Stop avoiding your backyard because of the heat. We design and build permitted sunroom additions that stay comfortable year-round, even when summer temperatures climb past 100 degrees.

A sunroom addition in Moreno Valley is an enclosed, light-filled room built onto your home with large glass panels on most of its walls - creating a space you can use comfortably without stepping into the full heat of the Inland Empire, most projects complete in four to twelve weeks of active construction.
If your family has outgrown your living space, or you have a patio that sits empty from June through October, a sunroom solves both problems at once. It adds real square footage, keeps bugs and wind out, and - when designed correctly for this climate - stays usable even on the hottest days of the year. Many homeowners who call us are also interested in four season sunrooms, which connect directly to your home's heating and cooling for true year-round comfort.
Moreno Valley regularly sees temperatures above 100 degrees, and most open patios are genuinely unusable from June through September. If you find yourself looking at your patio furniture through a window instead of sitting on it, that is a clear sign you need an enclosed, shaded space designed for this climate.
If your family has outgrown your living space but you do not want the hassle of moving, a sunroom addition can add a meaningful amount of usable square footage. It is one of the more straightforward ways to gain a dedicated room - whether that is a home office, a playroom, or a reading space.
If you already have a concrete slab or covered porch that sits empty, it may already be a strong candidate for a sunroom conversion. Working with an existing foundation reduces both cost and construction time, since part of the base work is already done.
In Moreno Valley's intense sunlight, UV damage to flooring and furniture is a real problem. If you notice bleaching near south- or west-facing windows, a sunroom with UV-blocking glass acts as a buffer zone - protecting the rest of your home while adding livable space.
Every sunroom addition we build starts with engineered plans submitted to the City of Moreno Valley - there are no shortcuts on permits. We handle foundation prep, framing, glass installation, roofing, and electrical, so you have a single point of contact from the first site visit to the final city inspection. If your home needs a full sunroom construction build from the ground up - including a new concrete slab - we handle that too, with foundations engineered for Moreno Valley's expansive clay soils.
We also offer four season sunroom upgrades for homeowners who want the room connected to their home's heating and cooling system. This is the right choice for anyone who wants year-round comfort regardless of the temperature outside - and in Moreno Valley, that is a meaningful upgrade given how many months the heat keeps you indoors anyway.
Best for homeowners who want a comfortable space for most of the year with good ventilation and shade, at a lower overall cost.
Fully insulated with heating and cooling connected to your home's system - the right choice for year-round use in any weather.
Builds a sunroom on top of your existing concrete patio slab, reducing cost and construction time compared to a full ground-up build.
Heat-reducing, UV-blocking glass options and roofline designs matched to your home's existing architecture and HOA requirements.
Moreno Valley summers regularly push past 100 degrees, and that changes everything about how a sunroom should be designed and built. Standard glass that works fine in coastal Southern California will turn a Moreno Valley sunroom into an oven by mid-morning in July. We use heat-reducing, low-emissivity glass on every project here because we know what the climate demands. On top of that, large portions of the city sit on clay-heavy soils that expand when wet and shrink when dry - a cycle that cracks slab foundations over time if they are not engineered correctly. According to the California Geological Survey, expansive soils are a widespread concern throughout the Inland Empire, and a foundation that does not account for this movement will crack and shift within a few seasons.
We have worked on homes across the Inland Empire, including in Riverside and Perris, and the building codes and permit processes differ in ways that matter. We are familiar with the City of Moreno Valley Building and Safety Division's review process - including what inspectors look for at each stage. Homeowners in master-planned communities like Rancho Belago also need HOA approval before city permits can be filed, and we handle that coordination as part of our standard process.
We respond within one business day to schedule a site visit. During that first call, we ask a few basic questions about the size, location, and your rough budget - not to pitch you, but to think through what makes sense for your property.
We walk the space with you, check your existing slab if there is one, and take measurements. After the visit, you receive a written estimate that describes exactly what is included - no vague line items.
We submit your plans to the City of Moreno Valley and, if needed, prepare your HOA submission. This step typically takes two to six weeks. We handle all the paperwork - you do not need to visit any office.
Foundation work and framing happen first - this is the loudest phase and usually wraps within the first week or two. Glass, roofing, electrical, and interior finishing follow. A city inspector signs off at the end, and you receive all permit documentation to keep on file.
We respond within one business day. No pressure, no obligation - just a straightforward conversation about what is possible on your property.
(951) 518-9916We specify heat-reducing, low-emissivity glass on every sunroom we build in this area. Standard glass sold at a lower price point will make your room unusable in summer - and we have seen enough of those projects from other contractors to know it is a corner not worth cutting.
Moreno Valley's clay-heavy soil shifts with the seasons. Every foundation we pour is designed to handle that movement, so the room stays level, windows seal properly, and the roof sheds water as it should - not just on day one, but for years down the road.
We have been through the City of Moreno Valley's permit review process many times and know what the reviewers flag. We prepare and submit all permit applications on your behalf, and we know which HOA communities in the area require architectural review before city permits can even be filed. The National Association of Home Builders recommends always confirming permit status before signing any contractor agreement.
We hold a current California contractor's license, which you can verify on the California Contractors State License Board website. Every project we take on is covered by general liability insurance, so you are not exposed if something unexpected happens during construction.
These are not just talking points - they are the specific things that determine whether a sunroom holds up over time in this climate and on this soil. When you call us, you will talk to someone who knows Moreno Valley, knows the permit office, and knows what your home needs.
A fully insulated room addition tied into your home's heating and cooling - the upgrade for homeowners who want true year-round comfort in any weather.
Learn MoreGround-up sunroom builds with engineered foundations, complete framing, glass, roofing, and electrical handled under a single permitted contract.
Learn MorePermit timelines in Moreno Valley can add several weeks before construction begins - the sooner you reach out, the sooner we can have your room ready to use.