Edinburg Sunrooms & Patios has served the Rio Grande Valley since 2018, building custom sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen rooms on Mission homes of every age and style. Every project is permitted through the City of Mission and backed by a workmanship warranty.

Mission homes range from older brick houses near downtown to newer stucco-finish subdivisions on the north side - each with different lot layouts, HOA rules, and sun exposure. Our custom sunroom process is designed around your specific home, not a standard kit that may not fit the footprint or survive a Rio Grande Valley summer.
Many Mission homes were built with covered concrete patios that were never enclosed. A patio enclosure adds walls, screens, or glass panels to what is already there, turning an outdoor slab into a usable room without a full foundation pour. Mosquitoes near the Rio Grande and local irrigation canals make an enclosed patio especially practical here.
Mission's mild winters make screen rooms usable from October well into April, which is a long, comfortable outdoor season that few other Texas cities can match. A screened room keeps insects out while letting evening breezes through - something Mission homeowners near Bentsen Road and the river enjoy every cooler season.
Temperatures in Mission exceed 100 degrees for weeks at a stretch in summer, and a room without dedicated climate control simply stops being usable. A four season sunroom with low-e glass and a mini-split unit holds a comfortable temperature year-round - including the occasional hard freeze that Mission is not built for but does sometimes face.
A sunroom addition built onto a Mission home needs to account for the expansive clay soils throughout Hidalgo County - soils that swell and shrink with every wet and dry season. Proper foundation preparation from the start prevents the cracks and gaps that appear when this step is skipped.
A solid patio cover cuts the heat load on the back of a Mission home and makes outdoor space livable through the shoulder seasons of spring and fall. In a city where the sun is intense from March through October, a patio cover is often the practical first step before a full enclosure.
Mission sits in one of the hottest corridors of the continental United States, with summer temperatures that regularly top 100 degrees Fahrenheit and a sun intensity that degrades ordinary building materials faster than manufacturers' ratings account for. Roofing panels, glass units, and exterior caulk installed here without UV-rated specs will crack, discolor, and fail well ahead of schedule. The city's growth over the past two decades has also produced a mix of housing ages - older downtown properties from the 1950s and 1970s built with different structural conventions than the post-2000 subdivisions spreading northward. A contractor who has worked across both types understands what each needs.
The soil throughout Hidalgo County is heavy clay that expands with rain and contracts in dry weather, cycling repeatedly through every season. Nearly every Mission home sits on a slab-on-grade foundation, and that soil movement is one of the leading causes of cracked driveways, uneven floors, and gaps at the base of room additions. Any enclosed room built here without proper foundation preparation will show those signs within a few years. Flash flooding is also a real concern - Mission's flat lots and clay soils mean standing water lingers near foundations after storms, and an enclosure that is not properly detailed at the base will let that moisture in.
Our crew works throughout Mission regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits from the City of Mission and have worked on homes from the older streets near Conway Avenue to the newer subdivisions going up on the north side of the city. Mission is known as the home of the Texas Ruby Red Grapefruit, and many older residential lots still have citrus trees in the yard - a detail that tells you a lot about how these properties were originally laid out and how they have settled over time.
We know the neighborhoods near Bentsen-Rio Grande Valley State Park, the established streets closer to the Mission Civic Center, and the growth areas out along Bentsen Road and US-83. Most homes we work on in Mission have slab foundations and stucco or brick exteriors - materials that hold up to the climate but need the right installation methods when you are attaching a new structure to them.
We also serve homeowners across the Valley. Clients in nearby McAllen face the same soil conditions and permitting requirements, and the same care we bring to Mission projects carries over there. If you are just east of Mission in Edinburg, we work there regularly as well.
We respond within one business day. The first conversation covers how you want to use the space, your home's layout, and your general budget - no sales pressure at this stage.
We visit your Mission property, measure the space, and assess the existing foundation and wall conditions. You get a written estimate before we leave - no vague verbal quotes that change later.
We submit the permit application to the City of Mission on your behalf. Approval typically takes one to three weeks. Your construction start date is confirmed once the permit is in hand.
We complete the work according to the permit drawings, coordinate city inspections at required stages, and walk through the finished room with you before we consider the job done.
We serve Mission, TX homeowners with permitted sunroom additions and patio enclosures. Call or submit your details and we will respond within one business day.
(956) 603-1615Mission is a city of around 84,000 people in Hidalgo County, situated just north of the Rio Grande in the heart of the Rio Grande Valley. The city is part of the McAllen-Edinburg-Mission metro area and has grown steadily for decades, producing a housing stock that spans multiple eras - from modest mid-century homes near the original downtown core to large-lot subdivisions still being developed on the north and west edges of the city. The older neighborhoods near Conway Avenue and the city center have a different character than the newer communities near Bentsen Road, and both types see consistent demand for home improvement work. You can read more about the city's history and demographics on the Mission, Texas Wikipedia page.
Mission calls itself the Home of the Texas Ruby Red Grapefruit and hosts the annual Texas Citrus Fiesta each January, one of the longest-running festivals in the Valley. The city is also home to Bentsen-Rio Grande Valley State Park, a world-renowned birdwatching destination that draws visitors from across the country every winter. Most of the residential housing stock is single-family detached homes, and owner-occupancy rates are high - which means most homeowners here have a long-term stake in keeping their properties in good shape. Neighboring cities like Palmview and McAllen share Mission's climate and building conditions, and homeowners throughout this corridor have similar needs when it comes to sunrooms and outdoor enclosures.
Call us today or submit your details online. We respond within one business day and serve all of Mission and the surrounding Rio Grande Valley.