Oxnard Sunroom Expert serves Camarillo homeowners with patio enclosures, sunroom additions, and four season rooms built for the ranch-style and suburban homes throughout the city. Most Camarillo homes were built between the 1960s and 1990s, and we understand what that means for foundations, framing, and permit timelines. Every project is fully permitted through the City of Camarillo Building Division.

Camarillo's afternoon onshore winds and clay soils make the condition of your existing patio slab the first thing we check. We assess the slab for leveling and cracking before designing any enclosure on top of it. See the full range of patio enclosure options we offer for Ventura County homeowners.
Many Camarillo homeowners in Mission Oaks and Springville have outgrown their ranch-style homes but are not ready to move. A sunroom addition adds a permitted, documented room - a home office, dining space, or family room - using your existing backyard footprint.
Camarillo's winters are mild but the November-through-March rainy season can make an uninsulated room feel cold and damp. A four season sunroom with proper insulation and a connection to your existing HVAC system stays comfortable all year without a significant jump in energy costs.
Camarillo's evenings bring insects and the Santa Ana wind season can push debris across open patios. A screen room on your existing slab blocks insects and wind-driven dust while keeping the space open and cool during Camarillo's long, dry summers.
Older Camarillo homes from the 1970s and 1980s sometimes have existing aluminum-framed sunrooms that are corroding, leaking, or simply outdated. We can reframe and re-glaze those spaces to modern standards without removing the entire structure.
Hillside homes in Camarillo Heights and Las Posas Estates tend to have larger lots and more varied layouts than the valley-floor tract homes. An all season room on a custom foundation can work with sloped terrain and irregular footprints where a standard kit sunroom cannot.
Most homes in Camarillo were built between 1960 and 2000, during the city's rapid suburban expansion across the Oxnard Plain. That era of construction means most ranch-style homes have concrete tile roofs, stucco exteriors, and attached garages - a familiar footprint, but one where the foundation and patio slab conditions vary quite a bit. The Oxnard Plain's clay soils expand when wet and shrink during Camarillo's long dry summers, and that seasonal movement is one of the main reasons existing patio slabs in this area crack or settle unevenly over time. Before any enclosure or sunroom addition is designed, the slab and foundation conditions need to be assessed honestly.
Camarillo also sits about ten miles from the Pacific, which means it gets marine air without being directly on the coast. That is enough to accelerate corrosion on metal frames and hardware over time, especially on north- and west-facing surfaces. Santa Ana wind events in fall and winter can gust above 50 mph in this area, and those winds put real stress on roofing attachments and exterior seals. A sunroom that is not properly anchored and flashed will show you the gaps in its design after the first hard Santa Ana season - which is why material selection and attachment detailing matter as much as the aesthetic choices.
Our crew works throughout Camarillo regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We submit permits to the City of Camarillo for our clients on a regular basis and know that the building department's review timeline for room additions can run several weeks - something we account for at the start of every project, not as a surprise later.
The valley-floor neighborhoods - Mission Oaks, Springville, and the tracts east of Las Posas Road - tend to be the most straightforward to work in. Homes there follow recognizable patterns from the 1970s and 1980s suburban build-out, and the flat lots make foundation and access work predictable. Camarillo Heights and Las Posas Estates are a different story: hillside lots with custom footprints, older construction that does not always match standard attachment details, and longer driveways that affect material staging. We have worked in both and adjust our approach accordingly.
Camarillo sits between two of our other regular service areas - Thousand Oaks to the east in the Conejo Valley and Oxnard on the coast to the west. If you are near either city, we cover your area.
We respond to all Camarillo inquiries within one business day. The first conversation covers the basics: what you want to build, where on your property it would go, and a rough sense of budget so neither of us wastes time.
We visit your home to assess your existing patio slab, the roofline, and your electrical panel. This is where we catch anything - a settled slab, an underpowered panel, or an HOA restriction - before it affects your budget. No cost, no obligation.
We handle the permit application with the City of Camarillo. The review typically takes several weeks - we start this process the day your contract is signed so the wait happens in the background, not as a delay on your construction start date.
Construction typically runs one to four weeks depending on scope. After the city inspection, we walk you through the finished space and hand over all permit and warranty documentation. The room is yours - ready to use.
We serve Camarillo and all of Ventura County. No pressure, no obligation - just a straight answer about what your project will cost.
(805) 853-2837Camarillo is a suburban city of roughly 70,000 people in southern Ventura County, situated on the Oxnard Plain between the Santa Monica Mountains to the south and the Topatopa Mountains to the north. The city grew rapidly from the 1970s through the 1990s, and the ranch-style single-family home is its dominant housing type - most built between 1965 and 2000 with stucco exteriors and concrete tile roofs. Neighborhoods like Mission Oaks, Springville, and the tracts along Las Posas Road are characteristic of this era: wide lots, attached garages, and backyards that were built for outdoor living. The hillside communities of Camarillo Heights and Las Posas Estates offer a different character - larger, more varied custom homes on bigger lots, some with horse property or significant native landscaping.
The city's Old Town district along Ventura Boulevard is home to some of Camarillo's oldest buildings and pre-1960 housing stock, giving that part of the city a distinct character from the planned subdivisions to the north and east. The Camarillo Airport on the west side of the city is a familiar landmark for residents throughout the area. Camarillo's mild, dry climate - shaped by its position about ten miles inland from the Pacific - makes sunrooms genuinely usable year-round. We also work regularly in nearby Ventura to the west and Moorpark to the northeast.
Affordable screened rooms ideal for spring, summer, and fall enjoyment.
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Learn MoreCamarillo's mild climate makes sunrooms usable all year - and the sooner you get a free estimate, the sooner you can start enjoying that extra space.