
Beaumont Sunrooms & Patios builds sunroom additions, four season rooms, and patio enclosures across Beaumont. We handle every permit with the city and design every room for Southeast Texas heat and humidity.

Most Beaumont homes were built with back patios that sit unused for five or six months of the year because of the heat and humidity. A sunroom addition turns that dead space into a room you can actually use, with proper insulation, low-E glass, and air conditioning built in from the start. We design every addition to handle Beaumont summers, not just the mild months.
Beaumont's long, hot summers mean a three-season room is comfortable only a fraction of the year. A fully insulated four season room with a dedicated HVAC connection keeps the space usable whether it's 95 degrees in August or the rare freezing night in January. This is the most popular build type we do for Beaumont homeowners who want a room they'll actually use every day.
If you have an existing covered patio, enclosing it is one of the most cost-effective ways to gain protected indoor-outdoor living space in Beaumont. We assess the existing roof and slab to see what can be used and design the enclosure around your current structure. Screened and glass panel options are both available depending on how much weather protection you need.
Beaumont's warm spring and fall evenings are ideal for a screen room, which keeps out mosquitoes and insects while letting in the breeze. Screen rooms are the more affordable option when full weatherproofing is not the goal, and they can often be built faster than an enclosed glass room. They work particularly well on properties where the primary concern is pest control rather than temperature control.
Older sunrooms in Beaumont often have single-pane windows, failing seals, and no real air conditioning connection - all of which make them miserable in summer. We update existing rooms with modern low-E glass, new weatherstripping, and HVAC integration to bring them up to a standard where they're actually comfortable. Many homeowners are surprised how much better an old room performs after a focused remodel.
Not every home in Beaumont has a standard rectangular patio footprint. We work through the design phase with you to fit the room to your property - whether that means working around a mature tree, accommodating a roofline with an unusual pitch, or matching the brick exterior of an older Calder Place home. Custom design means the room looks like it was always part of the house.
Beaumont's climate is genuinely different from most of Texas. The city sits in one of the most humid regions in the country, with summer temperatures regularly exceeding 95 degrees and heat indexes that push well past 100. Add in an average of about 55 inches of rain per year and regular Gulf Coast tropical storm activity, and you have conditions that will stress-test any sunroom that was not designed with this environment in mind. A room built for a milder climate will be uncomfortable, leaky, or structurally compromised within a few years of Southeast Texas weather.
The soil under Beaumont homes adds another layer of complexity. Jefferson County is known for its heavy, expansive clay that swells with winter rains and shrinks during dry summer stretches. This constant movement cracks concrete, shifts slabs, and causes sticking doors across the city - we see the results on almost every site assessment we do. Any sunroom built here needs a foundation that accounts for this movement, whether that means reinforcing an existing slab, replacing it, or engineering the new footing around it. Contractors who do not assess the slab first are setting their customers up for repairs within the first few years.
Our crew has been pulling permits with the City of Beaumont Development Services department since 2018, and we know the review timelines, the inspection stages, and the requirements that apply to sunroom additions in this city. We handle the permit application on every job so you never have to visit city hall yourself.
The homes we work on in Beaumont range from the historic brick bungalows in the Calder Place neighborhood near downtown to the newer builds in subdivisions on the west side of the city off Highway 105. We've worked near Tyrrell Park, on streets within a few miles of Ford Park, and in older neighborhoods where the homes date to the 1940s and 1950s. Each part of the city has its own building stock and its own challenges - older homes often need more slab prep, while newer builds sometimes have HOA rules that affect what can be built and where.
Our neighboring service area in Lumberton, TX north of Beaumont has similar soil and storm exposure, and we work across both communities regularly. If you're in Beaumont but close to the city's outer edges, we serve your area without any additional travel charge.
Reach out by phone or through the contact form and we respond within one business day. We ask a few basic questions about your space and goals so we can make the site visit as useful as possible.
We visit your property, measure the space, assess your existing slab, and check the exterior wall connection point. Our written estimate is itemized and includes materials, labor, permits, and any foundation prep - no vague lump sums.
We submit the permit application to Beaumont Development Services and finalize design details while the city reviews it, usually two to four weeks. Construction begins only after the permit is in hand.
Our crew completes the build in stages, with city inspections at the foundation and framing phases. After the final walkthrough with you, we leave your property clean and give you a copy of all inspection records.
No pressure, no obligation. We give you a written estimate after one site visit and you decide from there. Serving Beaumont and Jefferson County since 2018.
(409) 240-0365Beaumont is the largest city in Jefferson County and the anchor of the Beaumont-Port Arthur metro area, with a population of roughly 113,000 residents. It sits about 85 miles east of Houston on Interstate 10, surrounded by the industrial refinery corridor that has defined Southeast Texas since the Spindletop oil discovery in 1901. The city's neighborhoods range from the historic streets of Calder Place and Old Town near downtown to the newer subdivisions that have grown along Phelan Boulevard and Highway 105 on the west side. Beaumont's housing stock skews older, with a large share of homes built between the 1940s and 1970s - a building era that comes with its own set of maintenance realities in a Gulf Coast climate.
Community anchors include Tyrrell Park and the Beaumont Botanical Gardens on the south side, Ford Park on the east side, and Lamar University near the central neighborhoods. Beaumont homeowners tend to stay in their homes for a long time - homeownership rates are above 55 percent - and they invest in their properties. Our work also takes us regularly into Port Arthur to the south, which shares Beaumont's climate and many of the same building stock characteristics.
Keep bugs out while enjoying fresh air with a quality screen room.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
Learn MoreTurn your deck into a weather-protected sunroom you can use year-round.
Learn MoreDurable patio covers that provide shade and protect your outdoor area.
Learn MoreWe respond within one business day and visit your property before we quote anything. Call now or submit the contact form to get started.