
Your backyard should work for you every morning, not just when the weather is perfect. We design and build permitted sunrooms that fit Santa Maria homes and last through the coastal conditions.

Sunroom remodeling in Santa Maria means adding a fully enclosed, permitted room to your home - work typically runs three to six weeks for construction, plus the city permit review period. Whether you are replacing an aging patio cover or building a brand-new sunroom addition, the process starts with a site visit and ends with a city inspection.
Most homeowners in Santa Maria come to us because their outdoor space is not working the way it should. Maybe the morning marine layer keeps you inside, or a tired old patio cover has reached the end of its life. A properly built sunroom solves both problems. If you are weighing your options, our screen room installation service is worth considering if you want a more open, lower-cost alternative.
We pull every permit ourselves and handle the city's review process on your behalf. You do not have to chase paperwork or wonder if the work will pass inspection - that is our job, and we have done it on homes all across Santa Maria.
Santa Maria's marine layer keeps most open patios cold and damp until midday - especially from May through September. If your outdoor furniture is collecting dew instead of being used, a sunroom gives you that same view in a dry, protected space. Waiting just means more mornings spent inside looking out.
Older aluminum patio covers in Santa Maria corrode faster than most homeowners expect - the salt-laden coastal air speeds up the process. If your cover is rusting, sagging, or letting in water, patching it is rarely the right call. A proper sunroom built with the right materials will outlast any repair by years.
If your family needs more room - a home office, a quiet sitting area, a space for the kids - a sunroom adds real usable square footage without tearing into your existing layout. Because the work happens mostly on the exterior of your home, you stay in it throughout the entire project.
Some Santa Maria homes have patio enclosures or screen structures that were added without a permit. This shows up as a problem when you sell or refinance. A licensed contractor can assess what was built, advise you on the path to bring it up to code, and complete any work the city requires.
Our sunroom remodeling work covers everything from first-time additions to full replacements of existing structures. Whether you are starting from a bare concrete slab or rebuilding something that was already there, we handle design, permit application, foundation work, framing, windows, and finishing. For homeowners who want full year-round use, we also offer sunroom design as a separate step - so the layout and window placement are thought through before any ground is broken.
Every project we build is submitted for city permit and inspected by the Santa Maria Building Division. That is not an upgrade - it is the baseline for every job we take on. We also manage HOA submissions for homeowners in newer Santa Maria subdivisions where exterior additions require association approval before the city permit can be issued.
For homeowners starting from scratch - no existing structure, just a wall and a slab to build from.
For homeowners replacing an aging patio cover, screen enclosure, or older sunroom that is past its useful life.
For homeowners who want enclosed, weather-protected space without full insulation or HVAC connection.
For homeowners who want the room to function like the rest of the house - insulated, heated, and cooled.
Santa Maria sits in a coastal valley, and the marine layer that rolls in from the Pacific brings persistent moisture - not just rain. That ongoing dampness is hard on window seals, roof flashing, and wall connections that were not spec'd with coastal conditions in mind. We choose materials and sealing methods that hold up in this environment, so the room you get on day one is the same room you have five years later. Homeowners in Orcutt and Nipomo are especially aware of what coastal air does to poorly sealed structures over time.
Santa Barbara County is also a seismically active region, and every room addition we build meets California's earthquake-resistant construction standards. The foundation design and the way the new structure connects to your existing home are not afterthoughts - they are built in from the start because the building code requires it, and because it is the right way to build. A contractor who shortcuts that process is putting your home and your sale record at risk.
We respond within 1 business day to schedule a free on-site visit. You will not be handed a price over the phone without anyone seeing your home first.
We come to your home, check the existing slab or foundation, and talk through what you want the space to do. You leave with a written estimate covering materials, labor, permit fees, and timeline.
Once you sign, we prepare drawings and submit the permit application to the City of Santa Maria. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we handle that submission in parallel so the two approval tracks do not stack up on you.
Work starts when the permit is approved - typically three to six weeks of active construction, with a city inspection at completion. We walk you through the finished room before we call the job done.
No obligation, no sales pitch. We come to your home, look at the space, and give you a written quote you can actually compare.
(805) 867-6735We submit every permit application to the City of Santa Maria Building Division ourselves - we do not hand you paperwork and send you to the counter. That means the permit record is accurate, the inspection history is clean, and there are no loose ends when you sell your home.
Santa Maria's marine layer is not a problem we discover after the fact - we account for it in every material selection. Window seals, roof flashing, and framing systems are chosen to hold up against persistent coastal moisture, not just the occasional rain event.
Many newer Santa Maria neighborhoods require HOA design approval before a city permit can be issued. We manage both tracks - association and city - so you are not coordinating two separate review processes while also trying to manage a construction project. For more on permitting, the National Association of Home Builders has useful general guidance on room addition projects.
Santa Barbara County sits in a seismically active part of California, and every room addition we build meets the state's earthquake-resistant construction standards. The foundation design and structural connection to your existing home are done right the first time - not corrected after an inspector flags a problem.
We have been building and remodeling sunrooms in the Santa Maria area since 2016 years, and we understand what makes this market different from a generic California job. Every project we finish is one we stand behind - permitted, inspected, and built to last in this climate.
A more open, lower-cost alternative for homeowners who want bug and wind protection without full enclosure.
Learn MoreWork through the layout, window placement, and materials before construction starts so nothing is decided on the fly.
Learn MorePermit timelines in Santa Maria mean the sooner you start, the sooner you are enjoying your new space - reach out today and we will get the process moving.