
Murrieta Sunrooms & Patios delivers licensed sunroom construction, custom enclosures, and patio-to-sunroom conversions throughout Temecula. We handle permits through the City of Temecula, navigate HOA approvals in planned communities, and design every room with the valley's hot, dry summers in mind.

Temecula homes range from flat-lot tract houses near the Promenade to hillside properties in Crowne Hill and Morgan Hill - and sunroom construction looks different on each. We design the foundation and framing to match your specific lot conditions, whether that means a standard slab or a stepped footing system for sloped terrain. If you are ready to add a permanent room, see how our sunroom construction process works.
A large share of Temecula homes in planned communities like Redhawk and Paloma del Sol have covered back patios that go unused from June through September because they offer no protection from the valley heat. Enclosing that existing slab - with screens, glass panels, or a fully glazed wall system - is one of the fastest ways to add usable square footage without a new foundation pour.
With triple-digit heat in summer and overnight temperatures that dip below freezing a few nights each winter, Temecula demands a room that works year-round. A four-season sunroom with full insulation, low-emissivity glass, and climate control gives you a space that is genuinely comfortable in every season - not just the three mild months when any patio is pleasant.
Properties in the Temecula wine country corridor along Rancho California Road and estates in De Luz have layouts and lot sizes that no catalog kit was designed for. We build custom sunrooms from scratch to fit your specific footprint, roofline, and HOA design requirements - so the finished room looks like it was part of the original architectural plan.
Temecula spring and fall evenings can be genuinely enjoyable outdoors, but insects and the occasional warm wind make an open patio less than ideal. A screen room installed on an existing slab gives you the open-air feeling with protection from bugs and debris - a practical and affordable first step for many homeowners here.
Temecula's HOA communities often approve a patio-to-sunroom conversion more readily than a ground-up addition because the footprint is already established. Converting your existing covered patio into an enclosed room typically costs less than starting from scratch and disrupts your yard and landscaping far less during construction.
Temecula was incorporated in 1989 and grew rapidly through the 1990s and early 2000s. The result is a city where most homes are now 20 to 30 years old - the age at which original covered patios, screen enclosures, and patio roofs reach the end of their useful life. Homeowners who bought into communities like Redhawk, Harveston, or Wolf Creek are increasingly looking to upgrade rather than repair aging outdoor structures, and demand for properly permitted sunroom projects has grown steadily as a result.
The Temecula Valley also presents geographic conditions that most out-of-area contractors are not equipped to handle. The expansive clay soils throughout the valley shift with each wet and dry cycle, putting stress on foundations that were not designed for that movement. Hillside lots in areas like Crowne Hill require stepped footings and engineered drainage solutions that flat-lot work does not. And roughly half the city's neighborhoods are under HOA oversight, which means every exterior project - including a sunroom - requires an architectural review before a permit application can even be filed. A contractor unfamiliar with these layers will get you stuck at the first hurdle.
Our crew works throughout Temecula regularly, and we submit permit applications directly to the City of Temecula Building and Safety Department for every project that requires one. We know what the plan check reviewers in this jurisdiction look for and how to submit a complete application that minimizes back-and-forth. That experience shortens the permit timeline, which matters when homeowners are trying to schedule around summer heat or a specific calendar deadline.
Temecula is a city of distinct neighborhoods spread across varying terrain. The established subdivisions around Paloma del Sol and Redhawk sit on relatively flat ground with consistent lot sizes, while Crowne Hill, Morgan Hill, and the wine country estates off Rancho California Road involve slopes, retaining walls, and larger footprints that require individualized design work. Near Old Town Temecula, properties occasionally have older construction or smaller lots that call for a different approach than the standard tract neighborhood job.
Temecula borders Wildomar to the north and Murrieta to the northeast. If you are in North Temecula near the Murrieta city line, or in South Temecula near the San Diego County border, we are familiar with both ends of the valley and serve the full city without geographic restrictions.
Call or fill out the form and we respond within one business day. We schedule a free on-site visit at a time that fits your schedule - no pressure, no commitment required.
We come to your home, assess the lot conditions and existing structures, and talk through your goals. You receive a written quote with itemized costs before any agreement is signed - no hidden fees.
We prepare and file all documentation for your HOA architectural review and for the City of Temecula building permit. We track both processes and do not schedule construction until every approval is confirmed.
Our crew builds on the agreed timeline. The city inspector signs off on the completed work, and we walk you through every detail of the finished room before the job is closed out.
We serve all of Temecula - from Redhawk and Paloma del Sol to the wine country estates and hillside neighborhoods in Crowne Hill. Call or fill out the form and we will reply within one business day.
(951) 574-0064Temecula is a city of about 110,000 people in Southwest Riverside County, known regionally for its wine country, its historic Old Town district along Front Street, and a landscape of distinct neighborhoods spread across hilly terrain. The residential character of the city is shaped by its master-planned communities - Redhawk, Paloma del Sol, Harveston, Wolf Creek, and Crowne Hill each have their own feel, their own HOA requirements, and their own property types. A large share of homes are single-family detached and owner-occupied, and most were built between 1990 and 2010. The Temecula Valley wine country along Rancho California Road adds a rural character on the western edge of the city, with larger properties and more custom construction.
Temecula sits in a valley bordered by the Santa Rosa Plateau and the Palomar Mountain range to the west and south. Neighboring Murrieta is directly to the north, and Wildomar lies to the northwest. The valley climate - long hot summers, mild winters, and expansive clay soils - creates the same set of challenges for outdoor structures that we encounter throughout the Southwest Riverside region, and every project we take on here is designed with those conditions in mind from the start.
Professional sunroom construction from foundation to finishing touches.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
Learn MoreEnclose your patio to create a private, weather-protected outdoor room.
Learn MoreFloor-to-ceiling glass solariums that flood your home with natural light.
Learn MoreProtect your outdoor space with a durable, attractive patio cover.
Learn MoreMurrieta Sunrooms & Patios handles permits, HOA submissions, and construction across all of Temecula. Contact us today and get your project on the schedule before summer arrives.