Our Attic Insulation Process
What Happens During Attic Insulation
We start by sealing the gaps. Around your attic door, light fixtures, pipes, anywhere air sneaks through. Then we blow insulation to fill your attic evenly. After that, we check everything, clean up, and show you what we did.
The order matters. Pile insulation on top of gaps and warm air still leaks out in winter. Hot air still pushes in during summer. Your furnace and air conditioner work harder, your bills stay high, and some rooms never feel right.
Seal gaps first, then add insulation, and homes use about 15% less energy for heating and cooling. ENERGY STAR has tracked this across thousands of homes—the savings are real.
Here's what happens during a typical project:
What Do We Check in Your Attic First?
Before we start, we go up to see what's already there and look for anything that needs fixing.
We measure how deep your current insulation is. Older homes often have insulation that's settled over time. What was thick 20 years ago might be half that now. And it's rarely even—some spots thick, others thin, and the areas around your attic door or along the edges often bare.
While we're up there, we take photos of the obvious problem spots:
Why Do You Seal Air Leaks Before Adding Insulation?
How Do You Prepare the House and Attic?
Once the gaps are sealed, we get ready to blow insulation. This step protects your home and makes sure air can still flow through your attic the way it's supposed to.
Ponits Heading
How Do You Install Blown-In Insulation?
With everything sealed and prepped, we blow insulation to fill your attic evenly. The goal is consistent depth across every part—between the beams, around pipes and wires, in all the corners.
Blown-in insulation is loose material that flows into spaces batts can't reach. It fills gaps, wraps around wiring, settles into corners. That's one reason it works better than rolls of insulation that leave voids wherever they don't fit perfectly.
We use rulers stuck into the insulation every few feet so we can check depth as we work. Most homes around here need about 16 to 20 inches for good energy performance. We make sure every spot hits that target.
Here's how it works:
What Happens After Insulation Is Installed?
How Does Attic Ventilation Work with Insulation?
Your attic needs insulation and airflow—both work together. A well-insulated attic still needs air moving through it to stay dry.
Air comes in through vents along the edges of your roof, rises as it warms, and goes out at the top. This keeps your attic temperature close to outside temperature, stops moisture from building up, and helps your roof handle hot summers better.
Your living space below stays sealed. That's what all the gap sealing accomplishes. You don't want heated or cooled air leaking into the attic. But the attic itself needs to breathe.
What happens if vents get blocked:
How Do You Budget for Attic Insulation?
Attic insulation costs money up front but pays you back through lower energy bills and a more comfortable house. We offer payment plans so the project fits your monthly budget without a big cash outlay.
Most financing approvals happen within 24 hours. You can review payment options before committing to a timeline, and we'll walk you through costs so you know exactly what you're getting.
Tools to help you plan:
Why Choose Integrity for Attic Insulation?
Our Recent Projects
WHAT HOMEOWNERS ARE SAYING
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Ready to Insulate Your Attic the Right Way?
High energy bills? Rooms that never feel comfortable? Second floor always a different temperature than the first? Proper attic insulation—starting with sealing gaps—makes a real difference.
We've completed insulation projects for over 10,000 customers across Ohio and Michigan. Our crews follow the same process every time: check what's there, seal gaps, protect your home, blow insulation evenly, check coverage, and clean up before the final walkthrough.
Our Lifetime Workmanship Warranty covers installation problems for as long as you own the home. The Gold Standard Protection Plan includes project timelines, cleanup standards, and clear communication so you know what to expect from start to finish.