Home >Article >Why Air Sealing is Important

Why Air Sealing is Important

Apr 17, 2012

Having your home properly air sealed is critical to your energy conservation efforts and greatly impacts your utility bills. You can save up to 30% of your energy costs by air sealing multiple points of your home where energy losses occur. Additionally, air leaks are also a major cause of discomfort, moisture problems and even poor air quality.

Where Air Leakage Occurs

The US Department of Energy shows how much air leakage occurs in various locations of an average American home:

  • Ceiling, Walls and Floors – 31%
  • Ducts – 15%
  • Fireplace – 14%
  • Plumbing Penetrations – 13%
  • Doors – 11%
  • Windows – 10%
  • Fans and Vents – 4%
  • Electrical Outlets – 2%

These figures provide you with the most important areas to target for air sealing. However, a home energy assessment will pinpoint the exact locations of air loss and assess your entire home’s energy consumption and waste, and recommend ways to improve your home’s energy efficiency.

Exterior of Your Home

The exterior of your home is often referred to as the “envelope” or the “shell”. Sealing your home against air infiltration (air leaking in from the outside) and air ex-filtration (air leaking from inside of the house to the outside) helps to reduce your energy expenditures.

As a homeowner, you can greatly improve your home’s energy efficiency by sealing as many entry points as possible. Check seams between the top of the foundation wall and the wood framing, doors and windows, along baseboards, through electrical receptacles and switches mounted on exterior walls, fireplaces, laundry chutes, attic hatchway doors and pull-down stairs, whole-house fan installations and pipe and wire penetrations.

It is recommended to consult a RESNET certified energy auditor to test for air leaks using a “blower-door test” to accurately measure air leakage of your house. The test is done by temporarily de-pressurizing the house to get an accurate measurement of how much air is entering the house through cracks, gaps and holes. The auditor will also use a device called a smoke pencil to pinpoint where air is entering the house while the blower door is in operation.

Interior of Your Home

To ensure that air doesn’t leak from the outside of your home to the inside, check the following:

  • Baseboards and Floors: Any gaps left between baseboards and hard floors can be filled with latex caulk.
  • Gaskets: Check switches and electrical outlets – they may feel cold or you may feel a cold draft. You can block these drafts form the inside of your house by installing inexpensive insulated gaskets. (Caution: to avoid electrical shock, remove the covers from switches and receptacles only after you have shut off the power.)
  • Recessed Ceiling Lights: Older types of recessed lighting can be extremely leaky and difficult to make airtight. Often, the best solution is to build an airtight box of flame-resistant material (i.e. sheet metal or drywall) at least 3 inches larger the light’s housing to cover the portion of the fixture that is in the attic. You will need to pay attention to fire code regulations.
  • Attic Floor: The top floor ceiling in your home acts as a containment barrier to rising warm air. Any small hole or a gap in that area will create an outlet for warm air to escape. As the air exits through the top floor ceiling, it will create a slight negative pressure inside your house and the air leaving will need to be replaced. That air will come from the outside of the house and will need to be heated – requiring additional use of your furnace, which costs you money. Checking for cracks, holes of small openings in the attic floor will result in substantial energy savings.
  • Fireplace: Careful sealing of this area is often neglected, and gaps around fireplaces allow heated or cooled air to escape the house easily. Check around your fireplace with a good flashlight to see if there are any holes that need to be sealed with spray foam, fireproof caulk or other filler.
  • Weather stripping: Checking the weather stripping around your doors will not only keep the drafts out of your home – it will keep your heating and cooling bills under control.
  • Attic: Sealing and insulating your attic is one of the most critical steps to ensuring that your home is properly air sealed. Most attics have insulation which helps reduce heat loss. But it won’t stop the air flow. Insulation can actually conceal cracks, gaps and holes through which the pressurized air from your home is driven into the attic. Check for staining in the insulation, which is an indicator of an air leak.
  • Chimneys: Building codes mandate a minimum two-inch gap between any flammable material and the masonry or metal. This gap is often left unfilled and it leaves a hole that goes directly from the basement to the attic. The solution is to close the hole with a non-flammable material and fireproof caulk.
  • Pull-Down Attic Stairs: This is often the largest hole in the attic floor which can allow a tremendous amount of air to escape. Some estimates state that the hole around a typical pull-down stairs can amount to 40 square inches. Proper sealing is difficult, but adding compressible self-stick foam tape along the upper edges of the plywood door will help reduce air leakage.

An Energy Assessment Provides Answers

A professional home energy assessment by a RESNET certified energy professional is the best way to evaluate your energy consumption, providing you with a comprehensive assessment of your home’s energy performance. You could perform a simple energy assessment yourself by carefully inspecting your entire home, checking for possible air leaks, efficiencies of your appliances, etc. But you will get much more detailed information and a plan of action with an audit performed by a professional energy auditor using diagnostic equipment.