
Ventura Sunrooms and Patios is a licensed sunroom contractor serving Ventura, CA, specializing in sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen rooms. We handle every permit through the City of Ventura Building and Safety Division, and we have been serving Ventura homeowners since 2015.

Ventura homes built in the 1950s and 1960s often have covered patios that sit unused through the marine layer months. A sunroom addition encloses that space into real living square footage, giving you a light-filled room that works with Ventura's coastal climate rather than fighting it.
Ventura's mild winters rarely push below 40 degrees, but the marine layer keeps mornings damp and cool well into spring. A fully insulated four-season sunroom with its own heating and cooling lets you use that space comfortably every month, not just in fair weather.
Many Ventura properties have concrete slabs or covered patios off the back of the house that are comfortable in theory but lose appeal the moment the ocean breeze picks up. Enclosing that patio with glass or screen panels converts a transitional space into a room you actually live in.
Ventura's outdoor-friendly climate means homeowners want fresh air without the bugs and debris that blow in off the coast. A screened room is one of the most cost-effective ways to get that, and it pairs well with existing patio slabs that are already in good condition.
Ventura's mix of craftsman bungalows, Spanish Colonial Revival homes, and mid-century ranches means one-size-fits-all sunroom kits often look out of place. A custom-designed sunroom is built around your home's existing roofline, materials, and proportions so the addition looks like it was always there.
Ventura's summer sun is intense even near the coast, and a properly installed patio cover can drop the temperature of your outdoor space by fifteen degrees or more. For homeowners not ready for a full enclosure, a permitted solid or open-beam cover is often the right first step.
Ventura sits directly on the Pacific coast, and that location shapes everything about how outdoor living structures behave here. Salt air works into metal frames, window seals, and hardware faster than homeowners expect - what holds up fine in Riverside may start showing corrosion within a couple of seasons near the Ventura Harbor or Pierpont Beach. A contractor who works here regularly knows to specify powder-coated aluminum, stainless steel fasteners, and low-e glass with coastal-rated seals, not because it looks better on a proposal but because it is what the environment demands.
The building stock adds another layer of complexity. A large share of Ventura homes were built between the 1940s and the 1980s, and homes that age often have older electrical panels, slabs that are too thin or unreinforced to serve as a sunroom foundation, and framing that does not meet current California seismic requirements at the connection points. California also sits in a significant seismic zone, and Ventura County is near several active fault systems - sunroom framing and attachment must meet state earthquake standards, which your city inspector will verify. Getting an accurate quote requires a contractor who will actually assess those existing conditions before naming a price, not one who estimates from a photo.
Our crew works throughout Ventura regularly, pulling permits through the City of Ventura Building and Safety Division on projects across Midtown, the Ondulando hills, and the beach-adjacent neighborhoods near Pierpont. The permit office knows us and we know their process - that matters when you are waiting for approval before work can legally begin. We have worked on craftsman bungalows near downtown Main Street, Spanish Colonial Revival homes with clay tile roofs, and hillside properties in the Foothill area where sloped lots require drainage planning before any foundation work starts.
Ventura is a city that runs from the historic San Buenaventura Mission on Main Street all the way out to the working marina at Ventura Harbor, and the housing stock changes character neighborhood by neighborhood. Homes near the water have had decades of salt air exposure that you can see in paint, hardware, and wood trim. Homes up in the hills have soil movement from clay and drainage concerns that affect what kind of foundation a sunroom addition needs. We also serve neighboring communities across Ventura County, including Oxnard and Camarillo, where many homeowners face similar coastal and mid-century housing challenges.
Reach out by phone or through the contact form and we will get back to you within one business day. We ask a few quick questions about your space so we can give you a useful first read on scope before the visit.
We visit your property to measure the space, check the existing slab or foundation, and assess any condition-specific factors like soil, coastal exposure, or HOA requirements. The estimate we give you after this visit is written and itemized - not a ballpark figure.
We submit your permit application to the City of Ventura and schedule construction to begin after approval. You do not need to be home for every phase, but we will tell you when a city inspection is scheduled so you can be available if you prefer.
Once construction is complete, the city inspector signs off on the finished room. We walk through the space with you, answer any questions, and hand over copies of all permit and inspection records - documents you will need when you eventually sell.
We serve homeowners across Ventura, CA with free on-site estimates and no-pressure quotes. Call or fill out the form and we will get back to you within one business day.
(805) 861-1219Ventura - officially the City of San Buenaventura - is a mid-sized coastal city of roughly 110,000 people on the Pacific coast of Ventura County. The city is anchored by its historic downtown along Main Street, where the San Buenaventura Mission, founded in 1782, is still standing. The downtown area and the surrounding Midtown neighborhoods have a dense mix of craftsman bungalows, Spanish Colonial Revival homes, and small commercial districts - most built between the 1920s and the 1960s. South of downtown, the Pierpont Beach neighborhood runs along the water with smaller beach cottages on tight lots. Up in the hills above the city, the Ondulando and Foothill areas have larger homes on sloped lots, many built in the 1960s and 1970s.
Ventura is the departure point for Channel Islands National Park, accessible by boat from the Ventura Harbor on the city's south side. The harbor area anchors a working marina and waterfront dining district that draws both locals and visitors. About half of Ventura's housing units are owner-occupied, which means homeowners here have a real stake in maintaining and improving properties that are worth well above the national average. Neighboring cities like Oxnard to the south and Ojai to the north are also within our regular service area.
Call us today or send a message and we will schedule your free on-site estimate. Ventura homeowners get written quotes, proper permits, and no-pressure service from start to finish.