Field notes from Jupiter installs
Jupiter is oceanfront Palm Beach County, and salt air drives the work more than anything else. The housing is mostly 1990s and 2000s coastal CBS: the walkable new-urbanism blocks of Abacoa, the waterfront estates of Admirals Cove and Jupiter Inlet Colony, and the homes around the lighthouse district and the Loxahatchee River. The walls are impact-rated stucco-over-CBS that holds a Tapcon anchor like bedrock, so wall strength is rarely the problem in Jupiter.
The problem is corrosion. Homes near the inlet and the open Atlantic take constant salt spray, and ordinary zinc-plated hardware rusts within a season. Your installer makes 316 marine-grade stainless the default on anything exposed in Jupiter, with sealed cable connections and UV-stable conduit for outdoor runs.
Abacoa adds its own wrinkle: compact new-urbanism floor plans, two- and three-story townhomes, and shared walls that make clean, quiet drilling and smart TV placement matter more. Across all of Jupiter, Florida impact codes and the impact-window framing on exterior walls shape where and how we route wire on a coastal exterior.
TV mounting prices in Jupiter
Jupiter TV mounting starts at $149 (basic up to 54”), $199 (large 55-69”), $259 (XL 70-79”), $319 (XXL 80-inch+). Cable concealment $119/TV. Jupiter is mostly solid impact-rated CBS with no historic surcharge; outdoor and salt-exposed installs use 316 stainless hardware and are quoted on site for the corrosion-rated materials and weather-sealed cable runs the coast demands.
Helpful guides before your Jupiter install
How Express Mounting covers Jupiter
Alex Crabinsky launched Express Mounting out of Atlanta in 2015, and it now counts 7,874 documented installs with 750+ five-star reviews behind it. Jupiter jobs run through vetted Palm Beach County installers who carry the same hardware, work off the same install checklist, and back every job with the same 100% satisfaction guarantee. We send a vetted local pro who reads how Jupiter impact-rated CBS, the Abacoa floor plans, and the heavy inlet salt air behave before they ever pick up a drill.