
SunPort Fullerton Sunrooms & Patios serves Anaheim homeowners with sunroom construction, patio enclosures, and four season rooms. We work across all of Anaheim - flat neighborhoods in the west, hillside properties in Anaheim Hills - and we have been doing it since 2025.

Anaheim has a wide range of housing - from 1950s-era tract homes in the west to newer two-story homes in Anaheim Hills - and the right sunroom construction approach depends entirely on what you are starting with. We assess your existing foundation, lot grade, and sun orientation before drawing a single line, so the finished room works with your home instead of against it.
Many Anaheim homes from the 1960s and 1970s have existing covered patios on concrete slabs. Enclosing that structure is one of the most efficient ways to gain a new room, because the roof framing and slab are already in place. We add walls, low-E glass panels, and doors to turn a covered patio into a true enclosed space at a lower cost than building from scratch.
Anaheim Hills homeowners in particular often want a room that functions year-round - cooler in summer evenings, warm enough in winter mornings. A four season sunroom with full insulation and a mini-split heating and cooling unit makes that possible without turning the room into a liability when temperatures climb into the 90s in July.
Anaheim's mild winters and long warm season make a three season room a practical fit for many homeowners who mainly want extra space from spring through fall. It is a lighter-weight project than a four season room and often costs significantly less, while still giving you a screened, weatherproof space you can furnish and use most of the year.
Central and west Anaheim neighborhoods near the flatlands can have persistent bug pressure during the warm months. A screened room lets air flow freely while keeping insects out entirely - and it is the fastest, most affordable path to adding usable outdoor living space. For families who spend their evenings outside, it often delivers the most value per dollar of any enclosure option.
Anaheim's abundant sunlight makes solariums a natural fit for homeowners who want to bring the outdoors in without compromise. A floor-to-ceiling glass solarium floods an interior space with natural light and works especially well on the east sides of Anaheim Hills properties, where morning sun is plentiful and direct afternoon heat from the west is less of a factor.
Anaheim is a geographically varied city. The flat, postwar tract neighborhoods in central and west Anaheim were built on concrete slab foundations in the 1950s and 1960s - homes that are now 60 to 70 years old, with original or near-original slabs that may have shifted over time. The hillside neighborhoods in Anaheim Hills present a completely different set of conditions: sloped lots, retaining walls, drainage grades, and soils that behave differently than the basin floor. A sunroom contractor who only works on flat lots is not fully prepared for Anaheim Hills, and one who has never encountered a 1960s slab is guessing at what they will find when they pull up the old concrete.
The climate compounds the challenge. Anaheim summers regularly push into the 90s and occasionally top 100 degrees, which means any sunroom that doesn't manage solar heat gain effectively will be unusable from late spring through early fall. Anaheim also sits in the path of Santa Ana winds each fall, and those gusts can test the seals and connections on any room addition. A contractor who has built in Anaheim knows how to spec glass, sealants, and framing connections for this specific environment - not just for a generic Southern California setting.
Our crew works throughout Anaheim regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits from the Anaheim Building Division and know the plan check process for room additions in this city. Anaheim is large - about 50 square miles - and the permit and inspection experience for a flat-lot ranch home on Ball Road is genuinely different from what you encounter on a sloped parcel in Anaheim Hills, where site-specific grading plans may be required.
We work on homes in all parts of the city - from the older neighborhoods near the Platinum Triangle and Angel Stadium to the winding residential streets in the hills east of the 241 freeway. The housing stock in west and central Anaheim is older and lower-profile - mostly single-story ranches with concrete slab foundations and attached garages. Anaheim Hills homes tend to be two-story, built on larger lots, and they require a different eye for how a sunroom addition integrates with the existing structure and the site's grade.
We also regularly serve homeowners in neighboring Fullerton to the north and Buena Park to the northwest. If your address sits near those boundaries, we cover your area as well.
You reach out and describe what you are hoping to build - rough size, how you plan to use the room, your part of Anaheim, and any timing concerns. We respond within one business day and set up a site visit at a time that works for your schedule.
We come to your property, measure the space, assess your foundation or slab, check sun orientation, and evaluate your site grade if you are in Anaheim Hills. You receive a written estimate with line items before any commitment is made - no vague "starting at" quotes. This is where we address any cost questions directly.
We handle the Anaheim Building Division permit submission and, if your community has an HOA, we manage the architectural review submission first. Plan check and approvals typically take four to eight weeks. We start this phase as early as possible after you sign so it does not compress your build timeline.
Once permits are issued, construction follows a clear sequence: site prep and foundation if needed, framing, glass and windows, systems, finishing. City inspectors check required stages throughout. When the work is done, we walk you through the room and hand over the final inspection paperwork before we leave.
We work across all of Anaheim - including Anaheim Hills. Call us or fill out the form and we will get back to you within one business day with next steps.
(657) 632-9118Anaheim is one of the largest cities in Orange County, with about 350,000 residents spread across roughly 50 square miles. Most people outside Southern California know Anaheim primarily because of Disneyland, which opened in the western part of the city in 1955 and remains the dominant landmark for the Resort District along Harbor Boulevard. But the residential Anaheim that homeowners live in is more varied than the tourist corridor suggests. Central and west Anaheim are made up largely of postwar tract neighborhoods - mostly single-story ranch homes on modest lots, built between the late 1940s and the 1970s, with stucco exteriors and concrete slab foundations. These homes are comfortable and well-established, but they are also reaching an age where exterior systems and structural elements need attention.
The eastern part of the city - Anaheim Hills - is a different character entirely. Developed mostly from the 1970s through the 1990s, Anaheim Hills has larger two-story homes on hillside lots with views, retaining walls, and winding streets far removed from the flat grid of the western neighborhoods. The Angel Stadium near the Platinum Triangle anchors the city's sports identity, and the area around it has seen significant new development in recent years. Homeowners across all parts of Anaheim share a real stake in protecting their properties - median home values are around $700,000 - which is why they tend to think carefully before choosing a contractor. Our neighboring service areas of Orange to the south and Buena Park to the northwest round out the area we cover in this part of Orange County.
Convert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
Learn MoreWhether your home is in west Anaheim or up in the hills, we are ready to assess your property and give you a written estimate at no cost. Call us or fill out the form today.