
ViewPoint Moreno Valley Sunrooms builds patio-to-sunroom conversions, screen rooms, and custom sunroom additions for Perris homeowners, with licensed construction, permit handling, and free estimates answered within one business day.

Perris has a large share of single-family homes built in the 1990s and 2000s with concrete slab patios that sit unused most of the year because of the heat. Our patio-to-sunroom conversion service takes those existing slabs and turns them into enclosed, usable rooms - without tearing out your patio or starting from scratch.
Perris gets good weather for most of the year outside the peak summer months, and a screen room lets you take full advantage of spring and fall evenings without insects or dust. Screen rooms work especially well on the large backyard lots that are common in Perris subdivisions, giving you an outdoor-feel space at a lower cost than a fully enclosed sunroom.
With summer temperatures regularly topping 100 degrees and winter nights that can dip below freezing, Perris homeowners need a sunroom that handles both extremes. A four-season sunroom with insulated glass panels and a climate-control connection is the only version of a sunroom you can use comfortably every month of the year in this climate.
The stucco-sided tract homes throughout Perris typically have poured concrete back patios that are already in good shape as a foundation for an enclosure. A patio enclosure adds walls and a roof over your existing slab, giving you a weather-protected room that costs less than a full addition and can be built without major structural changes to the house.
Many Perris families bought homes in the 1990s and 2000s when neighborhoods were newer, and those homes are sized for smaller households. A permitted sunroom addition increases your usable square footage and adds value to your property without the disruption of a full interior remodel.
For Perris homeowners who want shade and weather protection without the commitment of a full enclosure, a patio cover is an effective first step. A solid or lattice patio cover reduces surface temperatures on your concrete slab and extends the usable season for your outdoor space, and it can be upgraded to a full enclosure later if your needs change.
Perris has grown quickly, and the housing stock reflects it. Most homes in the outer neighborhoods were built on concrete slabs between the 1990s and 2010s - stucco-sided, tile-roofed, and laid out on large lots with backyard patios that have been sitting in direct sun for twenty or thirty years. Those patios are one of the most common starting points for a sunroom conversion, but converting them correctly requires knowing how the local heat and clay soil affect the slab over time. A contractor who understands what to look for in a Perris slab will catch issues before they become expensive surprises during construction.
The climate in Perris is not forgiving of poorly planned additions. Summers regularly exceed 100 degrees and the intense UV exposure at this inland elevation breaks down materials faster than in coastal areas. A sunroom built without proper glazing and insulation will be unusable from June through September - which means you spent money on a room you avoid. Getting the glass specification right from the start is the most important decision in a Perris sunroom project, and it requires experience with the actual conditions here rather than a generic estimate template.
Our crew works throughout Perris regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The homes we see most often are the 1990s and 2000s tract builds on Ramona Expressway-area streets - stucco over wood frame, concrete tile roofs, and slab foundations that have been through twenty or more wet-dry cycles. We know where the slab edges tend to lift on these properties and what to check before we attach a new room.
Perris sits southeast of Lake Perris State Recreation Area and extends west toward the I-215 corridor. The newer subdivisions on the north and west sides of the city - the ones built in the 2000s - are where we get most of our calls, because the patios on those properties are starting to reach the age where a conversion makes both practical and financial sense. The older neighborhoods closer to downtown, near D Street and the historic core, have homes from the early and mid-1900s that require more evaluation before a room addition, but we've worked on those too.
We also serve the surrounding area, including Hemet to the southeast and Moreno Valley to the north. If your address is near the Perris city limits, call us and we will confirm your area is covered.
Call or submit the contact form with your address and a brief description of what you want to build. We respond within one business day to schedule a visit.
We visit your Perris property, inspect the existing slab or patio, check setback requirements, and provide a written, itemized estimate with no obligation. You get a clear number before any commitment.
After you approve the estimate, we handle the permit application with the City of Perris and schedule your build date. Permit review in Perris typically takes one to three weeks depending on project scope.
Our crew completes the build and passes all required city inspections. We do a final walkthrough with you, address any items you want adjusted, and consider the job done only when you are satisfied with the result.
We build patio-to-sunroom conversions, screen rooms, and custom additions for homeowners across Perris, CA. Free estimates, licensed work, and permit handling included.
Perris is a growing city in Riverside County, located about 20 miles southeast of Riverside along the I-215 corridor. The city has expanded significantly since the 1990s, with large single-family subdivisions spreading across the valley floor. Most of the residential neighborhoods are made up of stucco-sided tract homes on large lots, built in phases from the early 1990s through the mid-2000s. The older downtown area near D Street and the historic rail corridor has smaller, wood-framed homes from the early 1900s that have a different character from the newer outer neighborhoods. Perris is also home to Lake Perris State Recreation Area, a large regional park that draws visitors from across Riverside County year-round.
The city's housing market reflects its working-family character - most residents are homeowners who have lived in their properties for ten years or more. The combination of large lots, aging concrete slabs, and hot summers creates real demand for sunroom and patio enclosure work. Perris residents are typically practical about home improvements, and they want contractors who can give them a straight answer on cost and timeline. We also serve nearby Hemet to the east, where the housing stock and outdoor living conditions are similar to what we see in Perris.
Call us today or submit your details online - we reply within one business day with a free estimate and a clear plan for your home.