
Stop letting bugs, dust, and Inland Empire wind drive you back inside - a properly built screen room turns your patio into a space you can actually use, evening after evening.

Screen room installation in Perris means building an aluminum-framed, screen-enclosed structure on your existing patio slab, fully permitted through the city, with most projects completing construction in two to five days once approvals are in hand.
A screen room is not a sunroom - it uses mesh panels instead of glass, so the space stays open to outdoor air while keeping bugs, dust, and debris outside. That makes it a natural fit for Perris evenings, which cool down noticeably compared to the coast and are genuinely pleasant for much of the year. The trade-off is that a screen room is not climate-controlled, so it is best used in the cooler months and evenings rather than during peak summer heat.
If you want a fully enclosed, year-round space with air conditioning, our patio-to-sunroom conversion service is a stronger fit. If you already have a covered patio and are mainly looking for bug and dust control at a lower price point, a screen room is likely the right call. Our patio enclosures service offers a middle ground between the two.
If you end up going inside after a few minutes because of flies, gnats, or the gritty dust that blows through the Inland Empire on dry, windy days, that is the clearest sign a screen room would change how you use your patio. A screen room does not eliminate the outdoors - it filters out the parts that drive you back inside.
West- and south-facing Perris patios take the full force of afternoon sun, and without shade, the surface temperature of an exposed concrete slab can be brutal. A screen room with a solid or insulated roof panel adds shade that makes the space usable for several more hours each day during the spring and fall months.
If your aluminum patio cover is faded, bent, or leaking at the seams, replacing it is a natural moment to consider upgrading to a full screen room instead. The structural work involved in replacing a cover overlaps with what is needed for a screen room, and the incremental cost of going further is often smaller than homeowners expect.
A screen room gives children and dogs a safe outdoor area that is enclosed on all sides with a latching door. In Perris neighborhoods where coyotes and other wildlife occasionally appear near residential areas, a fully enclosed outdoor space adds a layer of security that an open patio cannot provide.
We handle the full installation from permit application through the city's final inspection. That includes assessing your existing slab, anchoring the aluminum frame, installing the roof system, tensioning the screen panels, and hanging and aligning the screen door. We pull the permit from the City of Perris Building and Safety Division before any work begins - this is required for any attached structure, and skipping it creates real problems when you sell. Our patio-to-sunroom conversion service is an option if you decide you want a fully enclosed, climate-controlled space rather than a screen room.
Every project starts with a written estimate that itemizes the permit fee, any concrete work needed, materials, labor, and cleanup - so the number you see upfront is the number on the final invoice. If your community has an HOA, we prepare the architectural review submission and submit it at the same time as the city permit so neither process holds up the other. Our patio enclosures service is worth reviewing if you want solid walls rather than screen panels but a similar budget range.
Best for homeowners on an existing slab who want bug-free outdoor living at a straightforward price, with standard fiberglass screen mesh and a screened or solid roof panel.
Best for homeowners who want shade and rain protection alongside bug control - the solid roof extends usable hours on hot afternoons and keeps the space dry during winter storms.
Best for homeowners on exposed lots or in areas that regularly see strong Santa Ana wind events, with upgraded frame anchoring and heavier screen mesh rated for high-wind conditions.
Best for homeowners starting from bare dirt or a compromised existing slab, combining a new pour with the screen room installation so the entire project is completed in one mobilization.
Two conditions make screen room installation in Perris different from most other markets. First, the Santa Ana winds. These wind events hit the Inland Empire every fall and winter with gusts that can exceed 50 miles per hour, and a screen room that is not anchored and tensioned with those conditions in mind will not hold up. The frame connection to your slab and the way screen panels are secured at the edges matter more here than in most of California. Second, the clay-heavy soils common throughout the Perris Valley mean existing patio slabs shift and crack over time. Building a screen room on a compromised slab leads to frames that rack out of square, doors that stick, and panels that pull loose - problems that could have been caught with a proper slab assessment at the estimate stage.
We install screen rooms throughout the area. Homeowners in Lake Elsinore often have lakeside lots with specific HOA rules about structure appearance and materials. Homeowners in Murrieta tend to be in newer planned communities where the architectural review process is part of every exterior project. We handle both and we start that process before any work begins.
Call or submit a contact form and we will respond within one business day. That first conversation is a short one - you describe the space and how you want to use it, and we schedule a site visit from there.
We visit your home to measure the space, check the condition of your existing slab, and assess where the frame will anchor to your home's exterior wall. If the slab has issues that need addressing, we note them in the written estimate so there are no surprises mid-project.
Once you sign the contract, we submit the building permit application to the City of Perris. If your community has an HOA, we prepare that submission at the same time. Permit review typically takes one to three weeks - no physical work begins until those approvals are in hand.
The crew installs the frame, roof, and screen panels over two to five days. A city inspector visits after completion and we do a final walkthrough with you to confirm everything is aligned and functioning correctly before we consider the job closed.
We reply within one business day and your free estimate comes with no obligation.
(951) 564-0336We anchor every frame to handle the wind events this part of Riverside County actually sees. The screen panel tensioning and edge fastening on our installations are designed for the Inland Empire's conditions, not for a generic Southern California climate. Your room should look and function the same after the first big wind season as it did when it was installed.
Every screen room we build goes through the City of Perris permit and inspection process from start to finish. You receive the completed permit documentation when the project closes. A permitted structure is a documented asset, not a liability, when you sell or refinance. California Contractors State License Board licensing requirements apply to all structural work we perform.
Perris clay soils cause slab movement, and a compromised slab is the most common cause of screen room problems down the road - doors that stick, panels that pull loose, frames that rack out of square. We check the slab during the estimate visit and tell you what we find before you sign anything.
The estimate we give you covers the permit fee, concrete work if needed, materials, labor, and site cleanup. The number on the final invoice matches the number you approved before work started. The National Association of the Remodeling Industry recommends itemized written contracts for exactly this reason - so homeowners can compare proposals and know what they are agreeing to.
The combination of wind-rated construction, permitted work, and a final cost that matches the estimate is what sets a well-built Perris screen room apart from a job that looks fine on installation day but creates problems within a season or two.
If you want a fully climate-controlled room rather than an open-air screen enclosure, a patio-to-sunroom conversion gives you year-round comfort from the same starting point.
Learn MorePatio enclosures use solid or glass panels instead of screen mesh - a good middle ground if you want bug control and weather protection without a full sunroom build.
Learn MoreSpring and fall installation slots fill up quickly - reach out today and we will lock in your start date before the calendar gets away from you.