
Aluminum-framed enclosures with no-see-um mesh, permitted by Palm Beach County, and built to handle South Florida storm season.

Screened-in porch and screened deck installation in Royal Palm Beach means building an aluminum-framed enclosure with mesh panels over an existing slab or new deck structure, keeping insects out while letting air and light in, with most construction taking three to seven business days once Palm Beach County permits are approved.
Most homeowners in Royal Palm Beach come to us after spending another summer avoiding their backyard because of mosquitoes and no-see-ums - insects that are active here year-round, not just in warm months. A screened enclosure solves that at the source. The mesh panels stretch across a structural aluminum frame attached to your home or built as a freestanding structure. If you are also planning to add overhead protection, our covered decks and patio covers service can be combined with a screen enclosure in one permitted project.
Because Palm Beach County requires a building permit for any attached screened enclosure - and because a large share of Royal Palm Beach neighborhoods are HOA-governed - we treat permit filing and HOA coordination as standard steps on every project. A contractor who skips the permit leaves you without county-verified wind protection and can create serious complications when you sell your home.
If you step outside and immediately retreat because of mosquitoes or no-see-ums, a screened enclosure would change how you live in your home. In Royal Palm Beach, insect pressure is a year-round reality - not a seasonal inconvenience. A screened porch turns that unusable space into somewhere you actually want to spend time.
If your outdoor space faces west or southwest and becomes unbearable after noon, you are losing most of the usable hours in a day. A screened enclosure with a solid or insulated roof panel can dramatically reduce the heat that reaches the floor, and solar screen mesh can cut glare without blocking the breeze.
If your deck boards are soft, discolored, or pulling away from the frame, that is a sign the structure needs attention - and it may be the right time to combine a deck repair with a screened enclosure project. Doing both at once is almost always more cost-effective than doing them separately.
If you already have a screened porch but the screens are pulling away from the frame, have holes, or sag in the middle, insects are getting in and the structure is no longer doing its job. In Royal Palm Beach's climate, damaged panels deteriorate quickly once they start to fail - UV exposure and afternoon storms accelerate the damage.
We build screened enclosures over existing concrete slabs, over new elevated decks, around pool areas, and as screen rooms with solid insulated roofs. The right option depends on what you already have, what your budget allows, and how you plan to use the space. Every enclosure uses aluminum framing - it resists corrosion, holds up in South Florida's humidity, and can be engineered to meet Palm Beach County's wind load requirements. We walk through each option in plain terms at the estimate visit so you are not guessing which approach makes the most sense for your property.
One of the most common combinations we build is a screened deck - a new elevated deck structure with the enclosure designed and permitted as one unified project. This gives you a finished, protected outdoor room rather than two separate jobs done at different times. If you are also considering shade and rain protection beyond screens, pergola installation can serve as a structural base for a future screen enclosure, giving you the flexibility to expand the space later.
Best for homeowners who already have a concrete patio and want to enclose it without building new structural elements underneath.
Ideal when a new elevated deck is being built at the same time - the enclosure is designed and permitted as part of one unified project.
Suits homeowners who want to enclose the pool area for insect control and safety, using the same aluminum framing and mesh system.
The right choice when you want full weather protection as well as insect control - a solid panel or insulated roof makes the space usable in rain.
Royal Palm Beach sits in a subtropical climate where mosquitoes and no-see-ums are active for most of the year. Standard window screen mesh lets those tiny biting insects pass right through - so the mesh type you choose matters more here than in most other parts of the country. The University of Florida IFAS Extension publishes practical guidance on insect screening in Florida's climate, and we follow those recommendations on every project. Palm Beach County also falls in a high-wind zone, which means screened enclosures must be engineered to withstand storm forces - a requirement that protects your home and keeps your enclosure intact when the next tropical storm passes through. Homeowners in Wellington, FL and nearby Loxahatchee Groves, FL face the same insect pressure and wind requirements and regularly request the same enclosure solutions.
A large share of Royal Palm Beach neighborhoods are governed by homeowners associations, and most HOAs have rules about the appearance, color, and placement of screened enclosures. HOA approval is separate from the county building permit - you need both. The permit process through the Palm Beach County Building Division typically takes two to four weeks. If you want your enclosure ready before the June rainy season, starting the process in late winter or early spring gives you the most comfortable timeline.
We respond within 1 business day. We ask a few basic questions - the size of the space, whether you already have a deck or slab, and whether you are in an HOA - so we can show up with a realistic sense of what the project involves.
We come to your home, measure the space, and walk through your options in plain terms - screen mesh type, frame material, roof options, and whether your existing structure needs reinforcement. You leave with a written estimate and a realistic permit timeline.
We pull the Palm Beach County building permit on your behalf and help you prepare HOA submission drawings if your community requires them. Permit approval typically takes two to four weeks - we keep you updated throughout.
Most builds take three to seven business days once work begins. After the county inspection passes, we walk you through the finished enclosure, show you how the door latches and how to clean the screens, and leave the work area completely clean.
We respond within 1 business day. Written estimate, no obligation.
(561) 668-0908We file the Palm Beach County building permit on every screened enclosure job. Your structure is on record as legally installed - which matters for your homeowner's insurance coverage and when you go to sell your home.
A large share of Royal Palm Beach neighborhoods have HOA rules about enclosure appearance, color, and placement. We have helped homeowners across the village get designs approved without the back-and-forth that delays so many projects.
Standard screen mesh lets no-see-ums pass right through. We explain the difference between mesh types on every estimate - and we follow the University of Florida IFAS Extension's guidance on insect screening in subtropical climates so you actually get the bug protection you are paying for.
Your written estimate covers materials, framing, screen mesh, permits, and cleanup. We do not change that number unless you change the scope. In a market where permit timelines and material prices vary, a clear number you can plan around matters.
Every one of those points comes back to the same thing: a screened enclosure that actually does what it is supposed to do for years without creating headaches. The Florida Home Builders Association consistently points to quality framing, proper permits, and correct mesh selection as the factors that separate durable enclosures from ones that fail within a few years. We build to those standards on every job, regardless of size.
Add a solid or louvered roof structure over your outdoor space for rain and sun protection - works as a standalone project or combined with a screen enclosure.
Learn MoreA pergola defines your outdoor space with partial shade and can serve as the structural base for a future screen enclosure if your plans expand.
Learn MorePermit wait times in Palm Beach County run several weeks - the sooner you start, the sooner you are enjoying your new space.