Insulation That Stops Heat Where It Belongs

Residential Insulation Services in Windham for homes with cold floors, drafty rooms, and high heating costs

Ecofit Insulation LLC provides residential insulation solutions in Windham, Gorham, Raymond, and surrounding areas that address the specific thermal challenges older Maine homes face during extended heating seasons. The work includes attic insulation, basement insulation, exterior wall insulation, kneewall insulation, crawlspace insulation, blown-in insulation, and air sealing applied where your home loses the most heat. These upgrades target the uneven temperatures and elevated energy bills that result from insufficient insulation in homes built before modern energy codes took effect.


Cellulose insulation fills cavities and irregular spaces more completely than rigid materials, creating continuous coverage that reduces heat transfer through floors, walls, and ceilings. The material settles into gaps around wiring and framing, which prevents the air leaks that cause cold spots and force heating systems to run longer than necessary. During Maine winters that stretch from November into April, this complete coverage keeps conditioned air inside living spaces rather than letting it escape into unconditioned attics, basements, and wall cavities.


Schedule a consultation to identify which insulation upgrades will address your home's specific heat loss patterns.

What Proper Insulation Coverage Requires

The installation process begins with a thermal assessment that locates where your home loses heat most rapidly. Technicians examine attic depth, basement rim joists, exterior wall cavities, and kneewall spaces to determine current R-values and identify air leakage points. This evaluation establishes which areas need additional insulation and where air sealing must occur before insulation is added.


After insulation is installed to the proper depth and density, you notice floors that stay warmer without space heaters, rooms that maintain consistent temperatures throughout the day, and heating systems that cycle less frequently. Your thermostat settings produce the comfort levels they're supposed to without adjustments throughout the evening, and ice dams become less likely because heat no longer escapes through your roof deck.


The work focuses on cellulose rather than fiberglass because blown-in cellulose conforms to irregular spaces and provides better coverage around obstacles. Some projects qualify for Efficiency Maine incentives, which offset a portion of material and installation costs. The assessment clarifies which upgrades produce the most significant reduction in heat loss based on your home's current condition and construction type.

What Homeowners Usually Ask

These questions address the most common concerns about residential insulation upgrades for Maine homes dealing with seasonal temperature extremes.

  • How does cellulose insulation differ from fiberglass in attic applications?

    Blown-in cellulose fills around obstructions like wiring and ductwork more completely than batts, which eliminates gaps that allow heat to escape. The material also settles over time without creating voids, maintaining its R-value throughout the heating season.

  • What causes cold floors in homes with basements?

    Heat moves through uninsulated rim joists and foundation walls into the basement, then cold air rises into the first floor through gaps in the subfloor. Insulating these areas and sealing air leaks stops this convective loop and keeps floor surfaces warmer.

  • When should insulation work be scheduled in Windham?

    Fall allows you to complete upgrades before heating demand peaks in December and January. Spring installations prepare your home for summer cooling efficiency, but scheduling depends more on project scope than weather conditions.

  • What signs indicate walls need additional insulation?

    Rooms that stay noticeably colder than others despite adequate heating, exterior walls that feel cold to the touch, and frost forming on interior wall surfaces near corners all suggest insufficient insulation in wall cavities.

  • How is insulation depth determined for different areas?

    Attics in Maine typically need R-49 to R-60, which translates to roughly 13 to 16 inches of cellulose depending on density. Basements and crawlspaces require lower R-values, but the specific depth depends on whether the space is conditioned and how much existing insulation remains in place.

Ecofit Insulation LLC evaluates your home's current thermal performance and recommends upgrades based on where heat loss occurs most significantly. Request an insulation assessment to determine which improvements will reduce your heating costs and address comfort issues in specific rooms.