A quiet morning coffee without swatting mosquitoes. A shady spot that still feels like fresh air. A backyard that works 10 months of the year—yes, even in Dallas-Fort Worth. That’s the promise of a well-built screen enclosure around your patio.
## Why a Screen Enclosure Makes Sense in DFW
Here’s the thing: North Texas weather swings hard. Sun bakes. Storms pop up. Oak pollen drifts like confetti. But a patio screen enclosure balances it out. You get shade, airflow, and a barrier from bugs and debris—without turning your patio into a full-blown room addition. It’s simple, sturdy, and surprisingly stylish.
For homeowners from Plano to Mansfield, a screened-in space checks the boxes: practical, comfortable, and low-maintenance. You know what? It’s also the fastest way to make your backyard feel bigger. Not visually—functionally.
– More time outside — Morning coffee, weeknight dinners, movie nights with a projector.
– Fewer pests — Mosquitoes, wasps, and those giant grasshoppers stay out.
– Less cleanup — Pollen, leaves, and random debris don’t pile up on your furniture.
## Comfort: Beat the Mosquitoes, Sun, and Pollen
If you live in DFW, you’re not new to mosquitoes. We build with that in mind. A screened-in patio creates a breathable barrier that stops bugs without choking airflow. Shade screens reduce heat gain, and tighter meshes can cut dust and pollen.
– Mosquito control — Standard 18×16 mesh blocks mosquitoes and wasps, while No-See-Um mesh stops gnats and tiny biters by the creek or greenbelt.
– Sun relief — Bronze or charcoal screens soften glare. Pair with a Pergola roof or polycarbonate top for even cooler temps.
– Pollen defense — High-mesh screens catch a surprising amount of oak strings and ragweed fluff—your eyes and cushions will thank you.
Honestly, it’s not magic. But it sure feels close when you can sit outside in July and actually relax.
## Add Usable Square Footage (Without Building an Addition)
A screened patio isn’t a room, technically. But it acts like one. It protects your outdoor furniture, gives pets a safe “yard within a yard,” and creates a defined spot for entertaining. You can run string lights, set a fan, bring in a TV, and suddenly that patio lives like a lounge.
– Everyday living — Breakfast nook, reading corner, kids’ craft zone.
– Entertaining — Game day hangouts without flies. Cozy fall evenings without wind.
– Pet-friendly — Keep dogs on the patio without the jailbreak anxiety.
And if you already have a Dallas pergola? We can screen beneath it, add a knee wall if you want, and keep the wood aesthetic. It’s a clean look that still feels outdoorsy.
## Design Options That Fit Your Home
Screens aren’t one-size-fits-all. We match your house style, HOA rules, and how you actually use your space. Materials, color, and mesh type matter—for comfort and longevity.
### Smart choices, plain-English explanations
– Frame materials — Powder-coated aluminum is the DFW workhorse: light, strong, and rust-free. Steel is heavier and rare for residential. Wood framing can blend with cedar pergolas but needs more care.
– Screen mesh — Standard fiberglass, pet-proof screen (vinyl-coated polyester), No-See-Um mesh (tighter weave), or solar screen for heat control.
– Door options — Self-closing hinged doors, wide double doors, pet doors, and low-threshold sills for easy step-in.
Here’s a quick cheat sheet:
| Component | Typical Options | Best For |
|—|—|—|
| Frame | Powder-coated aluminum (white, bronze, black) | Durability, low maintenance |
| Screen | Standard fiberglass, Pet-resistant, No-See-Um, Solar | Bugs, pets, airflow, sun control |
| Roof | Existing patio cover, pergola with panels, insulated roof | Shade, storm resilience |
We often recommend Phifer or Super Screen meshes for DFW—they hold up to sun, dogs, and kids’ soccer balls better than budget screen.
## Performance and Durability in Texas Weather
North Texas can throw a lot at an outdoor structure. Wind, UV, sudden hail, and the occasional flying lawn chair. That’s why the details matter.
– Wind ratings — Proper anchoring and cross-bracing help your enclosure shrug off gusty spring storms.
– Fasteners — We use exterior-grade screws and corrosion-resistant hardware. Cheap fasteners rust; rust stains stucco and brick.
– UV protection — High-quality screens resist fading and brittleness. It’s worth getting the good stuff.
– Storm strategy — With removable panels or reinforced corners, your screen room can be serviced and repaired easily after a serious weather event.
A quick word on hail: screens flex; glass breaks. Another quiet win for screened enclosures over more rigid solutions.
## Cost, Value, and ROI in Dallas-Fort Worth
Pricing depends on size, coverage, screen type, and whether we’re tying into an existing roof or building a new cover. Most homeowners in DFW fall into one of three buckets.
| Project Type | Typical Range (DFW) | Notes |
|—|—|—|
| Screen under existing patio cover | $3,500–$9,000 | Most cost-effective; fast install |
| New roof + screen enclosure | $10,000–$22,000 | Bigger shade, integrated look |
| Large custom or 4-season conversion | $20,000+ | Insulated roof, doors, upgrades |
Ranges are real-world ballparks, not quotes. The sweet spot for value is usually screening an existing covered patio with upgraded mesh and a solid door. You get 80% of the benefit without the complexity of a full sunroom.
As for resale? A well-built screened-in patio doesn’t count as heated square footage, but buyers love it—especially folks relocating from bug-heavy areas. It helps your listing photos pop and signals “this home is well cared for.”
## Little Surprises You’ll Love (and a Few You Should Plan For)
– Furniture lasts longer — Less sun fade and less grit grinding into cushions.
– Outdoor kitchen stays cleaner — Grease isn’t a magnet for dust anymore.
– Privacy screens — A darker mesh turns your patio into a calm hideaway without feeling boxed in.
A couple honest trade-offs:
– Views change slightly — Screens add a soft filter. With charcoal mesh, most folks forget it’s there after a week.
– Fans and lighting — You may want to add a fan or recessed lights. We’ll plan wiring neatly during install.
## Installation Basics: What to Expect
Let me explain how it usually goes. We visit, measure, and talk through how you want to use the space. We bring real mesh samples so you can compare airflow vs. shade right there in your backyard light.
– Timeline — Most projects wrap in 1–3 days once materials land.
– Permits/HOA — Some DFW suburbs need simple permits; HOAs in places like Frisco or McKinney often want color and elevation details. We help with that paperwork.
– Clean finish — We flash to your home exterior carefully (brick, stucco, or siding), seal as needed, and use trim that looks factory—no “afterthought” vibe.
And yes, we schedule around weather. It’s Texas.
## Patio Enclosure vs. Sunroom vs. Pergola—What’s the Difference?
If you’re comparing, this may help:
| Type | Feels Like | Good For |
|—|—|—|
| Screen enclosure | Outdoors with protection | Airflow, bug control, budget-friendly |
| Sunroom (glass) | Indoors with sunlight | Year-round use, HVAC tie-in |
| Pergola | Open shade structure | Visual appeal, vines, partial shade |
Many homeowners start with a pergola and later add a patio screen enclosure under or around it. It’s a great “grow with your home” approach.
## Care and Maintenance—Easy Wins
Good news: screens are low fuss. Most care is “every now and then.”
– Seasonal rinse — Hose the mesh to knock off dust and pollen.
– Spot cleaning — Mild soap and water on frame and door handles.
– Hardware check — Once a year, make sure latches and closers feel smooth.
– Pet damage — If you’ve got a jumper or a scratcher, choose pet-proof screen from the start and save yourself headaches.
One more tip: consider a darker screen tone. Charcoal or bronze tends to “disappear” to the eye and hides dust better than silver.
## The Dallas-Fort Worth Touch: Design That Fits Here
We build for Texas light—strong and bright. That means shade angles matter, so western exposures may need a touch darker mesh or a partial privacy panel. We also plan for storm runoff, gutters, and splash-back, since heavy rain can blow in sideways.
Cedar details? Sure. Brick-to-aluminum transitions? Clean. A screen enclosure that mirrors your home’s trim color? Absolutely. It’s your patio; it should feel like it always belonged.
## Ready for a more livable patio?
If you’re picturing morning coffee without the bug parade—or a relaxed space that just works—let’s talk. Dallas Pergola Company designs and installs screen rooms built for DFW weather and your everyday life.
Call 214-624-7083 or Request a Free Quote. We’ll bring samples, real ideas, and a straight answer on what works best for your home.
