Your patio sits empty most of the year because the heat and sun make it unusable. A properly built sunroom conversion gives you a climate-controlled room your family can enjoy every day, not just on mild spring afternoons.

Patio-to-sunroom conversion in Moreno Valley turns your existing concrete patio slab into a fully enclosed, livable room - walls, windows, a proper roof, and a connection to your home's heating and cooling system. Most build phases run two to four weeks of active construction after permits are approved, with the full project from first call to finished room typically taking two to four months.
You already have the hardest part: the slab. We build on top of what you have, which keeps costs lower than a ground-up addition. If your goal is a fully enclosed room you can use year-round, this is the most cost-effective path. Homeowners who want something in between - partially enclosed, with airflow but no full climate control - may find that a deck-to-sunroom conversion or an open screen room fits their budget better.
The real value here is permanent. You are not patching an aging cover or buying another outdoor shade structure. You are adding a room with a floor, walls, and a roof - a room that shows up in your home's square footage and protects that investment when it is time to sell.
If your patio furniture collects dust for half the year because it is simply too hot to sit outside, you are losing the benefit of space you already own. Moreno Valley regularly sees temperatures above 100 degrees from June through September, and no amount of shade sails or portable fans solves that. A converted sunroom with air conditioning lets you enjoy that square footage all year.
If your family has outgrown your home's interior but you love your neighborhood, a patio-to-sunroom conversion is one of the most cost-effective ways to add a real room. It works with space you already have - the slab, the existing roofline, the wall of your house - rather than starting from scratch. Homeowners often use the new room as a playroom, home office, or casual dining area.
If your existing cover is rusting, sagging, or leaking, you are already facing a repair or replacement cost. That moment is often the right time to ask whether a full conversion makes more sense than patching what you have. Putting money into a proper sunroom instead of another temporary cover gives you a permanent, livable space rather than just another shade structure.
Small cracks in a concrete patio slab are common in Moreno Valley, where the soil shifts with seasonal moisture changes. If the slab is cracked but still level and structurally sound, it may still be a good candidate for conversion. A contractor can assess whether the cracks are cosmetic or a sign of deeper movement - catching this early as part of a conversion is far easier than fixing it after walls are already up.
We build fully enclosed sunrooms on existing patio slabs, handling every part of the project from slab assessment and design through permit submission, construction, and final inspection. Every conversion includes walls, windows or glass panels, a proper insulated roof, and a connection to your home's heating and cooling system. Homeowners who want a year-round room with full climate control can also explore our enclosed patio rooms service, which covers similar fully enclosed options with different interior finish levels.
We manage the full permit process with the City of Moreno Valley and handle HOA architectural review where required. Window selection, roofline design, flooring over the existing slab, and interior finish level are all decided in the design conversation before a nail goes in. For homeowners who want to explore the range of enclosed outdoor spaces, our deck-to-sunroom conversion service covers a similar process for homeowners working with an elevated deck structure rather than a ground-level slab.
Suits homeowners who want basic enclosure with ventilated windows and a comfortable space in spring, fall, and mild winter months.
Right for Moreno Valley homeowners who want to use the space through summer heat and occasional cold nights - fully insulated and HVAC-connected.
Needed when the existing patio slab shows cracking or settling before framing can begin - addressed as part of the conversion project.
Included in every project - we handle the City of Moreno Valley permit application and your HOA architectural review so you do not have to.
Most homes in Moreno Valley were built between 1980 and 2005, and a lot of the original patio slabs from that era are now showing the wear from decades of Inland Empire heat, frost cycles, and expansive clay soil movement. That wear does not necessarily rule out a conversion - it means the slab assessment step matters more here than in other climates. Moreno Valley regularly sees temperatures above 100 degrees in summer, which is why every conversion we build is designed from the start with insulation and HVAC connection in mind. A basic three-season enclosure may cost less upfront, but homeowners here consistently tell us they wish they had gone with full climate control from the beginning. The South Coast Air Quality Management District also reports that the Inland Empire experiences elevated wildfire smoke during late summer and fall - another reason a fully enclosed room with filtered air is worth the investment here.
HOA rules are common in Moreno Valley's planned communities, and many neighborhoods require architectural committee approval before any exterior addition begins. Homeowners across Moreno Valley and neighboring Riverside deal with similar HOA requirements, and we handle both the city permit and the HOA submission as part of every project so you are not chasing paperwork on your own.
You describe your patio, your goals, and roughly what you hope to use the room for. We ask a few questions about the slab condition, your HOA situation, and your budget range. We respond within one business day and schedule an on-site visit if the project sounds like a good fit.
We come out, measure the space, and assess the slab. We walk you through design options - window style, roof structure, finish level, and climate control approach - and explain how each choice affects the price. You receive a written estimate before we leave.
Once you sign a contract, we prepare the drawings and submit the permit application to the City of Moreno Valley. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we prepare that submission at the same time. Plan review typically takes several weeks - you do not need to contact the city or your HOA during this period.
The build phase runs two to four weeks with workers on-site most weekdays. A city inspector checks the framing before walls close up and returns for a final sign-off when the room is complete. We walk you through the finished space and hand over your permit documentation.
We respond within one business day. Written estimate, no obligation, no sales pressure.
(951) 518-9916We inspect the condition of your existing patio slab before any design work begins. Moreno Valley's expansive clay soils can shift slabs over time, and building on a compromised foundation leads to problems fast. If repair or leveling is needed, you know that cost upfront - not halfway through construction.
Every conversion we complete goes through the City of Moreno Valley's Building and Safety Division. A California-licensed contractor who skips permits is saving themselves time at your expense. Permitted work is independently inspected, shows up correctly in your home's record, and protects your investment when you sell.
We design every conversion around Moreno Valley's summer heat from the start - not as an afterthought. That means window selection, insulation thickness, and HVAC tie-in are part of the initial design conversation, not upgrades you discover you needed after move-in day.
You receive a detailed written estimate before any work begins, with a payment schedule tied to specific milestones rather than arbitrary dates. One of the most common homeowner complaints about contractors is watching the price climb after the project starts. Our contract is designed to prevent that from happening to you.
Taken together, these commitments mean you know what you are building, what it will cost, and that the finished room will be legal, inspected, and comfortable to use every month of the year.
Have a deck instead of a concrete patio? We assess the existing structure and convert it into a fully enclosed, year-round room.
Learn MoreExplore enclosed patio room options when you want a finished indoor-outdoor space with solid walls and weather protection.
Learn MorePermit slots fill up - the sooner we submit your plans, the sooner you are enjoying your new room. Call or request a free estimate now.