Mission Sunrooms & Patios serves Edinburg homeowners with four season sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen rooms built to handle the Valley heat. We have been working in Hidalgo County since 2017, we reply within one business day, and every estimate is free and written.

Edinburg summers push past 100 degrees Fahrenheit for weeks at a time, and a standard three-season room simply cannot keep up. A four season sunroom with insulated low-E glass and a dedicated mini-split system gives you a room that is comfortable whether it is July or January, without relying on your main HVAC to carry the load.
Many Edinburg homes, especially those built in the 1990s and 2000s, have covered concrete patios that owners want to turn into livable space. Enclosing an existing covered patio costs less than building from scratch because the roof and slab are already in place, and it adds protected square footage that works through most of the year.
Insects are a persistent problem in Edinburg, especially during wet months when standing water breeds mosquitoes near drainage channels and low-lying yards. A screen room lets residents enjoy the outdoor air in the evening without the bugs, and it costs a fraction of a fully glazed sunroom.
Edinburg has a varied housing stock, from older stucco homes near downtown and the UTRGV campus to newer two-car-garage subdivisions on the north side of the city. A custom sunroom is designed around the specific roofline, exterior finish, and lot size of your property rather than forcing a standard kit to fit where it does not belong.
An all season room is the practical choice for Edinburg homeowners who want usable space throughout the year without committing to a full sunroom budget. These rooms use thermally broken frames and insulated panels that keep heat out in summer and hold warmth during the occasional hard freeze the Valley does experience.
Edinburg gets over 230 sunny days a year, and an uncovered patio is simply not usable for most of the day from May through September. A solid patio cover blocks direct UV exposure, keeps the concrete cooler underfoot, and makes outdoor seating practical for morning and evening hours even in peak summer.
Edinburg has grown rapidly, and the homes going up on the north and west sides of the city are being built on expansive clay soil that shifts with every wet and dry season. Even newer construction is not immune to foundation movement here. A sunroom added to a home in Edinburg needs a foundation system engineered for clay-heavy ground, not the standard approach used in other parts of Texas. Footings that are too shallow will separate from the house structure within a few years as the ground moves beneath them.
The other factor is heat. Edinburg averages more than 100 days per year above 90 degrees Fahrenheit, and temperatures regularly exceed 100 degrees from June through August. Glass products and framing systems designed for temperate climates degrade quickly under this kind of UV and thermal load. We specify materials for South Texas conditions specifically, because a sunroom that overheats or has its seals fail in the first summer is not a usable investment.
Our crew works throughout Edinburg regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Edinburg is the county seat of Hidalgo County, which means the city permit office and county records are both located here, and our team is familiar with the City of Edinburg Development Services process for sunroom addition permits.
Edinburg has a recognizable geography that shapes how homeowners think about their properties. The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley campus sits near the center of the city and anchors the surrounding neighborhoods, many of which have older housing stock from the 1970s and 1980s. Heading north and west from downtown, newer subdivisions on larger lots have been built over the last decade, and those homes tend to have more backyard space available for additions. Both types of properties have their own structural quirks, and we have worked on them throughout the city.
We also serve homeowners throughout the broader Valley. If you are in McAllen to the west, or in other surrounding cities, our team covers the full Rio Grande Valley region and brings the same knowledge of local soil, climate, and permit requirements to every job.
Contact us by phone or through the form below. We respond within one business day. You do not need a finished plan yet, just a description of the space and what you want to do with it is enough to start the conversation.
We come to your Edinburg property, measure the space, assess the existing structure, and go over the permit requirements with you. The estimate is free, written, and itemized so you know exactly what each line item costs before you make any commitment.
We submit the building permit to the City of Edinburg and order materials once it is approved. Most sunroom projects in Edinburg take two to six weeks to complete after permit approval, depending on the size and type of room.
After construction wraps, the city inspector reviews and signs off on the permit. We then walk through the finished space with you to confirm everything meets your expectations before we close out the job.
We serve homeowners across Edinburg and the surrounding Valley. Estimates are free and written, we handle all permits, and we reply within one business day.
(956) 391-1529Edinburg is the county seat of Hidalgo County and one of the fastest-growing cities in Texas, with a population that has surpassed 100,000. The city anchors the central part of the Rio Grande Valley metro area and serves as a hub for government, healthcare, and retail for communities throughout the region. The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, one of the largest universities in the state by enrollment, has its main campus here and is the most recognizable landmark in the city. Residential neighborhoods spread outward from downtown and the UTRGV campus, transitioning from older stucco and brick homes closer to the center into larger, newer subdivisions as you move north and west.
The Edinburg Scenic Wetlands, a 40-acre urban nature center in the heart of the city, draws families and birdwatchers year-round and gives the city a distinctive natural feature that most Valley towns do not have. Housing in Edinburg runs from modest single-family homes on smaller in-town lots to newer three- and four-bedroom houses with attached garages and landscaped yards in the outer subdivisions. The city has a higher rate of renter-occupied units than the state average, driven partly by the student population near UTRGV, but owner-occupied single-family homes make up the backbone of the residential market. Neighboring McAllen to the west is the metro's commercial center, and many Edinburg residents travel that corridor regularly for work and shopping.
Enjoy your sunroom year-round with full climate control and insulation.
Learn MoreSummer heat in Edinburg is not getting any cooler. The sooner your sunroom is permitted and built, the sooner you have shaded, comfortable space to use. Contact us today.