
Menifee Sunrooms & Patios serves Perris homeowners with patio enclosures, screen rooms, and custom sunroom additions - and we design every structure to handle the extreme summer heat and clay soil conditions specific to the Perris Valley.

Perris homes built in the 1990s and 2000s often have concrete slab patios with aging alumawood covers - an existing footprint that makes a patio enclosure the most straightforward path to a new finished room. See our full patio enclosures work and how we approach Perris slab conditions.
Perris evenings from September through November can be genuinely comfortable, but bugs and dust make outdoor sitting difficult. A screen room captures those windows of good weather without enclosing the space completely, and the lighter structure typically moves through the Perris permit process faster than a full glass enclosure.
Perris homes sit on large lots compared to denser suburban areas, which means there is often real room to add a sunroom without crowding the yard. Perris families who want more living space without moving find that a sunroom addition on an existing slab is a practical and cost-effective option.
Perris gets well over 100 degrees in July and dips near freezing on some winter nights. A fully climate-controlled four-season room with properly rated glass handles both ends of that range and gives Perris homeowners a comfortable room every month of the year.
A solid patio cover is the first step for any Perris outdoor project. The intense UV exposure in this area breaks down alumawood and fabric covers faster than in coastal markets - we spec materials and anchoring appropriate for Perris's heat and occasional high winds.
Perris homeowners with an existing patio slab often find that an enclosed patio room is the most direct way to gain living space. We assess the slab condition - especially for clay soil-related cracking - before recommending how to tie the new room into the foundation.
Perris is about 75 miles from the Pacific Ocean, which means it gets none of the marine layer cooling that takes the edge off summer heat in coastal cities. July temperatures regularly exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit, and that heat beats down on home exteriors, concrete surfaces, and any outdoor structure for months at a time. A sunroom or patio enclosure built without the right glass specification becomes unusable well before the Fourth of July - and a room that bakes its occupants is not a room anyone will use. Inland heat conditions like Perris experiences are simply not on the radar of contractors who work primarily in Los Angeles or San Diego.
The other critical factor in Perris is the soil. The Perris Valley sits on expansive clay soils that absorb moisture and swell in wet winters, then dry out and shrink in the heat. That expansion-contraction cycle stresses concrete slabs and attached structures continuously. Many homes in Perris built in the 1990s and 2000s already show cracking in their driveways and patio slabs from this movement. Attaching a new sunroom to a shifting slab without addressing the underlying condition is a shortcut that shows up in cracked glass panels and sticking doors within a few years. The California Geological Survey documents expansive soil hazards throughout this region, and we use that understanding on every Perris site assessment.
Our crew works throughout Perris regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Perris has a mix of older homes near downtown and along D Street - some dating back to the early 1900s - and newer tract construction in subdivisions on the north and west sides of the city. The older properties sometimes have unreinforced slab sections and layers of previous repairs, while the newer tract homes are straightforward stucco construction on modern slabs. We adjust our approach based on what the site actually shows us, not a standard template.
The city is well-known locally for Lake Perris State Recreation Area to the east - a landmark that most Perris residents use to orient the city's geography - and for Skydive Perris, which draws visitors from across the country. Ramona Expressway and the I-215 corridor are the main routes through the city, and we work in neighborhoods on both sides of those roads. Perris has grown significantly since 2000, and the newer subdivisions off Ramona Expressway follow the same stucco tract home pattern common throughout Riverside County.
We serve homeowners throughout this part of Riverside County, including neighboring Moreno Valley to the north. Homeowners in Sun City to the south also work with us regularly for projects on the older Del Webb-era homes in that community.
We reply within one business day. The first call covers what you want to use the space for, your rough budget, and what your existing patio or yard looks like - so we can point you toward the right structure before we visit.
We visit your property, examine the slab condition, check for clay soil cracking, and take measurements. We also talk through cost directly at this visit - no vague estimates, no surprises later - and confirm the permit requirements with the City of Perris Building Division.
We prepare a complete permit package - drawings, structural calculations, and energy documentation - and file it with the City of Perris. Review typically takes three to six weeks, and we build that period into your project schedule so it is not a surprise.
Construction runs two to four weeks for most Perris projects once permits are approved. A city inspector reviews the completed work before the job is officially closed - a routine step that confirms everything was built to code.
We serve Perris homeowners in neighborhoods throughout the city, from downtown to the newer subdivisions near Ramona Expressway. No pressure, just an honest conversation about what makes sense for your home.
(951) 593-1061Perris is a city in southwestern Riverside County with a population of over 80,000, having grown significantly from around 36,000 residents in 2000. The city sits in a broad valley surrounded by low hills and is located roughly 75 miles east of Los Angeles. The older core of the city, near downtown and the historic D Street corridor, has homes dating back to the early and mid-1900s. Newer subdivisions on the north and west sides - built mostly in the 1990s and 2000s - follow the standard Inland Empire pattern of single-story and two-story stucco homes on concrete slabs. Lake Perris State Recreation Area, a large reservoir and state park to the east of the city, is one of the most visited spots in the region. The City of Perris provides local permit and building resources for residents.
The city has also become a significant distribution and warehousing hub in the Inland Empire, drawing employment that has helped stabilize homeownership in Perris. Owner-occupied single-family homes make up a large share of the housing stock, and many of those homeowners are working families who invest in home improvements when they find a contractor they trust. Perris is geographically close to Moreno Valley to the north and Sun City to the south - two areas we serve regularly with the same approach to heat-resilient sunroom design.
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 older downtown homes to newer subdivisions near the I-215, we build sunrooms and patio enclosures suited to Perris conditions. Call or submit a request and we will respond within one business day.