
Palm Beach Gardens Fence & Deck builds covered patios, custom decks, wood and vinyl fences, and screened porches for homeowners throughout Royal Palm Beach. We have served Palm Beach County since 2016 and know how the village permit process and HOA requirements work in this community.

Royal Palm Beach gets intense sun from March through October, and an uncovered patio is unusable for most of the day during summer. Our covered deck and patio cover work includes attached insulated roof systems and open-beam patio covers that give Royal Palm Beach homeowners real shade without boxing in the backyard.
Royal Palm Beach was built out mostly between the 1980s and early 2000s, and many original wood fences are at or past the end of their useful life. We install pressure-treated and cedar privacy fences that hold up to South Florida's humidity and can be matched to most HOA-approved board styles and heights.
With homes in Royal Palm Beach now 25 to 45 years old, many homeowners are replacing aging pressure-treated wood decks with composite boards that resist warping, fading, and rot under South Florida's UV and rain cycles. Composite is the most popular upgrade material for backyard decks in this area.
Royal Palm Beach sits close to canal corridors and flat wetland areas, which means mosquito pressure is real during warm months. A screened enclosure over an existing or new patio deck lets homeowners in the village use their outdoor space comfortably from spring through fall without constant insect issues.
Many HOA communities in Royal Palm Beach list white vinyl as the only approved front-yard fence material. Vinyl also makes sense here from a maintenance standpoint - it does not fade, peel, or need repainting under the year-round South Florida sun the way painted wood does.
Pergolas are a common addition in Royal Palm Beach because they provide partial shade and a defined outdoor room without requiring the same permitting footprint as a full enclosed structure. They work well on slab patios adjacent to CBS homes and are compatible with most Royal Palm Beach HOA architectural guidelines.
Most homes in Royal Palm Beach were built between 1980 and 2005 in a series of planned subdivisions that grew the village from a small development into one of the largest villages in Florida. That puts a large portion of the housing stock at 25 to 45 years old - right at the age when original decks, patio covers, and fences start showing real wear. South Florida's climate accelerates that aging considerably. The combination of intense UV exposure, high humidity, and daily summer thunderstorms breaks down wood, degrades sealants, and corrodes standard fasteners faster than homeowners in other states would expect. A patio cover or fence that might last 20 years in North Florida often needs attention in 10 to 12 years here.
Royal Palm Beach homes are built primarily on concrete slab foundations with concrete block (CBS) walls, which affects how exterior structures attach and how drainage behaves around them. The flat terrain throughout the village also means that poor grading around a new patio or deck can cause water to pool against the house after heavy rain. Any contractor working in Royal Palm Beach needs to understand how CBS construction and South Florida drainage interact with the structures they build. The Village of Royal Palm Beach also requires permits for most structural exterior work, and HOA approval is an additional step in many subdivisions.
Our crew works throughout Royal Palm Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect deck builder work here. Royal Palm Beach is organized around a network of planned subdivisions connected by Okeechobee Boulevard and Royal Palm Beach Boulevard - the two main east-west corridors through the village. Most of the neighborhoods we serve sit west of State Road 7 and are accessed from these roads or from Crestwood Boulevard along the northern edge of the village.
Royal Palm Beach Commons Park is the village's main community gathering space, and homeowners throughout the subdivisions near the park and throughout the village invest meaningfully in their outdoor spaces. We encounter CBS construction on nearly every job here, and our crews are set up for anchor work into concrete block walls rather than wood framing. The flat lots, slab foundations, and canal proximity throughout the village are factors we account for in every estimate.
We also serve neighboring communities in western Palm Beach County. If you are coming from Wellington just to the south, or from West Palm Beach to the east, we cover all of this part of the county. Reach out by phone or submit the estimate form and we will respond within one business day.
Contact us by phone or through the estimate form and we will respond within one business day. Sharing your subdivision name helps us look up any HOA guidelines before we visit.
We visit your Royal Palm Beach property to measure, assess drainage and slab conditions, and review any HOA requirements. You receive a detailed written estimate - no pressure to proceed.
Once you approve the estimate, we handle the permit application with the Village of Royal Palm Beach Building Division and assist with any HOA architectural review submission. Work begins after all approvals are in hand.
Most projects in Royal Palm Beach take one to three weeks of active construction. We do a walkthrough with you at the end to confirm everything meets your expectations before we close out.
We serve all of Royal Palm Beach and respond within one business day. No pressure, no obligation - just a free written estimate for your home.
(561) 576-0529Royal Palm Beach is a village in western Palm Beach County with a population of around 40,000 people. It developed rapidly from the late 1970s through the early 2000s as Palm Beach County grew westward, and the result is a community made up almost entirely of single-family homes organized into planned subdivisions. Owner-occupancy rates are high here - this is a neighborhood of people who have lived in the same house for years and have a real stake in how their homes look and function. The village sits between Wellington to the south and the Acreage to the west, with Okeechobee Boulevard connecting it to the coastal cities to the east. Nearby, Royal Palm Beach is part of the western communities corridor that also includes Wellington and the Acreage.
The housing stock in Royal Palm Beach is overwhelmingly concrete block construction built on slab foundations - the standard South Florida build method from the 1980s through the 2000s. Lots are flat and modest in size, and most homes have screened patios or pool enclosures as a standard feature. Many subdivisions are governed by HOAs, which means exterior projects require a two-step approval process. Homeowners in areas like those near Royal Palm Beach Commons Park and the subdivisions off Crestwood Boulevard tend to invest in outdoor improvements that add both usable space and property value. Neighbors in Greenacres to the southeast share many of the same building conditions and service needs.
Get a one-of-a-kind deck designed and built to your exact specifications.
Learn MoreLow-maintenance composite decking that looks great for decades.
Learn MoreAffordable pressure-treated wood decks built to handle Florida weather.
Learn MoreNaturally beautiful cedar decks with excellent rot resistance.
Learn MoreProtect and refresh your deck with professional staining and sealing.
Learn MoreSlip-resistant, stylish pool decks designed for Florida outdoor living.
Learn MoreDurable vinyl fencing that requires virtually no ongoing maintenance.
Learn MoreClassic wood and privacy fences for security and curb appeal.
Learn MoreEnjoy the outdoors without bugs with a professionally screened space.
Learn MoreShade your outdoor space with a beautiful covered deck or patio.
Learn MoreExpand your entertaining space with a fully equipped outdoor kitchen deck.
Learn MoreGet a free written estimate for your deck, patio cover, fence, or screened enclosure in Royal Palm Beach. We respond within one business day and know the village permit and HOA process well.