The most expensive problems are usually the ones you can’t see, and insulation isn’t something most people think about until it’s already costing them. Skyrocketing energy bills, moisture in the wrong places, a client who can’t figure out why their second floor is unbearable in August, these are all symptoms of a space trying to tell you something. Here are five warning signs that an insulation inspection is overdue and what that looks like.
1. Energy Costs Continue to Rise
If your heating and cooling costs keep creeping up year over year without a major change in usage or utility rates, your insulation is a prime suspect. Insulation acts as a thermal barrier between your conditioned living space and the outdoors. When it compresses, absorbs moisture, or simply ages out, your HVAC system compensates by running longer and harder, and that shows up on your bill every month.
What to watch for: An unexplained 10-20% in monthly energy costs, or a home where HVAC equipment has been upsized repeatedly without resolving comfort complaints.
2. Temperature Differences Exist Between Areas
A room that’s chronically off-temperature, especially one above an unconditioned garage, below an attic, or on the end of the house, almost always has an insulation deficiency and an inspection can confirm it fast. Isolated cold or hot zones point to specific areas where the thermal barrier has failed.
What to watch for: Persistent hot or cold spots in the same room every season that don’t respond to HVAC adjustments.
3. You notice persistent Odors Indoors
Unusual or lingering odors can indicate issues in attic spaces, wall cavities, or mechanical areas where insulation and airflow play a role. In commercial buildings, these concerns can also impact occupant comfort and overall indoor environment quality. Rodents are notorious for shredding batts and nesting inside them, leaving behind waste that compounds the problem.
What to watch for: Musty Odors from walls or HVAC registers, droppings, nesting material.
4. The Space Has Never Has an Insulation Evaluation
Most people never think about insulation until something goes wrong. But older materials degrade over time. They compress, absorb moisture, and lose R-value. Homes built before the 1980s may also contain materials now considered hazardous, including vermiculite with asbestos contamination. If you’ve never had insulation evaluated since buying the home, you’re likely overdue. Age alone is a reason to recommend an insulation assessment during any service visit or pre-project walkthrough. A 20-year-old attic that’s never been touched is almost certainly underperforming.
What to watch for: No record of insulation being inspected or upgraded since original construction, or visible signs of aged, yellowed, or heavily compressed batts in accessible areas.
5. A Renovation or Addition is Coming Up
A planned remodel is one of the best opportunities you’ll ever have to address insulation because the walls are already open. Finishing a basement, adding a room, replacing a roof, or putting on an addition all create direct access to areas that are otherwise hard or expensive to reach. Doing an insulation assessment before construction starts lets you deal with any existing deficiencies at the same time, for a fraction of what it would cost as a standalone project. For contractors and builders, recommending an insulation upgrade as part of the scope, and explaining why, adds value to the project and positions you as the thorough professional who catches things others miss.
What to watch for: Any project involving exterior wall demo, roof removal, crawl space access, or the addition of new conditioned square footage.
The Bottom Line
Insulation problems don’t announce themselves. For homeowners, catching these issues early means lower bills and a more comfortable home. For contractors, knowing the signs and proactively flagging them means better project outcomes, stronger client relationships, and more complete scopes of work.
Have questions about what an insulation inspection involves, or ready to schedule one? Get in touch with our team today.



