Florida Pool Screen Enclosure Services
Pool screen enclosures are a defining feature of residential and commercial pool installations across Florida, providing a physical barrier that reduces debris intrusion, limits insect exposure, and offers partial UV attenuation. This page covers the definition and regulatory context of pool screen enclosure services, how installation and repair work is structured, common scenarios that trigger enclosure work, and the decision boundaries that separate routine maintenance from permitted construction. Understanding these distinctions matters because Florida's permitting framework classifies enclosure work differently depending on scope, and misclassification can result in unpermitted structures and failed inspections.
Definition and scope
A pool screen enclosure — also called a "pool cage" or "lanai enclosure" in Florida — is an aluminum-framed structure clad in fiberglass or polyester mesh screening that surrounds a pool and its deck area. Enclosures range from low-profile flat-roof designs to tall cathedral-style structures reaching 20 feet or more at the peak.
Scope of coverage: This page applies to pool screen enclosure services performed at residential and commercial properties within the State of Florida. Enclosures installed at licensed public swimming facilities, such as hotel and motel pools, fall under additional regulatory layers described on the Florida Hotel/Motel Pool Service Compliance page. Commercial public-pool enclosures may also trigger Florida Department of Health (FDOH) review alongside local building review. Agricultural or industrial screening structures are outside the scope of this page.
Florida Statute §489.105(3)(d) classifies the construction of pool screen enclosures under the work that requires a licensed contractor. The Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) issues the relevant Certified Pool/Spa Contractor and Certified Building Contractor licenses that authorize enclosure construction. Screen repair and re-screening of existing frames — without structural alteration — may fall under a different license threshold, but this determination is jurisdiction-specific and is confirmed through the applicable county building department.
How it works
Pool screen enclosure services divide into four discrete operational phases:
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Assessment and permitting — A licensed contractor measures the pool deck footprint, evaluates existing structure (if any), and submits permit documents to the local county building department. Florida Building Code (FBC) Chapter 15 governs aluminum screen enclosures, specifying wind load requirements. Florida's statewide minimum design wind speed maps, maintained by the Florida Building Commission, require enclosures in most South Florida counties to withstand wind speeds of 140 mph or higher under ASCE 7 standards.
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Engineering and plan review — Enclosures above a threshold size require signed-and-sealed drawings from a Florida-licensed engineer. The Florida Building Code, 8th Edition (2023), specifies load calculations for aluminum framing members, screen tension, and anchor bolt embedment. Many counties require truss engineering documents for larger cathedral-style cages.
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Installation or repair — New enclosure installation involves concrete footer drilling, vertical column placement, horizontal beam assembly, and screen panel installation. Re-screening involves removing damaged mesh panels and installing replacement screen material — typically 20×20 mesh at 0.013-inch wire for standard insect screening, or 20×20 phifer glass fiber for higher durability.
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Final inspection — A county building inspector verifies that the completed enclosure matches permitted drawings, confirms anchor bolt embedment depth, and checks screen tension and frame integrity. Without a passed final inspection, the structure remains "open permit" status in county records, which can complicate real estate transactions and insurance claims.
For context on how Florida pool service license requirements apply to contractors who also perform enclosure work, that page outlines the DBPR licensing tiers in detail.
Common scenarios
Pool screen enclosure services are typically triggered by one of the following conditions:
- Hurricane or wind damage — Frame bending, column uplift, and screen blowout following tropical weather events represent the highest-volume service scenario in Florida. Post-storm enclosure assessment often precedes pool water recovery; the Florida Pool Service After Storm Recovery page addresses the sequencing of those tasks.
- Age-related screen deterioration — Standard fiberglass screen mesh degrades under Florida's UV load in approximately 7 to 10 years, resulting in brittleness, tears, and hole accumulation.
- Aluminum frame oxidation and corrosion — Coastal properties within roughly 1 mile of saltwater exposure face accelerated aluminum corrosion, requiring frame section replacement rather than screen-only work.
- New pool construction enclosure addition — Homeowners adding an enclosure to a previously unenclosed pool must obtain a new permit even if the pool permit is historical.
- Re-screen for improved pest or debris control — Upgrades from standard screen to 20×20 "No-See-Um" mesh (finer weave) reduce passage of small insects and are a common elective service in North and Central Florida.
Decision boundaries
The critical classification boundary in Florida pool screen enclosure services is whether a project involves structural alteration versus non-structural maintenance.
| Service Type | Structural Alteration | Permit Typically Required | License Category |
|---|---|---|---|
| Re-screen only (existing frame intact) | No | No (varies by county) | Screen subcontractor or handyman threshold (county-dependent) |
| Frame section replacement | Partial | Often yes | Certified Building or Pool/Spa Contractor |
| Full enclosure removal and replacement | Yes | Yes | Certified Contractor + engineer drawings |
| New enclosure on existing pool deck | Yes | Yes | Certified Contractor + engineer drawings |
| Anchor bolt repair or column base work | Yes | Yes | Licensed Contractor |
Counties including Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach have adopted local amendments to the Florida Building Code that impose stricter wind-load and inspection requirements than the statewide baseline. Contractors working across county lines must verify local amendments separately; the Florida Building Commission publishes the statewide code base at floridabuilding.org, and each county building department publishes its local amendments independently.
Enclosure projects that also affect pool deck surfaces or deck drainage create overlap with Florida Pool Deck Maintenance Services scope. Projects that include screen door hardware, pool barrier compliance gates, or self-closing mechanisms tie directly into Florida Pool Health and Safety Service Standards, since Florida Statute §515.27 mandates specific barrier specifications for residential pools — and a screen enclosure door can serve as a qualifying pool barrier only if it meets those statutory specifications.
Understanding the Florida pool contractor vs. pool service technician distinction is relevant here because enclosure construction falls squarely in contractor territory, while a service technician's routine visit would not include permitted structural work.
References
- Florida Building Commission — Florida Building Code (8th Edition, 2023)
- Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) — Contractor Licensing
- Florida Statutes §489.105 — Definitions, Contractor Categories
- Florida Statutes §515.27 — Residential Swimming Pool Safety Act, Barrier Requirements
- Florida Building Commission — Statewide Wind Speed Maps and ASCE 7 Adoption
- American Society of Civil Engineers — ASCE 7 Minimum Design Loads and Associated Criteria
- Florida Department of Health — Public Pool and Bathing Place Rules (64E-9, F.A.C.)