a verbal assurance.
We prepare the drawings, submit the permit application, and coordinate every required inspection from foundation to final. You stay informed without having to navigate the county permitting office yourself.
You can verify any contractor's Florida state license through the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation. A licensed contractor is accountable to the state - unlicensed work puts your home and your insurance at risk.
Every vinyl sunroom design includes a cooling plan - whether that is a mini-split unit or a connection to your existing system. A glass-walled room without climate control in South Florida is unusable for months of the year, and we address this in the first design conversation.
Choosing a contractor for a vinyl sunroom in Fort Lauderdale means choosing someone who understands the local wind requirements, the permit process, and what actually keeps a glass room comfortable here in summer. Those details separate a room you use all year from one you regret.
Full sunroom addition projects for Fort Lauderdale homes, from planning through final inspection.
Learn MoreA lighter-weight enclosure option for homeowners who want outdoor-connected space during Fort Lauderdale's cooler months.
Learn MoreOur calendar fills up before South Florida's busy season - lock in your start date now.