
Your patio sits empty for half the year because of heat and bugs. We enclose it into a fully climate-controlled room - permitted, hurricane-rated, and built for Florida living.

Patio-to-sunroom conversion in Largo turns your existing concrete slab or screened porch into a fully enclosed, livable room - most projects take two to four weeks of active construction once Pinellas County permits are approved, with the full process from contract to move-in typically running eight to sixteen weeks.
If your lanai or patio sits empty from May through October because the heat makes it unbearable, a conversion changes that completely. PrimeLiving Largo Sunrooms handles patio-to-sunroom conversions throughout Largo, including the permit application, slab assessment, framing, windows, and all county inspections - so you have one point of contact from first call to final walkthrough.
Homeowners who also have an adjacent deck often combine projects. A deck-to-sunroom conversion handled alongside patio work can create a single larger room for a lower per-square-foot cost than building each space separately.
If you look at your patio or screened enclosure during a Largo summer and realize you have not stepped on it in months, the space is not working for you. Without climate control, a patio in this area is a seasonal room for about five months a year - at best.
Florida's thunderstorms are intense, and older screened rooms or patio covers develop leaks at roof connections and around window frames over time. Water stains, rust streaks, or soft spots in the ceiling are signs that repeated patch repairs are not solving the real problem.
If your patio is large enough to be a real room but you only use it to park patio furniture, it is not pulling its weight. A finished, climate-controlled conversion turns that dead space into a room your family reaches for every day - not just in November.
Florida's sandy soil shifts over time, and patio slabs poured decades ago sometimes crack or settle as a result. Left alone, those problems get worse. A conversion that addresses slab issues during the build solves the underlying problem while giving you a finished room.
Every conversion starts with an honest assessment of your existing slab. From there, the path splits based on what you want the finished room to do. Homeowners who want a room usable twelve months a year choose a fully insulated, four-season build connected to their home's cooling system - the most popular choice in Largo because of how long and intense the summer heat runs. For homeowners who want weather and bug protection with a lighter investment, our enclosed patio rooms cover that path without the full four-season price tag.
Homeowners whose existing patio connects to an adjacent deck can combine both spaces into one project. A deck-to-sunroom conversion handled at the same time as the patio work typically costs less per square foot than building each space as a separate project.
Homeowners who want a room comfortable in July and January - fully insulated, climate-controlled, and connected to the home's existing HVAC.
Homeowners who primarily want bug protection and rain cover, planning to use the space during Largo's cooler months rather than all year.
Homeowners with a screened lanai that already has a roof and frame, looking to add real windows and climate control to what is already standing.
Homeowners with both a slab patio and an adjacent deck who want to unify the two spaces into one larger finished room.
Largo sits in a designated high-wind zone on Florida's Gulf Coast, which means every window, door, and roof connection in your new sunroom must meet Florida's wind-resistance requirements. These are not suggestions - they are enforced through Pinellas County inspections. Materials that meet code here cost more than national pricing guides reflect, but they are what hold up when a Gulf storm rolls through. Any contractor who avoids mentioning permits or wind ratings is skipping steps that protect your home and your insurance coverage. Homeowners in Pinellas Park face the same requirements, and we handle conversions there as well.
A large share of Largo's housing stock was built between the 1960s and 1980s, which means many existing patios were poured to older standards that may not support an enclosed room. Sandy soil underneath those slabs can cause settling and cracking over the decades. Before any walls go up, we assess the slab honestly and tell you exactly what it needs - no surprises mid-project. We apply the same upfront assessment process for homeowners in Seminole, where the same older housing conditions are common.
We respond within 1 business day. A short conversation covers your patio's size, whether it is currently screened or open, and what you want the finished room to be used for. You do not need all the answers ready - the call just gets us started.
We visit your home to inspect the slab, measure the space, and check how the patio connects to your house. You receive a written estimate breaking down what is included - not a ballpark number over the phone.
Once you sign the contract, we submit the permit application to Pinellas County on your behalf. Review typically takes a few weeks. This is a good time to finalize window styles or flooring choices before construction begins.
Construction runs two to four weeks once the permit is approved. County inspectors sign off at required stages. We walk through the finished room with you and address anything that needs attention before we consider the job done.
Free on-site estimate. No obligation. We assess your slab and walk you through your options before anything is signed.
(727) 766-0157Many Largo patios were poured decades ago and may not support an enclosed room without reinforcement. We check the slab before giving you a price, so any work it needs is in your written estimate - not a surprise mid-project.
We file the permit application with Pinellas County on your behalf and are present for every required inspection. Your finished room comes with complete documentation - important when you refinance, file an insurance claim, or sell.
Every window and roof connection we install meets Florida's wind-resistance requirements for Pinellas County's high-wind zone. You can verify our contractor licensing through the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation at myfloridalicense.com.
We provide a written scope of work before any permit is filed. What is in that document is what gets built. Homeowners who have dealt with contractors who find surprises mid-project tell us this matters as much as anything else we do.
An honest slab assessment, full permit handling, and wind-rated materials are not extras - they are the baseline for doing this work correctly in Largo. Every conversion we complete is documented, inspected, and built to hold up when storm season arrives.
Convert an existing deck into a fully enclosed, climate-controlled sunroom using the structure you already have.
Learn MoreWeather and bug protection for homeowners who want a finished patio enclosure without a full four-season build.
Learn MorePinellas County permit slots fill up heading into peak season - lock in your start date now before your patio sits empty for another summer.