SunGallery Menifee Sunrooms & Patios builds all season rooms, enclosed patios, and screen rooms throughout Hemet, CA, handling sunroom additions, patio covers, and four season sunrooms for homeowners across the San Jacinto Valley. We manage City of Hemet permits and respond within 1 business day.

Most Hemet homes are single-story ranch-style houses on slab foundations built between the 1950s and 1990s. The services below are matched to what these properties and the San Jacinto Valley climate actually require.
Hemet's inland climate swings from summer highs above 100 degrees Fahrenheit to winter nights that can drop below freezing - an all season room with insulated glass and climate control handles that full range and gives you a space that works in January and July.
Learn more about all season roomsFour season sunrooms are a strong fit for Hemet's older ranch-style homes, where the back of the house often opens onto a concrete patio - the sunroom creates a proper enclosed transition between the interior and the yard that works through every season.
Many Hemet homes from the 1970s and 1980s already have covered patio slabs, and enclosing that existing structure is a cost-effective way to add a new room - using the foundation that is already there and converting outdoor space into livable square footage.
A screen room extends outdoor living into Hemet's spring and fall seasons without the cost of full glass enclosure - keeping dust and wind-blown debris out while allowing air to flow freely during the cooler months of the year.
Hemet's sun intensity degrades unprotected outdoor spaces quickly - a patio cover provides essential shade that makes the back patio usable from morning through afternoon and protects any existing concrete work from accelerated UV degradation.
A three season sunroom is a practical option for Hemet homeowners who want to expand outdoor living without the cost of full insulation and climate control - suited for use from roughly September through May when the valley temperatures are manageable.
Hemet sits in the San Jacinto Valley at about 1,600 feet elevation, and that combination of altitude and inland location creates a climate that swings harder than most of coastal Southern California. Summer temperatures regularly exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit from June through September, putting sustained heat loads on any enclosed structure. Winters bring occasional nights below 32 degrees Fahrenheit - cold enough to freeze exposed pipes and stress roofing and glazing materials not designed for freeze-thaw conditions. A sunroom built for a moderate coastal climate will underperform in Hemet. Glass specification, insulation values, and climate control sizing all need to account for the full temperature range this valley sees.
The ground beneath Hemet homes adds a second consideration. The San Jacinto Valley sits on clay-heavy soils that expand in wet conditions and shrink in drought. Hemet gets very little rain from May through September, then can receive heavy storms in winter - that seasonal wet-dry cycle drives the soil movement that cracks concrete slabs, shifts foundations, and stresses the perimeter walls of any structure anchored to a slab. Most Hemet homes were built between the 1950s and 1990s, which means their original slabs are now 30 to 70 years old and may show the effects of decades of this movement. Assessing the existing slab before recommending an addition approach is not optional - it is the starting point for quoting the actual work.
Our crew works throughout Hemet regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom and patio enclosure work here. Permits for enclosed room additions are handled through the City of Hemet Building and Safety Division, and we prepare and manage all permit documentation on your behalf so review delays do not fall on you.
Hemet is a city of about 90,000 people centered in the San Jacinto Valley, with major corridors running along Florida Avenue and State Street connecting the older western neighborhoods to newer development toward the east side of town. Diamond Valley Lake sits just south of the city and is a landmark most Hemet residents know well. The housing stock ranges from postwar ranch homes in established neighborhoods to age-restricted manufactured housing communities that have specific construction and permitting considerations of their own.
We also regularly serve homeowners in nearby San Jacinto and Perris, so our crews are already active throughout the eastern Riverside County valley communities.
Reach us by phone or through the estimate form on this page. We respond within 1 business day to schedule a free on-site visit at your Hemet property. No commitment is required to get the estimate.
We visit your Hemet home, evaluate the existing patio or outdoor space, assess slab and soil conditions, and walk through size, glass, climate control, and budget options. We review current City of Hemet permit requirements at this visit so the timeline is clear before any cost is presented.
Once you approve the written proposal, we prepare and submit the City of Hemet building permit application on your behalf. We manage the review process and let you know when the permit is approved and construction can start.
We complete all framing, glass, climate control, and finish work to the approved plan and coordinate the city's final inspection. We walk through the completed room with you before the job is closed to confirm everything meets your expectations.
We serve Hemet and the San Jacinto Valley. Free on-site estimates. No obligation to book.
(951) 618-2116The City of Hemet's Building and Safety Division requires permits for any permanent sunroom or patio enclosure addition. We prepare and submit all documentation and manage the review process through to approved permit status. Homeowners in Hemet who try to pull permits without contractor assistance often run into California Title 24 energy code questions that slow the review down.
We specify low solar heat gain glass and properly sized mini-split systems on every Hemet project because the valley's summer temperatures demand it. A sunroom that overheats above 90 degrees Fahrenheit in July is a room nobody uses, and standard glass specifications written for coastal climates do not account for the heat load in an inland valley at 1,600 feet.
Hemet's clay soils move seasonally, and that movement can stress existing concrete slabs and affect how a new addition needs to be anchored. We assess slab condition and soil at the on-site visit before recommending an approach. If site preparation or slab repair is needed, it is included in the written proposal - not added later as a change order.
We work with homeowners throughout Hemet, from neighborhoods near Diamond Valley Lake to the older sections closer to Hemet Valley Mall. Hemet's housing stock includes single-family ranch homes, age-restricted communities, and manufactured housing. We assess each property on its own terms and provide a proposal that fits the actual structure and site.
Hemet homeowners get a contractor who has done the homework on this specific valley - the heat loads, the soil conditions, and the City of Hemet permit process. That preparation is what separates a sunroom that works year-round from one that overheats in summer or cracks at the slab joint after the first wet winter.
Hemet is a city of about 90,000 people in the San Jacinto Valley in Riverside County, roughly 30 miles from Palm Springs. The city grew through the postwar decades and saw a significant building boom in the 1970s and 1980s, which is when most of its housing stock was built. The typical Hemet home is a single-story ranch-style house on a lot of about 6,000 to 8,000 square feet, with a stucco exterior, a concrete slab foundation, and a covered back patio. The city has a large population of retirees and long-term residents, and a significant number of mobile home parks and age-restricted communities sit alongside traditional single-family neighborhoods. Hemet Valley Mall has long served as the main commercial anchor of the city, and the Ramona Outdoor Play, held each spring in a natural amphitheater in the hills above the city, is one of Hemet's most recognized cultural landmarks.
Diamond Valley Lake, located just south of Hemet, is the largest reservoir in Southern California and a well-known recreational destination for fishing, hiking, and cycling. The lake draws residents from across the valley and gives the area a natural landmark that most longtime Hemet homeowners reference when describing where they live. The city is relatively self-contained, with its own medical, retail, and service economy. Neighborhoods near historic downtown Hemet tend to have older homes with more deferred maintenance, while development on the east side of the city includes slightly newer construction from the 1990s and early 2000s. Nearby San Jacinto borders Hemet to the north and east, and many families in the valley move between the two cities for work, school, and services.
Call SunGallery today or submit the estimate form - we serve Hemet and the San Jacinto Valley and respond within 1 business day.