
From the first site visit to the city final inspection, we handle every step of sunroom construction in Brea so you get a solid, permitted room - no surprises, no guesswork.

Sunroom construction in Brea builds a fully enclosed glass room attached to your home, managed from permit application and foundation work through framing, glass installation, and city final inspection, most projects complete three to five months from contract to move-in, with the permit review accounting for much of that time.
Most Brea homeowners are surprised to learn that the physical build is often the fastest part. What takes the most time is the paperwork - the city permit review and, if your neighborhood has one, your HOA's architectural approval. A contractor who handles both on your behalf keeps the project moving without you having to become an expert in Brea's planning process.
If you already have a sunroom that needs updating rather than building from scratch, our sunroom remodeling service may be a better fit. And if you are starting with an existing patio or deck, we can also handle a complete sunroom addition that ties into your current structure.
A plain concrete slab with a sliding door leading to it is one of the most natural starting points for sunroom construction. The door connection is already there, and the slab can sometimes be incorporated into the new room's foundation to reduce cost. If you walk past that door every day thinking "I should do something with this," the timing is usually right.
If your family has run out of room but you love your Brea neighborhood, sunroom construction adds a meaningful room without the cost and disruption of a full interior remodel. Many homeowners use the new space as a playroom, casual dining area, or home office. It takes pressure off the rest of the house without requiring you to leave it.
Santa Ana winds roll through Brea every fall and winter, bringing dry, gusty conditions that make time outside uncomfortable. A sunroom lets you watch the yard, enjoy the light, and stay connected to the outdoors without dealing with the wind and dry air. If you find yourself closing up the house every time the winds kick up, a sunroom gives you a middle option.
In Brea's Orange County market, a well-designed, permitted sunroom adds square footage and visual appeal that shows well in listing photos and in-person tours. If you are looking for a home improvement project that pays back at resale, a sunroom is worth evaluating - but only if it is built with permits and inspected by the city. Unpermitted additions are a common deal-killer in this market.
We manage the full construction process - from drawing up plans that satisfy the City of Brea's Building Safety Division to framing, glass installation, and interior finishing. Every project includes permit handling and city inspections at each required stage, so you are never left wondering whether the work meets code. For homeowners whose existing room needs updating rather than a full build, our sunroom remodeling service addresses that separately.
If you already have part of the infrastructure in place - an existing concrete slab, a framed patio cover, or a covered deck - a sunroom addition can sometimes reduce the overall cost by incorporating what is already there. During the estimate visit, we assess your existing structure and tell you honestly what can be reused and what needs to be replaced.
Best for homeowners who already have an existing sunroom or enclosed patio that needs structural updates, new glass, or a full interior refresh.
Best for homeowners with an existing patio slab or covered structure who want to convert it into a fully enclosed, weather-tight sunroom.
Brea's seismic zone means your sunroom's structure must meet California's earthquake safety requirements - not a formality, but a requirement that shapes how the foundation is built and how the frame ties into your existing home. The City of Brea's Building Safety Division reviews structural drawings before construction starts and inspects the work at key stages. A contractor who has built in Brea before knows exactly what those inspectors are looking for and how to keep the project on schedule. We also build throughout neighboring Fullerton, where the same permit review process applies.
A significant share of Brea's housing stock was built in the 1960s through 1980s, and homes from that era often have older electrical panels, original rooflines, and framing that does not always match modern dimensions. A contractor familiar with this era will assess your existing structure before finalizing a design and budget for a small contingency in case surprises turn up once the wall is opened. We serve Yorba Linda homeowners facing the same mix of older housing stock, active HOAs, and California seismic requirements.
We come to your home - usually within one business day of your call - to look at the space and discuss your goals. You do not need all the answers; this visit is about gathering information so we can give you a realistic number.
After the site visit, we deliver a written proposal covering room size, construction type, materials, and a total price - including any HOA approval steps needed before the permit process begins. Take your time reviewing it; we will answer every question before you sign.
We handle your HOA architectural review submission and submit the permit application to the City of Brea's Building Safety Division on your behalf. Plan check review typically takes several weeks - we keep you updated and let you know the moment permits are approved.
Foundation, framing, glass, and finishing run in sequence, with city inspections at required stages. Once the final inspection passes, we do a walkthrough with you, address any punch-list items, and hand over your permit and inspection records.
Free estimate. No obligation. Written proposal before anything is scheduled. We reply within one business day.
(657) 478-7348We submit to the City of Brea Building Safety Division and manage the HOA architectural review on your behalf. Permitted work is inspected by the city, which protects your investment and keeps your home's records clean - important in Orange County's active real estate market.
California requires sunroom additions to meet seismic safety requirements - we submit structural drawings for city review and build every frame accordingly. You can review the state's building standards at the California Building Standards Commission.
Brea summers regularly hit the mid-90s, and a sunroom without proper heat management will be unusable from June through September. We specify energy-efficient low-emissivity glass and design ventilation into every room so it stays comfortable the months you most want to use it.
We have navigated HOA architectural review committees throughout Brea's planned communities and know what those committees look for in a submittal package. That experience means fewer back-and-forth revision requests and a faster path to approval - which keeps your whole project timeline on track.
Handling permits, seismic compliance, heat management, and HOA coordination as one connected process - rather than leaving you to manage each piece - is what separates a smooth sunroom construction project from a frustrating one. That is how we approach every build in Brea.
Update an existing sunroom or enclosed patio with new glass, refreshed framing, or a complete interior overhaul.
Learn MoreConvert an existing patio slab or covered structure into a fully enclosed glass room tied into your home's foundation.
Learn MorePermit review takes time - the sooner your plans go into the city, the sooner you are enjoying the finished room.