
SunCourtyard Temecula Sunrooms is a licensed sunroom contractor serving San Jacinto, CA, building all season rooms, patio enclosures, screen rooms, and sunroom additions for homeowners across the San Jacinto Valley. We have been serving the San Jacinto area since 2024 and handle all permit filings with the City of San Jacinto Building and Safety Division.
San Jacinto is a city of single-story ranch homes on concrete slab foundations - a property type we know well. Whether your home is near the Mt. San Jacinto College campus, in the historic downtown neighborhoods, or in one of the newer subdivisions on the east side of the city, we work throughout San Jacinto and understand what the local climate and soil conditions mean for outdoor construction.

San Jacinto sits at about 1,600 feet and gets both punishing summer heat and real winter cold on the same property. An all season room with insulated panels and a mini-split system addresses both ends of that range. It is the most practical choice for San Jacinto homeowners who want a room they can use every month of the year, not just in spring and fall.
See all season room detailsMost San Jacinto homes were built on concrete slab foundations with a back patio already in place. A patio enclosure puts a roof and walls around that existing footprint at a lower cost than a ground-up addition. The valley's dry heat and seasonal wind events make enclosing that space a practical improvement rather than just a cosmetic one.
San Jacinto is primarily a city of owner-occupied single-family homes, and sunroom additions are one of the more common ways homeowners here add usable square footage without a full structural addition. The single-story ranch footprint that dominates the city is well suited to sunroom additions on either the back or side of the house.
A screen room offers San Jacinto homeowners a budget-accessible way to enclose a patio. It keeps the space protected from wind-driven dust and debris during Santa Ana season while allowing airflow during the mild spring and fall months. The aluminum frame is engineered to hold up under the wind and temperature conditions specific to the San Jacinto Valley.
San Jacinto summers are long and relentless. A properly designed patio cover reduces direct sun exposure on the patio and on the windows of adjacent rooms - which lowers interior temperatures and cuts cooling costs. We build covers that are structurally ready for future enclosure walls and windows so the investment grows with your plans.
The 1970s and 1980s homes that make up much of San Jacinto's housing stock sometimes have older sun porches or aluminum-framed enclosures from that era. Single-pane glass, oxidized frames, and non-code-compliant footings are typical issues. A remodel brings those spaces up to current performance and building standards without demolishing the entire structure.
San Jacinto sits at roughly 1,600 feet in the San Jacinto Valley, and the climate here combines two stresses that many inland cities do not deal with simultaneously: extreme summer heat and real winter cold. Temperatures climb above 100 degrees from June through September, then drop below freezing on winter nights between December and February. That temperature swing - from over 100 to below 32 within the same year - is hard on window seals, caulk, frame joints, and roofing materials. Products rated for coastal Southern California conditions are not engineered for the full range San Jacinto sees. We spec glazing, frame materials, and roofing systems that are rated for the actual inland climate, not a more moderate coastal baseline.
The clay-heavy soils throughout the San Jacinto Valley add a structural consideration on top of the climate challenge. These soils expand when wet and contract as they dry, putting continuous movement stress on concrete slabs and foundations over the course of each year. Most of the valley's homes sit on concrete slab foundations with no basement or crawl space, which means the slab is the floor - and if the soil shifts beneath it, the whole structure feels it. Patios and sunroom additions need foundations and anchoring that account for this behavior. A contractor who works primarily in coastal or higher-elevation markets may not have seen this soil type regularly enough to design around it properly.
Our crew works throughout San Jacinto regularly, and we file permits with the City of San Jacinto Building and Safety Division for residential sunroom and enclosure projects. San Jacinto is its own incorporated city with its own permit office - separate from Riverside County and from neighboring Hemet. Knowing the local submittal requirements keeps plan review moving without unnecessary delays. We handle all permit applications, track review status, and respond to any plan checker comments on our end.
The city is defined by a few landmarks most locals know well. The Mt. San Jacinto College campus is right in the city and is one of the largest employers in the valley. State Street and Ramona Boulevard are the main cross streets most residents orient by. The older neighborhoods around the historic downtown core have homes from the 1950s through the 1970s with ranch-style construction and concrete slab patios that are natural candidates for enclosure work. The newer subdivisions on the east side of the city are where 1990s and 2000s tract homes sit, and those properties have their own profile - larger footprints, two-story layouts in some cases, and backyard slabs ready to be improved.
San Jacinto shares the valley floor with Hemet to the west - a neighboring city where the housing stock and climate conditions are closely parallel, and where we also work regularly. We additionally serve Fallbrook and the broader region, which means the same crew serves multiple markets without the unfamiliarity of a first-time visit.
We reply within 1 business day. Before the site visit, we ask about your existing patio, slab condition, and HOA rules - so we arrive ready to assess your specific property rather than gathering basic information on the first visit.
We visit, measure, check the slab and roofline, and review any zoning or HOA considerations for your address. You get a written proposal with a specific price and a complete scope of work. No price ranges - what we quote is the project cost.
We prepare and submit the building permit to the City of San Jacinto Building and Safety Division. We manage the review process and handle any comments from the plan checker. You do not need to coordinate with the city directly.
Foundation or slab work comes first, then framing, windows, roofing, and finishing. We schedule all city inspections through the build. You receive the signed final inspection card and closed permit when the project is complete.
We serve San Jacinto homeowners from the older downtown ranch neighborhoods to the newer east-side subdivisions. Request a free estimate and we will reply within 1 business day.
(951) 466-2667San Jacinto is a city of around 35,000 to 40,000 people in the southwestern Riverside County, sitting at the foot of the San Jacinto Mountains. The mountains rise dramatically to the east, giving the city a distinctive landscape and meaning homes here deal with wind, dust, and temperature swings that lower-elevation Inland Empire cities do not see to the same degree. The city is laid out with the historic downtown near the center, where older homes from the early and mid-20th century stand alongside small commercial blocks. Moving outward, the housing stock transitions into the ranch-style single-family homes that were built from the 1960s through the 1990s - stucco exterior, tile or composition roof, concrete slab foundation, two-car garage. These homes now range from 25 to 60 years old, putting them squarely at the age where outdoor structures and home systems need attention.
The community is anchored in part by Mt. San Jacinto College, whose main campus draws students and staff from across the valley. Most San Jacinto residents are homeowners rather than renters, and the city has attracted families looking for more affordable housing than coastal Southern California offers while still being within commuting distance of the greater Inland Empire job market. The western end of the valley connects directly to Hemet, where the property types and permit process are closely comparable. Drivers heading north connect quickly to Perris via the 74 - another city we serve regularly, where the housing stock shares many characteristics with what we see throughout San Jacinto.
Glass solarium installations that flood your home with natural light.
Learn MoreWe serve San Jacinto homeowners from the historic downtown neighborhoods to the newest east-side developments. Call us today or submit a request and we will follow up within 1 business day.