
SunCourtyard Temecula Sunrooms is a licensed sunroom contractor serving Temecula, CA, specializing in sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen rooms. We have been working in Temecula neighborhoods since 2024 and pull all permits directly through Riverside County Building and Safety.
Our crew serves every part of Temecula - from Redhawk and Wolf Creek to Crowne Hill and the wine country estates off Rancho California Road. We know local soil conditions, HOA requirements, and what glass specifications actually work in this heat.

Temecula homes built in the 1990s and 2000s often have a covered patio that gets too hot to use by noon. A properly built sunroom addition turns that underused space into a comfortable, fully enclosed room with climate control and permitted square footage.
See sunroom addition detailsWith summer highs above 95 degrees and cool winter evenings, a four season sunroom with insulated glass and a dedicated HVAC system is the only option that stays comfortable year-round in the Temecula Valley.
Many Temecula tract homes have a concrete slab patio that already has the footprint for an enclosure. Converting it adds a livable room without major excavation, and the existing slab often serves as the floor.
Screen rooms suit homeowners who want to stay in the open air while keeping insects and debris out - a practical choice for Temecula's mild spring and fall evenings when the temperature drops and the outdoors becomes pleasant again.
A solid patio cover is often the first step for Temecula homeowners who want shade now and plan to enclose the space later. We build covers that are structurally ready for a future enclosure so you are not starting over down the road.
Older Temecula sunrooms built in the early 2000s often have single-pane windows and inadequate insulation that make them unbearable in summer. A remodel with modern glazing and updated insulation can reclaim the room for daily use.
The Temecula Valley sits inland, well away from the coastal marine layer that moderates temperatures in San Diego. Summer afternoons here regularly hit 95 to 105 degrees, and that heat is the single biggest factor in how a sunroom should be designed. Glass with a low solar heat gain coefficient, properly sized ventilation, and an independent cooling circuit are not upgrades in Temecula - they are the baseline for a room you will actually use in July. A contractor unfamiliar with inland Southern California heat loads may underspec the glazing, and you will spend your summers avoiding the room you paid for.
The Temecula Valley also sits on expansive clay soils that swell with winter rain and shrink in dry summer heat. That cycle puts stress on any concrete slab or foundation. If a sunroom foundation is not engineered for local soil behavior, the connection to the main house can separate or crack within a few years. Beyond soil, most Temecula neighborhoods are master-planned HOA communities - Redhawk, Paloma del Sol, Wolf Creek, and Harveston all require written architectural committee approval before any exterior work begins. Managing both the county permit and the HOA timeline at the same time is part of what we handle on every project here.
Our crew works throughout Temecula regularly, pulling permits through Riverside County Building and Safety on De Portola Road and coordinating HOA submissions for communities managed by FirstService Residential, Keystone Pacific, and Action Property Management - the three management companies that handle most of the large HOA communities in this city. Knowing which companies require what documentation before a submittal, and how long their review cycles typically run, helps us set realistic timelines for every Temecula homeowner we work with.
Temecula is a city of distinct neighborhoods. Homes in Crowne Hill and Morgan Hill sit on elevated pads with sloped yards and hillside retaining walls, which affects how we plan foundation work and drainage. Flat-lot subdivisions near the Promenade Mall have different soil exposure profiles than the wine country properties along Rancho California Road, where larger lots and older construction sometimes require more preparation before a slab can support a new room. We factor those differences into every estimate.
Old Town Temecula and the surrounding older streets have a small number of properties with pre-1980 construction, which can have different framing and foundation considerations than the 1990s and 2000s tract homes that make up most of the city. Homeowners in neighboring Murrieta deal with very similar HOA and soil conditions, and we serve that city with the same crew and permit process. We also regularly work in Menifee to the north, where newer master-planned communities like Audie Murphy Ranch face the same clay-soil and HOA approval questions as Temecula.
We reply within 1 business day. On that first contact we ask about your space, how you plan to use the room, and whether you have an HOA - so when we come out, we are already prepared for your specific situation.
We visit your property, measure the space, check the existing slab or foundation, and note any HOA constraints. You receive a written proposal with a clear price and scope before any commitment. No vague estimates.
We submit the permit application to Riverside County Building and Safety and help you prepare your HOA architectural review package. Both processes run in parallel to minimize wait time. County review typically takes two to six weeks.
Foundation work comes first, then framing, windows, roofing, and finishing. We schedule all county inspections and keep you updated at each stage. The project ends with a final walkthrough and your permit close-out documents.
We serve all of Temecula, CA - from Redhawk and Wolf Creek to Crowne Hill and the wine country. Call us or fill out the form and we will respond within 1 business day with straight answers, no pressure.
(951) 466-2667Temecula is a city of about 110,000 residents in southwest Riverside County, incorporated in 1989 and built out primarily through the 1990s and 2000s. The result is a housing stock where most homes are now 20 to 35 years old - stucco-exterior, wood-frame construction with tile roofs, attached garages, and private yards. Neighborhoods like Redhawk, Harveston, Paloma del Sol, and Wolf Creek are large master-planned communities where HOA governance shapes every exterior project. On the hillier terrain of Crowne Hill and Morgan Hill, lots are larger and views are longer, but sloped yards and retaining walls add complexity to outdoor construction work.
The city is best known regionally for its wine country - more than 40 wineries line Rancho California Road and De Portola Road in the western and southern reaches of the valley, drawing millions of visitors each year to what the Temecula Valley Tourism marketing district promotes as a premier Southern California wine destination. Old Town Temecula, the historic downtown along Front Street, is the city's original core - with buildings dating to the late 1800s, it serves as a dining, shopping, and entertainment anchor. Temecula borders Murrieta to the north and is roughly 30 miles north of San Diego via Interstate 15. Wildomar lies just north of Murrieta, and our service area extends there as well - homeowners in Wildomar can reach us through the same contact form or phone number.
Glass solarium installations that flood your home with natural light.
Learn MoreCall SunCourtyard Temecula Sunrooms today for a free on-site estimate. We handle the permits, manage the HOA submission, and build sunrooms that hold up to Temecula summers for the long run.