
Your old patio or drafty enclosure deserves better. We convert, upgrade, and build sunrooms that handle Pomona summers and earn their square footage every day.

Sunroom remodeling in Pomona means converting a covered patio or upgrading an aging enclosure into a finished, comfortable room - most projects run two to six weeks of construction once permits are approved, with permit review adding two to six weeks before the first nail goes in.
A lot of Pomona homeowners come to us with the same situation: a porch or covered patio they barely use because it is too hot in summer, too cold at night, or just unfinished. Sunroom remodeling in Pomona fixes all three at once. Whether you are starting from scratch or updating a 1970s enclosure with outdated single-pane glass, the result is a room you will actually live in. If you are comparing options, our screen room installation service is a lower-cost alternative for homeowners focused on outdoor feel over climate control.
If design and finish choices feel overwhelming, we also offer sunroom design consultations to help you figure out what works best before any construction begins.
If your covered patio is comfortable for maybe four months out of the year and sits ignored the rest, that is a clear sign. An enclosed sunroom with the right glass extends that to year-round use, even when Pomona summers push past 100 degrees.
Older enclosures in Pomona - especially those built in the 1970s and 1980s - often used single-pane glass and minimal insulation that simply does not hold up to today's temperature swings. If the room is uncomfortable more than three months a year, it is not doing its job.
Home prices in the Pomona area have risen significantly, and moving to a larger home is a major undertaking. A sunroom addition can add a functional room - a reading nook, a home office, a playroom - without the cost and disruption of a full move.
If your alumawood or wood-frame patio cover is sagging, rusting, or pulling away from the house, that is a natural moment to consider whether a full sunroom conversion makes more sense than a simple repair. A contractor can assess whether your existing structure is a good starting point.
Our sunroom remodeling work covers three main paths: converting an existing covered patio into a fully enclosed room, updating an older enclosure with new glass, framing, and finishes, and building a new room addition from the ground up. Every project goes through the City of Pomona permit process, which means city inspectors verify the work before you sign off. For homeowners who want an enclosed patio room with a more traditional feel, our screen room installation service is a good fit.
Finish choices matter as much as structure. We help you select glass that manages heat gain, ventilation that keeps the room comfortable without running the AC all day, and flooring and trim that match the rest of your home. If you want a room that functions like a true year-round living space, our sunroom design consultation helps you plan every detail before construction begins.
Best for homeowners with an existing covered patio who want to convert it into a fully enclosed, finished room.
Suited for owners of aging sunrooms or screen rooms that need new glass, framing, or insulation to function year-round.
Built from the ground up for homeowners who want a larger or differently positioned room than their existing patio allows.
Designed for homeowners who need full heating and cooling in the new room, with connections to existing HVAC or a standalone system.
Pomona sits in the Inland Empire, where summer temperatures regularly exceed 95 degrees and heat waves above 105 degrees are not unusual. A sunroom built without heat-reducing glass and proper ventilation will be unusable for four to five months of the year - essentially a very expensive storage room. When you are getting estimates, ask each contractor specifically how they plan to manage heat gain, and make sure the answer goes beyond just adding a ceiling fan. Low-emissivity glass and proper ventilation design are the tools that actually solve this problem.
A large share of Pomona's homes date from the 1950s through 1970s, and many were built on simple slab foundations that may not support an enclosed addition without reinforcement. Southern California's seismic activity adds another layer - any new addition must be engineered to move with your home during an earthquake rather than pulling away from it. We serve homeowners throughout the area, including Walnut and Diamond Bar, and we know what the permit offices in this part of Los Angeles County expect.
We will respond within one business day. The first conversation is a quick exchange about what you have - a covered patio, an old enclosure, or open backyard space - and what you want to end up with.
We visit your home in person before giving you a price - there is no way to estimate a sunroom accurately from photos alone. After the visit, you get a written estimate that breaks down what is included and what is not.
We submit plans to the City of Pomona's Building and Safety Division. This typically takes two to six weeks. We handle the process for you - you do not need to visit the permit office.
The main construction phase runs one to three weeks. After that, the city sends an inspector to verify everything was built to code. We then walk you through the finished room before you make your final payment.
No pressure, no obligation - just an honest look at your space and a written estimate you can actually compare.
We submit your plans to the City of Pomona and schedule all required inspections. You never have to visit the permit office or wonder whether the work is on record.
Pomona sits near the Chino and Cucamonga fault systems. We build to California's earthquake connection requirements so your sunroom moves with the house rather than pulling away from it.
We design every project with Pomona's climate in mind - the right low-e glass, the right ventilation, the right roof overhang - so the room stays comfortable even when temperatures hit triple digits. Learn more from the U.S. Department of Energy's guidance on energy-efficient windows.
We check your existing foundation during the estimate visit and tell you exactly what it needs before you sign anything. No mid-project surprises about slab work that adds thousands to the bill.
You can verify any California contractor's license through the California Contractors State License Board in seconds. A properly permitted, well-built sunroom is recorded as living space by the Los Angeles County Assessor, which protects your home's appraised value and makes for a clean sale.
A screened outdoor room at a lower cost - ideal if you want fresh air and shade without the full enclosure of a climate-controlled sunroom.
Learn MoreWork through your layout, glass options, and finish choices with a professional before any construction begins.
Learn MorePermit timelines in Pomona mean the sooner you start, the sooner you are sitting in your new room - reach out today and we will get the process moving.