Delano Sunrooms and Patios serves Earlimart homeowners with patio enclosures, screen rooms, and custom sunroom additions designed for San Joaquin Valley conditions. We handle the Tulare County permit process for every project and have served communities throughout this part of the Valley since 2016.

Earlimart homes typically have a concrete patio slab out back that collects heat and insects from spring through fall. A patio enclosure turns that unused slab into a screened or fully enclosed room - using the existing concrete as your floor and building walls and a roof around it - which is typically faster and less costly than starting a room from scratch.
Earlimart evenings in spring and fall can be genuinely pleasant, but the insects that come with Valley farmland make sitting outside frustrating. A screened room keeps pests out while letting air move through, and it is one of the more affordable ways to extend the usable hours you spend outdoors on your own property.
A four-season sunroom is fully insulated and designed to hold a comfortable temperature through Earlimart's extreme summer heat and its occasional winter frost. For homeowners in this part of Tulare County who want a room they can use every month of the year, this is the right build - not a three-season shortcut that leaves you roasting in July.
Earlimart homes are often modest in size, and many families need more square footage without the cost and disruption of a full home addition. A sunroom addition is a practical way to gain a livable room that your family will actually use, and it can serve as a sitting room, play space, home office, or dining area depending on what your household needs most.
Vinyl frames hold up well in the San Joaquin Valley's intense heat and UV exposure without warping, rusting, or needing periodic painting. For Earlimart homeowners who want a low-maintenance room that keeps its appearance over time, a vinyl sunroom is a practical choice that makes sense in this climate.
Not every project needs to start with a full enclosure. A covered patio creates real shade and cuts down on the radiant heat that bounces off exposed concrete in summer, making your backyard usable on afternoons that would otherwise send you back inside. It can also be a first step toward a full enclosure when your budget allows.
Earlimart sits in the middle of the San Joaquin Valley, where summer temperatures regularly climb above 100 degrees Fahrenheit and heat waves pushing 105 degrees are not unusual. That climate makes every design decision for a new room more consequential. A patio enclosure or sunroom that works in a coastal California city will fail here if it is not built with the right insulation, the right glazing, and a plan for keeping the room cool. Contractors who do not regularly work in the Valley often underestimate this - and the homeowner ends up with a room that is unbearable from June through September.
Earlimart is also an unincorporated community in Tulare County, which means building permits are issued by Tulare County's Building and Safety division rather than a city office. The process is different from what you would encounter in Delano or Visalia, and contractors who are not familiar with county permitting can experience delays that push your project back by weeks. Earlimart's clay-heavy soils are another local factor - these soils expand when wet and contract when dry, which causes concrete slabs to shift over time and can affect the stability of any structure built on them.
Our crew works throughout Earlimart regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom and patio enclosure work here. Earlimart is an unincorporated community, which means we work with Tulare County Building and Construction Services for permits rather than a city building department - a distinction that matters for scheduling and paperwork, and one we handle without burdening you with the details.
Earlimart sits right along Highway 99 between Delano to the south and Pixley to the north, and most of the homes here are older single-family houses - modest in size, often with stucco exteriors, and built on slabs that have been through decades of the Valley's seasonal soil movement. We see these properties often and know what to look for before we start any design conversation. The farmworker community that built this town takes care of its homes, and when families here invest in a new room, they need it done right.
We also regularly serve homeowners in Richgrove and other communities along this stretch of the Valley, so if you have family or neighbors nearby who need the same kind of work, we can take care of them too.
Call or submit the contact form and we will get back to you within one business day. We ask a few questions about your property and what you have in mind so we can come prepared for the site visit.
We visit your home in Earlimart, look at the existing slab or space, check foundation condition, and take measurements. We discuss your budget at this point and explain what the project will cost before any work is scheduled - no surprises later.
We submit the permit application to Tulare County and schedule construction once approval comes through. Most patio enclosures in Earlimart take one to four weeks to complete once work begins, depending on scope and materials.
We coordinate the final county inspection, clear the site, and walk you through the finished room. You receive a copy of the approved permit for your records - a document you will want to have if you ever sell or refinance your home.
We serve Earlimart homeowners directly - no long waits, no trip fees from out of the area. Tell us what you need and we will get back to you within one business day.
(661) 553-7796Earlimart is a small unincorporated community in Tulare County, situated in the flat farmland of California's San Joaquin Valley. The town sits right on Highway 99, about 8 miles north of Delano and 6 miles south of Pixley, and the economy here is rooted in agriculture - grapes, cotton, and row crops surround the community on all sides. Most of the housing stock was built between the 1940s and 1980s, giving the town its character: modest single-family homes on in-town lots, stucco exteriors, and the kind of practical, working-farm-town feel that has defined this stretch of the Valley for generations.
The community has a strong identity built on its farmworker roots and its connection to Cesar Chavez and the United Farm Workers organizing that happened in this part of the Valley. Multigenerational households are common here, and many families who own their homes have lived in Earlimart for decades. Nearby communities like Delano and Pixley are where most residents go for larger stores and services, but Earlimart itself is a tight-knit place where word of mouth still matters - and where a contractor who shows up and does good work gets remembered.
We know Earlimart's permit process and climate. Get a written estimate with no obligation - we respond within one business day.