
Menifee Sunrooms & Patios builds sunroom additions, handles sunroom remodeling, and installs patio enclosures throughout Murrieta - and we bring direct experience with the city's HOA submission process, clay-soil conditions, and Murrieta's community development permit office.

Murrieta's 1990s and 2000s sunrooms are at the age where original glass seals fail, aluminum frames corrode, and the room becomes unusable in summer. Remodeling an existing enclosed space costs less than a full addition and can dramatically change how comfortable the room is year-round. See the full scope of our sunroom remodeling work.
Murrieta's single-family stucco homes are well-suited for sunroom additions - the construction is consistent across most subdivisions, and we know the floor plans common to builders like Shea and KB Home. That familiarity speeds up estimates and reduces surprises during foundation work.
Many Murrieta homes built in the early 2000s have open alumawood covers that provided shade but did nothing to extend the usable season into summer. Enclosing that existing cover with glass or screen panels creates a genuinely usable room from the structure that is already in place.
A four-season room in Murrieta's inland climate means it has to perform in 100-degree July heat, not just mild winter days. We build four-season rooms with low solar heat gain glass and cooling connections so the room is genuinely usable in every month of the year, not just nine of them.
Murrieta's HOA-governed neighborhoods have strict standards for exterior additions - roofline, stucco color, window trim, and materials all require matching the existing home. Custom sunroom design lets us meet those architectural review requirements precisely while giving homeowners the layout and size they actually want.
Murrieta evenings in spring and fall are comfortable, but the open space near the eastern hills brings insects and airborne debris during fire season. A screen room lets residents enjoy those pleasant evenings without the bugs or ash, and the lighter structure typically moves through the permit process faster than a full glass enclosure.
Murrieta sits along Interstate 15 in southwest Riverside County, far enough from the coast that the marine layer rarely reaches it. Summer temperatures regularly hit the high 90s and low 100s, and the heat lasts from June through September. A sunroom built without proper solar-rated glass becomes an oven by mid-morning in July - a real problem in a city where most homes were built by large tract developers using standard residential glass specifications that were never designed for sustained inland heat. The remodeling calls we get most often in Murrieta are from homeowners who had a sunroom added in the early 2000s that has been sitting unused every summer since.
Murrieta also has a high proportion of HOA-governed communities, and the Murrieta Community Development Department requires permits for any structural addition. Clay soils throughout the Riverside County region expand and contract seasonally - a foundation design that ignores that movement will show problems within a few years. Homes near the eastern hills face additional considerations during fire season, when ember protection and attic sealing matter for structures that sit near open land. Contractors who know this city work differently from those who do not.
Our crew works throughout Murrieta regularly, and we submit permits to Murrieta's Community Development Department at the city's Community Development Division as a routine part of every project. We know what a complete Murrieta permit package looks like and what the city's plan reviewers flag most often - which means fewer correction cycles and a faster path from application to approval.
Murrieta's neighborhoods each have their own character. Greer Ranch and Spencer's Crossing are primarily newer construction with tight HOA oversight. California Oaks and the neighborhoods near California Oaks Sports Park are slightly older and a mix of HOA and non-HOA homes. The areas near Murrieta Hot Springs Road represent some of the city's longer-established residential streets. We work in all of them and know which HOA boards require detailed rendering packets versus a simple materials callout.
Murrieta borders Temecula to the south, and homeowners in both cities often ask us about the differences in permitting and HOA governance between the two. We serve both - reach out whether you are in Murrieta or in nearby Temecula. We also regularly work north toward Menifee, where the permit process and property types are different again.
We respond within one business day. The first conversation covers what you want to use the room for, a rough idea of size, and your budget range. We ask about HOA status early so there are no surprises later in the process.
We visit your home, assess the existing patio or slab, check soil conditions along the foundation line, and take measurements. This is when we talk cost directly - no vague ranges, no numbers pulled out of the air. You leave the visit with a written proposal.
If your Murrieta community requires HOA approval, we prepare and submit the architectural review packet before touching the permit application. Once HOA approval is in hand, we submit to the Murrieta Community Development Department. Permit review typically takes three to six weeks.
Construction runs two to four weeks once permits are approved. A Murrieta building inspector reviews the work before final signoff - this is standard, confirms everything was done to code, and protects you if you ever sell the home.
We work throughout Murrieta - from Greer Ranch to the neighborhoods near California Oaks Sports Park. Tell us what you have in mind and we will come out, take a look, and give you a straight number.
(951) 593-1061Murrieta is one of the fastest-growing cities in California, with a population that surpassed 116,000 in the 2020 Census and has continued climbing since. The city takes its name from the natural hot springs that drew visitors to the area in the late 1800s, and the Murrieta Hot Springs Road corridor remains one of the city's main residential arteries. Most of Murrieta's housing stock was built between the early 1990s and late 2000s by large tract developers, giving the city a consistent built environment of stucco homes with concrete tile roofs across neighborhoods like Spencer's Crossing, Greer Ranch, and California Oaks. You can read more about the city's background on the Murrieta, California Wikipedia article.
The city borders Temecula to the south and Menifee to the north, and most residents use Interstate 15 daily to commute toward San Diego or the broader Inland Empire. Median home values are well above the national average, and the homeownership rate reflects a community where people invest in their properties for the long term. Nearby communities we serve include Temecula and Wildomar, both of which have similar building stock and climate conditions.
Stay cool and bug-free with a professionally installed screen room.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
Learn MoreTurn your deck into a weatherproof, year-round sunroom addition.
Learn MoreGlass solarium installations that flood your home with natural light.
Learn MoreDurable patio covers that provide shade and protection year-round.
Learn MoreFrom Greer Ranch to the neighborhoods off the I-15 corridor, we build and remodel sunrooms for Murrieta homeowners who want more from their home. Call or submit a request and we will be in touch within one business day.