Florida’s year-round summer heat can turn your attic into an oven, often reaching temperatures over 150°. This damaging heat radiates into your living space, making your AC run harder longer and creating temperature imbalances throughout your living quarters.
Blown-in insulation is a highly effective solution for improving your home’s energy efficiency. This type of insulation involves spraying small particles of insulating material into your attic, walls, or other areas of your home, filling every nook and cranny to create a seamless thermal barrier. Here are some key benefits:
When it comes to insulation, choosing the right company is essential. Here’s why The Solar Guys are your best option:
As your home ages, the insulation in your attic becomes matted down and condensed making it less and less efficient. We can spray new insulation over the top and get it back up to par.
Here’s why updating your insulation with blown-in insulation is crucial:
Yes. Radiant barrier and blown-in insulation do different jobs. A radiant barrier helps reflect radiant heat (mainly summer attic heat), while traditional insulation (like blown-in fiberglass/cellulose) slows conductive heat flow year-round. Most homes get the best comfort and efficiency when radiant barrier is paired with proper attic insulation and air sealing.
Blown-in insulation (also called loose-fill) is fiberglass or cellulose that’s installed with a blower to create an even, continuous blanket, most commonly across an attic floor. Homeowners like it because it fills gaps and irregular areas better than many older batt installs. It’s a popular upgrade when rooms feel uneven, the home is drafty, or energy bills are rising.
If you have hot/cold rooms, drafty ceilings, or high heating and cooling bills, blown-in insulation is often one of the best “comfort per dollar” upgrades, especially in an under-insulated attic. It helps create a more continuous thermal blanket, which can reduce HVAC run time and improve indoor comfort.
Cellulose is typically made from recycled paper treated for fire resistance, while fiberglass is made from spun glass fibers. Both can perform well when installed to the right depth and density, but the “best” choice usually comes down to your goals (budget, sound control, air-leak reduction) and the specific area being insulated.
The right R-value depends on your climate zone and what’s already in your attic. A good installer will confirm your target R-value and then blow to the depth needed to hit it evenly, without blocking soffit vents or burying critical attic ventilation paths. (This is also why air sealing first can be such a big deal.)
Blown-in insulation is one of those projects that looks simple, but the results and safety depend on getting a lot of details right, including air sealing first, proper depth and coverage, and keeping ventilation paths clear. DIY can also get risky fast in attics because of heat, low clearance, exposed wiring, and the chance of stepping through the ceiling. A professional crew can handle baffles, recessed light clearances, hatch sealing, and tricky areas so you do not end up with uneven coverage or hidden problems. For most homeowners, hiring a pro is the safer, cleaner way to get the performance you are paying for.
Some materials can settle over time if they’re not installed to the right depth/density, which is why proper installation (and hitting the marked depth) matters. Moisture problems usually come from roof leaks, bathroom fan venting issues, or poor attic ventilation, so you want those fixed before insulating. Blown-in insulation isn’t a “mold maker,” but it can hide problems if the attic isn’t dry and well-vented.
Often, yes, especially if the batts are in decent shape and not blocking airflow. The bigger goal is an even, continuous blanket with good air sealing below it, so you don’t end up insulating “around” big leaks. When in doubt, an insulation pro can spot compression, gaps, or mis-installed batts that should be fixed first.
Not always. If the existing insulation is dry, clean, and not moldy or contaminated, many homeowners simply “top off” with blown-in insulation to reach the right depth. If there’s rodent damage, moisture issues, or you’re doing major air sealing and repairs, removal can make sense.
Most attics perform best with a combination of air sealing first (closing leaks around penetrations and the attic hatch) and then adding enough insulation to hit an appropriate R-value for your climate zone. Blown-in insulation is common because it covers evenly and tops off older insulation well. The “right” recommendation depends on whether you’re insulating the attic floor (typical) or the roofline (less common), plus ventilation and moisture conditions.
Most attics perform best with a combination of air sealing first (closing leaks around penetrations and the attic hatch) and then adding enough insulation to hit an appropriate R-value for your climate zone. Blown-in insulation is common because it covers evenly and tops off older insulation well. The “right” recommendation depends on whether you’re insulating the attic floor (typical) or the roofline (less common), plus ventilation and moisture conditions.
Cost depends on your attic size, access, current insulation, and whether air sealing or removal is needed. Many homeowners see installed pricing quoted by the square foot, and totals can vary widely by region and material choice. A contractor quote is the fastest way to get a real number because details like attic height, ductwork, and hatch sealing matter.
Common signs include hot/cold rooms, noticeable drafts, big temperature swings between floors, and higher-than-expected heating/cooling costs. In the attic, if insulation looks thin, patchy, or compressed, performance drops. A quick inspection (or an energy audit) can confirm whether you need a top-off, air sealing, or both.
This is really a moisture-control question, and the answer depends on your climate and what layers already exist. In many attic upgrades, installers use unfaced material so you don’t accidentally create a “double vapor barrier” that can trap moisture. When in doubt, it’s worth having a pro verify what’s already in your ceiling assembly before adding more.
It usually helps most when your attic is under-insulated and leaky, because the attic is a major pathway for heat gain/loss. Better insulation can reduce temperature swings, improve HVAC runtime, and make upstairs rooms feel less extreme in summer and winter. Pairing insulation with air sealing is typically where homeowners notice the biggest comfort jump.
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