Yorba Linda Sunrooms & Patios is a licensed sunroom contractor serving Anaheim, CA with sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and custom sunrooms. We work on homes throughout the city - from older ranch houses in central and west Anaheim to larger hillside properties in Anaheim Hills - and we understand how the building conditions, permitting process, and housing stock differ across Anaheim's neighborhoods.

Anaheim's postwar ranch homes were built on slabs with rear yards that get strong sun exposure - exactly the conditions that make a sunroom addition a practical choice. We assess your existing slab, tie the new structure into your roofline, and handle the full permit process with the City of Anaheim from start to finish.
Many Anaheim homes from the 1960s and 1970s have existing covered patios that are functional but not truly livable - too hot in summer, too exposed in a heavy rain year. Enclosing a patio with glass panels and a proper frame turns that underused space into a room you can actually use, without pouring a new foundation from scratch.
Anaheim covers 50 square miles and includes neighborhoods that look nothing alike - flat-lot ranch houses in the west, two-story hillside homes in Anaheim Hills, and everything in between. A custom sunroom is designed to fit your specific property, matching rooflines and exterior finishes rather than forcing a standard kit onto a house it was not made for.
Anaheim's summers push into the low-to-mid 90s, and a four season sunroom with properly specified glass keeps the space comfortable from January through October. For homeowners in Anaheim Hills who get more evening breeze, a fully insulated room lets you use the space as a real year-round living area without fighting the heat.
For Anaheim homeowners who want outdoor air without bugs or debris, a screen room gives you that open-air feeling while blocking what you don't want. It is a lower-cost entry point compared to a full glass enclosure, and it works well for the many months of the year when Anaheim's evenings are mild enough to enjoy with screens instead of glass.
Anaheim has a large stock of homes built in the 1970s and 1980s, some of which have older sunrooms or patio enclosures that were built with materials that have aged out. If your existing room leaks air, lets in too much heat, or simply looks dated, a remodel can bring it up to current standards without a full tear-down and rebuild.
Anaheim is a large, diverse city where the housing stock and site conditions change depending on which part of the city you are in. The older ranch homes in central and west Anaheim - most built between the 1950s and 1970s - sit on concrete slab foundations with stucco exteriors. They are well-suited to sunroom additions, but the age of those slabs means a contractor needs to assess whether the existing foundation is level and stable before quoting. Parts of the city also sit on clay-heavy soils that shift with the wet-dry cycle, which can cause poorly designed sunroom floors to crack within a few years if the foundation work is not done right.
Anaheim Hills, the hilly eastern section of the city, presents an entirely different set of conditions. Homes there are newer, larger, and often on sloped lots with retaining walls and drainage challenges. A flat-lot contractor who has not built on Anaheim Hills terrain before will underestimate what the site requires. Across the entire city, Anaheim's hot summers and the occasional heavy winter rain year mean glass selection and roof drainage design are not afterthoughts - they determine whether the room is comfortable and dry for the next 20 years.
Our crew works throughout Anaheim regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits from the City of Anaheim Building Division and know the review process and inspection requirements for residential additions. Getting the permit application right the first time keeps the project on schedule.
The city stretches from the high-traffic Resort District near Disneyland in the west out to the quieter hillside neighborhoods of Anaheim Hills in the east, passing Angel Stadium and the Platinum Triangle along the way. Each of those areas has a different housing character. The older stucco ranch homes on the west side need different site prep than the larger two-story properties on winding streets in Anaheim Hills. Knowing which part of Anaheim you are in before we arrive means we come prepared for what the site actually looks like.
Anaheim sits adjacent to Orange to the south and Buena Park to the northwest - both cities where we also work, so if you have family or neighbors in either area, we cover that work too.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form. We get back to you within 1 business day, ask a few quick questions about your home and what you have in mind, and schedule a time to come out and take a look. You do not need a finished plan before you call.
We visit your Anaheim home, walk the site, and look at the things that actually drive cost - your existing slab or foundation, lot slope, roofline, and how the sunroom will connect to your home. Most homeowners receive a written estimate within a week. No obligation to proceed.
Once you sign a contract, we submit the building permit application to the City of Anaheim. We handle all the paperwork and keep you updated on review status. City permit review typically runs four to eight weeks. Construction does not start until approvals are in hand.
With permits in hand, the build begins. Foundation prep, framing, glass installation, and interior finishes follow in order. City inspectors visit at required checkpoints - that is normal and confirms the work is being done correctly. At the end, we walk through the finished room with you before we close out the permit.
We serve Anaheim homeowners across every neighborhood with free on-site estimates. Call us or fill out the form and we will get back to you within 1 business day.
(657) 366-2795Anaheim is one of the largest cities in Orange County, with roughly 350,000 residents spread across about 50 square miles. Most people outside California know it as the home of Disneyland, which opened in the west part of the city in 1955, and Angel Stadium, home of the Los Angeles Angels since 1966. The Resort District and Platinum Triangle near the stadium make up the commercial core of the city. Residential neighborhoods begin just outside those areas, ranging from dense older blocks in central and west Anaheim to quieter streets in the eastern parts of the city.
The bulk of Anaheim's single-family housing stock was built between the late 1940s and the 1970s as part of large postwar tract developments. These are mostly single-story ranch homes with stucco exteriors on modest lots. The eastern section of the city, Anaheim Hills, was developed mostly from the 1970s through the 1990s and features larger two-story homes on hillside lots with tile roofs and views of the surrounding hills. We work on homes throughout both areas, and we also serve neighboring Orange to the south and Buena Park to the northwest.
Convert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
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Learn MoreWhether your home is in central Anaheim, out near Anaheim Hills, or anywhere in between, we come to your property, assess the site, and give you a written estimate. Call today or send a message to get started.