
Supreme Tulare Sunrooms & Patios builds four season sunrooms, patio enclosures, and custom sunroom additions for Visalia homeowners across every neighborhood in the city - and we have been doing it since 2019. Every estimate is free, on-site, and written with no obligation.

Visalia homeowners who want a room they can use in January fog and July heat need a four season sunroom with proper insulation and climate control. A well-built four season room handles the full range of Central Valley weather without turning into an oven in summer or a cold box in winter. To see how these rooms are designed and what goes into them, visit our four season sunrooms page.
Many Visalia homes, particularly those built between the 1950s and 1980s in the older central neighborhoods, have concrete patios that receive direct afternoon sun from the west. Enclosing that patio with aluminum framing and insulated panels gives you a shaded, protected room for under the cost of a full addition, and it converts an underused slab into livable square footage.
Visalia has a wide range of home styles, from craftsman bungalows near downtown to large two-story stucco homes in the newer north-side subdivisions. Custom sunrooms are designed from the start to match your specific floor plan, exterior finish, and how you plan to use the space, rather than fitting a standard prefab kit to your house.
Visalia evenings in late spring and early fall are genuinely pleasant once the heat breaks, and a screen room lets you take advantage of those hours without dealing with the insects that come with open outdoor spaces. Screen rooms are the entry-level option for expanded outdoor living and are typically installed in a week or less.
A full sunroom addition built on its own foundation is the right choice when you want a permanent room that adds significant square footage and integrates cleanly with your existing floor plan. In Visalia, where home values have been rising steadily, a well-built sunroom addition adds to the appraised value of your property while giving you usable space today.
Three season sunrooms suit Visalia well because the winters are mild enough that a non-climate-controlled room is still usable for much of the year. If your main priority is a comfortable morning room in spring and fall, a three-season sunroom gives you that at a lower cost than a fully insulated, climate-controlled addition.
Visalia sits at the center of Tulare County with a housing stock that ranges from craftsman bungalows built in the 1920s near downtown to large stucco subdivisions that went up in the 1990s and 2000s on the north and northwest sides of the city. Each era of construction comes with its own set of conditions. Older homes often have smaller patios with aging concrete that has been shifting in the clay soil for decades. Newer homes may have larger slabs in better condition, but they were built fast during housing booms and may lack the detail work that separates a good sunroom from a mediocre one.
The climate in Visalia is demanding in both directions. Summers push past 100 degrees for weeks at a time, and a sunroom that was not designed for that heat will become unusable by June. Winter brings tule fog that can blanket the city for weeks, creating persistent ground-level moisture that works into unsealed frames and poorly insulated panels. A sunroom that handles those two extremes - the heat of a Visalia August and the damp fog of a Visalia January - needs to be built with the right materials and the right attention to sealing, framing, and insulation. This is not the kind of project where a national chain with a standard product catalog will give you the best result.
Our crew works throughout Visalia regularly, pulling permits from the City of Visalia Development Services Department and working on properties across the city. We know the difference between a downtown bungalow with a narrow side yard and a north-side two-story with a large rear patio. Both call for different approaches, and we bring that familiarity to every estimate visit.
Visalia is a city we navigate well. The residential neighborhoods surrounding Mooney Boulevard, the older blocks near the Fox Theatre in downtown, the newer subdivisions to the north and northwest - we have worked in all of them. The clay soils that cause concrete to shift in older Visalia neighborhoods are a known variable we check for on every site visit, not something we discover after the job is done.
We also serve smaller communities throughout the region, including Exeter to the east and other communities across Tulare County. If you are just outside Visalia city limits or in an unincorporated area nearby, call us and we will confirm service to your location.
Call or fill out the form online. We respond within one business day to schedule your free on-site estimate. You do not need to have a design in mind - just a sense of the space you want to improve.
We come to your Visalia property, measure the space, review the existing slab or foundation, and walk through your options with you. We leave you with a written estimate and a clear explanation of what is included - no pressure and no obligation.
Once you approve the estimate, we apply for the required City of Visalia building permit and order materials. We keep you updated on timing. You do not need to manage any part of the permit process.
Our crew completes the project on the agreed schedule. We do a final walkthrough with you and address anything that needs adjustment before we close out. The permit inspection is scheduled and completed as part of the project.
We serve all of Visalia, CA and respond within one business day. On-site estimates are free, written, and come with no sales pressure.
(559) 837-6841Visalia is the county seat of Tulare County and, with about 145,000 residents, one of the larger cities in California's Central Valley. It has a genuine historic downtown with tree-lined streets, older commercial buildings, and the restored Fox Theatre, a 1930 movie palace that is one of the most recognizable landmarks in the city. Mooney Boulevard runs through the heart of the commercial corridor and serves as the main orientation point most residents use when describing where they live. Visalia also serves as the main gateway city for visitors heading east to Sequoia National Park, which sits about an hour's drive up the mountain.
Residential Visalia is a mix of eras. The neighborhoods closest to downtown include craftsman bungalows and older ranch homes built from the 1920s through the 1970s, many with mature trees and original concrete flatwork. The north and northwest sides of the city have seen the most new construction over the past 30 years, with large stucco subdivisions on modest lots that are now reaching the age where first-round maintenance and improvement work is coming due. We work throughout both parts of the city and in nearby communities, including Exeter to the east and the smaller communities throughout Tulare County.
We serve Visalia, CA and the surrounding Tulare County communities. Reach us by phone or message and we will respond within one business day.