
Heat escapes through your ceiling all winter long when the attic is under-insulated. We add the right amount of the right material to stop that loss - so your furnace works less and your home stays warmer.

Attic insulation in Klamath Falls reduces heating and cooling costs by slowing heat movement through the ceiling - most jobs are completed in a single day with no need to leave your home.
If your home was built before the 1980s, the attic may have far less insulation than today's standards call for - or the original material has settled and lost much of its effectiveness over the decades. Klamath Falls winters are cold enough that those gaps show up quickly on your heating bill. Before new insulation goes in, we seal the gaps around pipes, light fixtures, and other openings in the attic floor, because no amount of insulation fixes an air leak on its own.
When the attic is addressed properly, combining it with attic air sealing delivers the full benefit - less heat loss, more even temperatures across every room.
Klamath Falls winters are long and cold. If your heating system runs almost constantly from November through March without your home ever feeling fully warm, your attic may be the reason. Heat rises, and without a proper barrier, it escapes straight through the ceiling.
When insulation is uneven or missing in patches, the rooms directly below those thin spots feel colder than the rest of the house. If one bedroom or the hallway near the attic hatch is always chilly no matter how high you set the thermostat, an insulation gap is likely the cause.
If you peek into your attic and can clearly see the tops of the wooden beams, you do not have enough insulation. Those beams should be buried under a thick, even layer of material. This is one of the easiest self-checks a homeowner can do - it takes about 30 seconds with a flashlight.
Ice dams are a direct sign that heat is escaping through your attic and melting roof snow unevenly. Klamath Falls gets enough winter snow that ice dams are a real concern, and they can cause water to back up under your shingles. Proper attic insulation is the most effective long-term fix.
We install both blown-in and batt insulation depending on what your attic needs. For most older Klamath Falls homes - where the space is irregular or already has some insulation in place - blown-in insulation is the better choice because it fills gaps and settles around obstacles that batts cannot reach. Every job begins with air sealing the attic floor first, which is the step most contractors skip - and the one that matters most for your energy savings.
We also perform attic air sealing as a standalone service for homeowners who already have adequate insulation depth but are still losing heat through gaps. A written estimate, clear documentation of materials used, and a walkthrough at the end are part of every job.
Best for attics with irregular shapes, obstacles, or existing insulation that needs topping up - fills every corner without gaps.
A good fit for open, accessible attics with standard joist spacing where batts can be laid flat without gaps.
The complete approach - seal the gaps in the attic floor first, then add the right depth of insulation for maximum heat retention.
Klamath Falls has some of the coldest winters in Oregon. At roughly 4,100 feet elevation in a high-desert basin, temperatures regularly drop into the single digits in January and February. The federal government places Klamath Falls in a climate zone that calls for more attic insulation than most of western Oregon - and homes that were built here before modern energy codes took effect are often insulated to a fraction of what they actually need. That gap between what the home has and what it needs shows up on your heating bill every winter.
Homeowners in communities like Midland and Chiloquin also deal with these same conditions. Oregon homeowners served by Pacific Power may qualify for cash rebates through Energy Trust of Oregon, which can meaningfully reduce the out-of-pocket cost of an attic insulation upgrade.
We respond within 1 business day. You tell us the age of your home and what has been prompting your concern - high bills, cold rooms, or just a house that has never had insulation work done. We schedule a free in-home visit at a time that works for you.
A contractor comes to your home and spends 20 to 40 minutes looking at your attic - checking how much insulation is already there, whether it is in good condition, and whether gaps need to be sealed first. This visit is free and is the step that separates a real estimate from a guess.
You receive a written estimate that spells out the materials, depth, total cost, and whether a permit is required. A trustworthy contractor explains what they found in plain terms and tells you exactly what they recommend - no vague line items.
Most attic insulation jobs are completed in a single day. The crew seals any gaps in the attic floor first, then installs the insulation. There is no curing time - your home is ready to use immediately. Before they leave, they walk you through what was done and provide documentation of materials for your records.
We respond within 1 business day. No obligation and no pressure - just an honest look at what your attic needs and exactly what it will cost. We will also let you know what rebates and credits may apply before any work begins.
(458) 254-8018Oregon requires all contractors doing this type of work to be licensed through the Oregon Construction Contractors Board. Our license is active and our liability insurance is in place before any crew enters your home.
We have worked on homes across Klamath Falls and the surrounding basin for years. We know the mid-century housing stock here, the crawl space and attic configurations common in this area, and what the cold winters actually demand from insulation.
Sealing the gaps in your attic floor before adding insulation is the step that separates a thorough job from one that still lets heat out. We do not skip it. That is also the step most needed to prevent ice dams from forming on your roof.
You receive written documentation of the materials installed - exactly what you need to claim the federal tax credit and any Energy Trust of Oregon rebates. We make sure you have it before we leave, not after you ask.
We respond quickly, explain everything in plain language, and do not leave until you have seen the finished work and have your documentation. That is the standard we hold to on every job.
Blown-in material is the most common choice for topping up existing attic insulation and filling irregular spaces in older homes.
Learn MoreAir sealing the attic floor before insulation goes in is what separates a thorough job from one that still leaks heat.
Learn MoreSchedule your free estimate now - before the fall rush books up and the cold settles in for good.