
If your attic insulation is thin or patchy, heat is escaping through the ceiling every cold night. We fill those gaps with even, deep blown-in coverage so your home finally holds warmth through a Klamath Falls winter.

Blown-in insulation in Klamath Falls fills your attic floor with loose fiber material - fiberglass or cellulose - that covers every corner and gap batts cannot reach, and most attic jobs are complete in two to four hours with no need to leave your home.
Klamath Falls sits at roughly 4,100 feet in the Klamath Basin, and winters here are long and genuinely cold - temperatures dropping into the teens are common from November through March. If your attic has only a few inches of old, compressed material, heat is leaving through the ceiling every single night you run the furnace. Blown-in insulation brings attic depth up to what this climate demands, and many homeowners notice the difference within the first cold snap after installation.
If your home was built before 1980, chances are the attic insulation was installed to a standard that no longer holds up. Pair blown-in coverage with home insulation for the walls and crawl space, and you address the whole thermal envelope in one project.
If bedrooms or rooms on the upper level of your home never quite warm up even when the furnace is running, thin attic insulation is the most likely cause. Heat rises and escapes through the ceiling before it can warm the living space below. This is a common and fixable problem in older Klamath Falls homes.
If you look into your attic and can see the wooden beams across the floor, your insulation depth is almost certainly too low for Klamath Falls winters. Those beams should be completely buried under a thick, fluffy layer. Visible wood means heat is finding an easy path out every cold night.
Ice dams - ridges of ice at the roof edge after snowfall - form when heat leaks through a poorly insulated attic and melts snow unevenly. Klamath Falls gets enough snow and cold to make this a real risk. Those dams can force water under shingles and into your ceiling, causing expensive damage.
Homes built in Klamath Falls before the 1980s were insulated to standards far below what is recommended today. If you have owned your home for years and cannot recall any insulation work, a quick look into the attic - or a free assessment - will tell you in minutes whether you are leaving heat and money out in the cold.
We install both fiberglass and cellulose blown-in material depending on your attic layout, your existing insulation, and what will give you the most consistent depth over time. Cellulose is made from recycled paper and performs well in tight attic spaces; fiberglass holds its depth more consistently across a long heating season. Either way, the crew works methodically from the far end of the attic back toward the hatch, checking depth markers as they go so coverage is even across the entire floor - not just in the middle where it is easy to reach.
Many attics benefit from combining blown-in insulation with wall insulation for older homes where the walls have little or nothing inside them. We can assess both during the same visit. And because blown-in material fills gaps as well as adding depth, it works alongside home insulation projects that cover multiple areas of the house at once.
Best for homes where the attic is accessible and needs depth added - the most common blown-in job and the one with the fastest visible impact on heating bills.
Suited for attics with some insulation already in place but not enough depth - the crew blows new material directly on top, which is faster and less expensive than full removal.
Designed for walls in older homes where the cavities are empty - material is blown in through small holes that are patched afterward, so you get insulated walls without tearing them open.
Ideal for homes where both thin insulation and air gaps are driving heat loss - sealing gaps around fixtures and penetrations before adding blown-in material gives the best overall result.
The federal government places Klamath Falls in one of the colder residential climate zones in the country, which means the recommended attic insulation depth here is among the highest for any U.S. market. The city sits at roughly 4,100 feet in the Klamath Basin, and January lows regularly reach the mid-teens. A large share of homes in the area were built in the mid-20th century, when insulation requirements were minimal - meaning many attics have only a few inches of old, compressed material that is no longer doing much. Blown-in insulation is one of the most cost-effective ways to close that gap without a major renovation.
There is also a wildfire smoke angle that is specific to communities like ours. When smoke rolls into the Klamath Basin in late summer, a well-insulated and air-sealed attic reduces how much of that air finds its way into your living space through ceiling gaps. We serve homeowners throughout the area, including those near Merrill and Bonanza, where older ranch-style homes face the same cold-winter challenges as in-town properties.
We ask a few quick questions - your home's size, when it was built, and what you're noticing - and reply within one business day to confirm a visit time. No pressure, no commitment at this stage.
We go into the attic, measure what is already there, and check for moisture, damaged material, or gaps around fixtures that should be addressed first. The visit takes 30 to 45 minutes and results in a written quote before anything is scheduled.
The crew parks outside, runs a hose through the attic hatch, and blows material to an even depth across the whole attic floor, checking depth markers as they go. Most jobs are done in two to four hours and the blowing machine noise stays outside.
Before leaving, we walk you through the finished attic so you can see the depth markers yourself - you do not have to take our word for it. We provide written documentation of the work, which you may need for any Oregon energy efficiency rebate application.
Free written estimate. No pressure. We reply within one business day.
(458) 254-8018We are based here, not a franchise dispatched from a city three hours away. We know the housing stock in this area - the older ranch homes, the mid-century construction, and what Klamath Basin winters actually do to a thin attic - because we work in it every week.
Oregon requires insulation contractors to hold a Construction Contractors Board license. Ours is current and on file. That means you have real recourse if anything goes wrong - not just a verbal guarantee. You can verify our license on the Oregon CCB website.
Your estimate specifies the material type, the target depth, and the total cost. We do not change that number once we are in your attic. If we find something unexpected during the assessment, we tell you before we schedule the installation - not after we have already started.
We leave depth markers standing in the attic insulation so you can see the coverage before anything gets covered or put away. We also provide written documentation of the work, which may be needed for Energy Trust of Oregon rebate applications.
Every one of those things - licensing, written estimates, visible depth markers, and rebate documentation - exists to give you confidence in work you cannot easily check yourself. That matters when the job happens in a space most homeowners rarely enter.
A whole-home look at attic, wall, and crawl space insulation together - useful when you want to address all heat-loss areas in a single project.
Learn MoreDense-pack and blown-in options for wall cavities in older Klamath Falls homes that were built with little or no insulation between the studs.
Learn MoreKlamath Falls heating season arrives fast - lock in your installation date before the cold sets in and our schedule fills up.