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Based on your home's age, insulation level, and climate — here's what will have the biggest impact, in order:
The Right Order of Improvements
Building science professionals follow a specific sequence when improving a home's energy performance. The order matters because each step affects the next.
1. Air seal first. Close the uncontrolled leaks — especially in the attic floor and rim joist. Air carries heat much faster than conduction, and no amount of insulation fixes a bypass.
2. Insulate on top of sealed surfaces. Once bypasses are sealed, insulation performs at its rated value. Attic floor insulation delivers the highest return in most climates.
3. Right-size and upgrade HVAC. With a reduced load from steps 1 and 2, you may need smaller equipment. Any system now runs in longer, more efficient cycles in a tighter home.
4. Address water heating. Heat pump water heaters deliver 2–3× the efficiency of standard electric units and are one of the highest-return appliance upgrades available.
5. Lighting and appliances. LED lighting is already cheap and widely adopted. Appliance upgrades make sense at natural replacement time.
Common Questions
What is the single most effective thing I can do to lower my energy bills?
In most older homes, air sealing delivers the greatest impact per dollar spent. Uncontrolled air leakage is often responsible for 25–40% of heating and cooling costs — and it can be addressed with low-cost materials like caulk, spray foam, and weatherstripping.
Why does my home feel uncomfortable even with the thermostat set correctly?
Thermostat comfort and actual comfort are different. Radiant comfort depends on the temperature of surrounding surfaces — walls, ceilings, windows, floors — not just air temperature. Cold surfaces make a room feel cold even at 70°F. Improving the building envelope addresses the root cause.
Are smart thermostats worth it?
They help, but they're not a substitute for fixing the building envelope. A smart thermostat optimizes when you use energy — but if your home is leaky and under-insulated, it's optimizing a broken system. Fix the envelope first; then a smart thermostat amplifies those gains.
What does a professional energy audit actually tell me?
A comprehensive energy audit by a BPI-certified analyst includes a blower door test (measures actual air leakage), duct leakage test, combustion safety testing, insulation inspection, and a prioritized improvement report. It takes the guesswork out of where to spend your money and is often required to access utility rebate programs.