Edinburg Sunrooms & Patios has served Edinburg homeowners since 2018, building sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen rooms designed to hold up through Rio Grande Valley summers. Every project is permitted through the City of Edinburg and backed by a workmanship warranty.

Edinburg homes are on slab foundations that need careful preparation before any addition is built. Our sunroom addition process accounts for Hidalgo County clay soils and local permit requirements from the first day of planning. The result is a permitted, inspected room you can use every month of the year.
When Edinburg temperatures push past 100 degrees for weeks at a time, a room without climate control stops being usable. A four season sunroom with low-e glass and a dedicated mini-split unit stays comfortable even at the peak of a Rio Grande Valley summer, giving you real square footage you can count on twelve months a year.
Edinburg homeowners with covered concrete patios have a head start - a patio enclosure adds walls, screens, or glass panels to what is already there, creating a protected outdoor room without the cost of a full foundation pour. Mosquitoes near the resacas and irrigation canals are a real issue here, and an enclosed patio keeps them out.
Screen rooms are among the most practical additions for Edinburg homeowners who want to enjoy evening air without insects. The Valley's warm winters mean a screen room stays usable from October through April - a long, comfortable season that makes this one of the most-used outdoor spaces in South Texas homes.
Many Edinburg homeowners are adding home offices, hobby rooms, or extra living space for growing families. A custom sunroom can be designed around your specific lot layout, your HOA guidelines, and how you plan to use the space - not a standard kit that may not fit your home or the local climate.
A solid patio cover reduces the heat load on the back of your home and makes outdoor space usable during the shoulder seasons. In Edinburg, where the sun beats down from a wide sky for most of the year, a well-designed cover is a practical first step before a full enclosure if budget is a consideration.
Edinburg sits in the Rio Grande Valley, where summer temperatures regularly exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit and the sun is intense for the better part of nine months. That kind of heat means the glass, roofing panels, and framing materials in any outdoor addition need to be specifically rated for high-UV, high-temperature environments. A contractor who builds sunrooms in a milder climate and uses standard residential products here will leave you with a room that fades, warps, and fails long before it should. The February 2021 freeze was also a reminder that South Texas homes are not always built for cold snaps - any enclosed room addition needs to handle the occasional hard freeze, not just summer conditions.
The soil throughout Hidalgo County is heavy clay that expands when wet and shrinks when dry. That movement repeats with every rain event and every dry spell, and it puts real stress on any concrete slab that was not designed with it in mind. A sunroom addition built on a poorly prepared foundation in Edinburg will show cracks, gaps, and misaligned frames within a few years - not because the structure is bad, but because the ground underneath it moved. The City of Edinburg also requires building permits for any structural addition, and inspections are conducted at key project stages. A contractor who knows this process can navigate it without delays; one who does not can add weeks to your project timeline or leave you with unpermitted work that creates problems at resale.
Our crew works throughout Edinburg regularly, pulling permits from the city's Development Services department and working on homes across the full range of the city's housing stock - from the older neighborhoods close to downtown to the newer subdivisions on the north and west sides. Edinburg is the county seat of Hidalgo County, and its growth over the past decade has produced a wide mix of slab-on-grade homes that reflect different eras of construction and different foundation conditions.
We know the neighborhoods around the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley campus, the established streets near Edinburg Regional Medical Center, and the newer developments out toward the highway. Many of our Edinburg clients have homes with covered concrete patios that were built with the house but never enclosed - exactly the kind of starting point that makes a patio enclosure or screen room a straightforward project rather than a complicated one.
We also serve homeowners in nearby communities throughout the Valley. If you are in Pharr or further out in the Valley, the same local knowledge about soils, permits, and climate that guides our Edinburg work carries over to every project we take on in the region.
We respond within one business day. The initial conversation is about your home, how you want to use the space, and your general budget - no pressure, no sales pitch at this stage.
We visit your property, measure the space, assess the foundation and exterior wall, and walk through material and design options. You receive a written estimate before we leave - no open-ended verbal quotes.
We submit the permit application to the City of Edinburg on your behalf. Approval typically takes one to three weeks. Your construction start date is set once the permit is in hand, and we keep you updated throughout.
We complete the foundation, framing, roofing, glass, and finishing work in sequence. A city inspector signs off at the final stage. We do a walkthrough with you before we consider the job done.
We serve Edinburg, TX and the surrounding Rio Grande Valley. Free estimates, written quotes, and no pressure.
(956) 603-1615Edinburg is the county seat of Hidalgo County and one of the fastest-growing cities in Texas, with a population that has climbed well past 100,000. The city anchors the western side of the Rio Grande Valley metro area and is home to major institutions including the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley and Edinburg Regional Medical Center. Housing ranges from mid-century brick homes near downtown to large-lot subdivisions that have gone up in the past decade on the north and west sides of the city. The Edinburg Scenic Wetlands draws birdwatchers and families year-round and is a well-known landmark for longtime residents.
Most Edinburg homes are built on slab-on-grade foundations, which is standard across South Texas given the warm climate and clay-heavy soils. Stucco and brick veneer are the most common exterior finishes, and flat or low-slope roofs are typical on older properties. The city has seen heavy residential growth in recent years, with many newer subdivisions governed by homeowners associations that have specific rules about exterior additions. Homeowners in these areas should confirm HOA approval before starting any sunroom or enclosure project. We also work regularly in nearby communities - if you are outside Edinburg city limits and closer to Pharr, our team serves those areas with the same knowledge of local conditions and permit requirements.
Call us today or submit your project details online. We respond within one business day and serve all of Edinburg and Hidalgo County.