
A fully insulated, climate-controlled room addition you can actually use in August. Hurricane-rated windows, permits handled, and built to Charlotte County code from the first nail to the final inspection.

A four season sunroom in Port Charlotte, FL is a fully enclosed, insulated room addition connected to your home's heating and cooling system, built to Florida's hurricane wind requirements, and usable comfortably in every month of the year.
Most Port Charlotte homeowners start looking at four season sunrooms because their existing screened lanai or porch has become a room they avoid for five or six months out of the year. A screen enclosure in Southwest Florida is comfortable from November through April. From May through October, the heat and humidity make it unlivable. A four season sunroom changes that equation by adding real insulated walls, heat-blocking glass, and air conditioning sized for the room.
If you are still comparing options, our page on three season sunrooms walks through the differences in cost, comfort, and what each option is best suited for - so you can make the right call for your home and budget.
If your screened lanai or porch sits unused from May through October because it is simply too hot, you are losing most of the year from a space you paid for. A four season sunroom solves this with real walls, sealed windows, and air conditioning - turning that unusable area into a room you can enjoy on a 92-degree August afternoon in Port Charlotte.
Port Charlotte gets intense afternoon thunderstorms from spring through fall. If your existing porch lets in rain, wind-driven water, or insects during those storms, it is not functioning as a real room. Water stains on the ceiling or walls, puddles after rain, or a constant battle with mosquitoes are signs that what you have is not sealed well enough. A properly built four season sunroom eliminates all of those problems.
If your home feels cramped - especially if you work from home, host family, or just want a quiet place to sit - a four season sunroom is one of the most cost-effective ways to add usable square footage. Port Charlotte's flat lots and slab foundations make sunroom additions relatively straightforward, and a well-built room gets used every day, not just a few months a year.
Many Port Charlotte homes built in the 1980s and 1990s have Florida rooms with single-pane windows, thin walls, and minimal insulation. If your existing room is unbearably hot in summer, lets in outside noise, or has windows that rattle in the wind, it was not built to today's standards. Upgrading to a properly insulated, hurricane-rated four season sunroom can transform it from a storage space into one of your most-used rooms.
Every four season sunroom we build is fully enclosed, insulated, and connected to a cooling system sized for the room. Most projects in Port Charlotte connect to the home's existing air conditioning through a duct extension, or we install a dedicated mini-split unit for the space - whichever makes more sense for your layout and your existing system's capacity. We also work with homeowners who want to upgrade an existing all season room that was built to older standards and no longer performs the way it should.
Window selection is one of the most important decisions in any four season sunroom build. In Charlotte County's wind zone, windows must be hurricane-rated - and in Port Charlotte's climate, low-emissivity glass is worth asking about specifically. Low-e glass reflects heat before it enters the room, which can meaningfully reduce your cooling costs and keep the room comfortable without running the air conditioning constantly. Every window we install meets Florida's current requirements, and we explain the options clearly before you commit to anything. For homeowners who are starting from scratch on the design, our three season sunroom page is worth reading if you want to understand the full range of options before deciding.
Homeowners who want a new, insulated room built from the ground up - slab, framing, windows, roof, and HVAC all included.
Homeowners with an existing Florida room from the 1980s or 1990s that needs new windows, insulation, and a proper cooling connection.
Homeowners who have a basic all season or three season enclosure they want to bring up to full four season comfort and code compliance.
Homeowners who want a dedicated cooling and heating unit for the sunroom without modifying their home's existing ductwork.
Homeowners whose existing sunroom has old, single-pane, or non-hurricane-rated windows that need to be brought up to current county standards.
Homeowners with specific layout requirements, unusual rooflines, or HOA restrictions that require a tailored design before anything else.
Port Charlotte averages more than 260 sunny days per year, with summer temperatures regularly in the low 90s and daily afternoon thunderstorms from June through September. That climate punishes any sunroom that was not specifically designed for it. A room with standard windows and an undersized cooling system will be unusable from May through October - which is the opposite of what you paid for. Charlotte County also sits in a high-wind zone under Florida's building code, which means every component of your sunroom must be rated for hurricane-force winds. That requirement adds cost compared to sunrooms built in other states, but it also means a properly built room will hold up when the next storm comes through.
We serve homeowners across the area, including in North Port and Punta Gorda. If your neighborhood has an HOA - which is common throughout Port Charlotte's planned communities - we handle the HOA submission package alongside the county permit. Starting the contractor selection process in late winter or early spring gives you the best chance of completing construction before the heat of summer and the peak of hurricane season.
We respond within 1 business day. When you call or submit a request, we schedule a time to visit your home and look at the space. That visit usually takes 30 to 60 minutes - we ask about your goals, your budget range, and whether you have any HOA restrictions to work around. You leave with a clear sense of what is possible.
Once you agree on a design, you sign a contract that spells out the scope of work, timeline, and payment schedule. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we prepare and submit the approval package on your behalf - this can take two to six weeks depending on your HOA's meeting schedule.
We submit the permit application to Charlotte County Building Construction Services. The drawings must meet Florida's wind and energy requirements before the county approves them. Permit review typically takes two to six weeks, and we keep you updated throughout.
Once permits are in hand, the crew prepares the site, pours or connects the slab, frames the room, installs windows and roof, and completes the electrical and HVAC work. County inspectors visit at key stages. After final inspection, we walk through the room with you and hand over your warranty documents.
We respond within 1 business day. Submit your details and someone from our team will call to schedule a free on-site estimate at a time that works for you. No obligation and no sales pressure.
(941) 246-0621We size every cooling system to the actual square footage and sun exposure of your room - not a generic estimate. Port Charlotte's climate demands it. A room with an undersized system will be uncomfortable by 10 a.m. from May through October. That is not the outcome you are paying for.
After Hurricane Ian, a lot of Port Charlotte homeowners learned the hard way that not everything attached to their house was built to the same standard. Every sunroom we build meets current Charlotte County wind requirements - the same standards that apply to the rest of your home.
We pull the county permit on your behalf and prepare your HOA submission package if needed. An unpermitted addition can stop a home sale in its tracks - and in Charlotte County, building inspectors and title companies do check. We make sure your room is fully documented.
We have been building sunrooms in this area since 2015 and know the local permit office, the soil conditions in different neighborhoods, and the HOA approval requirements in the communities we work in most often. That local knowledge prevents delays and cost surprises.
You can verify any Florida contractor's license for free through the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation. The U.S. Department of Energy also publishes useful guidance on window and glazing choices that directly affect how comfortable your sunroom will be in Florida's heat. Our work and local track record are described in more detail on the About page.
A three season room extends your outdoor season at a lower cost, though it is not connected to your home's air conditioning.
Learn MoreAll season rooms share the same year-round comfort goal as four season sunrooms but may use different framing and panel systems.
Learn MorePermit slots in Charlotte County fill up before season - call now or submit your details to get a free, no-obligation on-site estimate.