nyserdaempowercontractors.com

FREE In- Home Energy Assessment & Upgrades. Schedule Today

Professional Home Insulation Services in New York City

Lower Your Energy Bills and Improve Comfort

Your NYC home should keep you comfortable without draining your bank account. Yet poor insulation forces most homeowners to pay hundreds of dollars extra every year while dealing with drafty rooms, temperature swings, and skyrocketing energy bills.

As a NYSERDA-approved EmPower+ contractor with over 15 years of experience serving NYC families, we help income-eligible homeowners get professional insulation upgrades at no cost through state-funded programs. Our BPI-certified team has completed thousands of installations across all five boroughs, delivering measurable energy savings and year-round comfort.

Check For Eligible Rebates

"*" indicates required fields

Name*

Our Partners

Why Air Sealing Matters for NYC Homes

Why NYC Homes Need Better Insulation

Nine out of 10 homes in the United States are under-insulated, and NYC is no exception. Walk through your home and you’ll likely notice the signs: drafty rooms in winter, certain spaces that never seem to cool down in summer, ice dams forming on your roof, or condensation on windows. These aren’t just comfort issues—they’re symptoms of energy waste that’s costing you money every month.

The building science is straightforward. Heat naturally flows from warm areas to cold ones. In winter, the warmth you’re paying to generate escapes through poorly insulated attics, walls, and basements. In summer, hot outdoor air pushes into your cooled space, forcing your air conditioner to work overtime. Proper insulation creates a thermal barrier that slows this heat transfer, keeping conditioned air where you want it.

Understanding Your Energy Costs

When you break down where your energy dollars go, heating and cooling account for nearly half of typical household energy consumption. If your home lacks adequate insulation, that percentage can be even higher. You’re essentially paying to heat or cool the outdoors while your family stays uncomfortable indoors.

The good news is that insulation improvements deliver measurable returns. Unlike some home upgrades that offer mostly aesthetic value, insulation directly reduces your operating costs. The savings compound year after year, while proper insulation typically lasts for decades without needing replacement.

our mission

How Proper Insulation Works

Insulation functions by resisting heat flow. Different materials accomplish this in different ways, but they all share the goal of creating a barrier between your home’s conditioned space and the outside environment.

The effectiveness of insulation is measured by R-value, which indicates resistance to heat flow. Higher R-values mean better insulating performance. NYC’s climate zone typically requires R-49 to R-60 in attics, R-13 to R-21 in walls, and R-25 to R-30 in floors, depending on your specific situation.

Taking the Next Step

The process starts with understanding your home’s current performance and identifying the most effective improvements. Schedule your free home energy assessment today. We’ll evaluate your home, explain your options clearly, and help you access available incentives and programs.

Call us at 718-550-1664 to schedule your assessment, or contact us through our website. Every day you wait is another day of wasted energy and higher bills. Let’s work together to make your home more comfortable, more efficient, and less expensive to operate.

We work with several insulation types based on your home's needs

Blown-in cellulose insulation

It's made from recycled paper products treated for fire resistance, making it an environmentally responsible choice with excellent thermal performance.

Spray foam insulation

Expands to fill cracks and crevices, creating both an insulation layer and an air barrier. It's particularly effective in rim joists, crawl spaces, and areas with irregular framing.

Rigid foam boards

Rigid foam boards provide high R-value per inch and work well for basement walls and other applications where space is limited.

Our Insulation Upgrade Process

We keep everything straightforward and respectful:

All installations follow strict NYSERDA guidelines and best practices.

Professional Home Energy Audits in NYC

Where Your Home Needs Insulation

Attic Insulation

Adding attic insulation delivers immediate results. Homeowners often report noticeable comfort improvements within days and see reduced energy bills within the first month.






Wall Insulation

Wall insulation is more complex to add after construction, but modern techniques make it possible without major renovation. We use dense-pack cellulose or injection foam methods that fill wall cavities through small access holes, which are then patched and painted to match your existing walls.


Basement and Crawl Spaces

Insulating rim joists, basement walls, and crawl space areas stops this heat loss and helps control moisture. The result is warmer floors in winter, lower heating bills, and a healthier home environment.




Air Sealing

Professional air sealing identifies and closes these gaps around windows, doors, electrical outlets, plumbing penetrations, and other openings. When combined with proper insulation, air sealing dramatically improves your home's energy performance. The two work together—insulation slows heat transfer through materials, while air sealing prevents heat loss through gaps.

why air sealing

The EmPower+ Program: No-Cost Insulation for Qualified NYC Homeowners

If you’re income-qualified, you may be eligible for comprehensive insulation and air sealing services at absolutely no cost through the NYSERDA EmPower+ program. This isn’t a loan or financing—it’s genuinely free service that can transform your home’s energy performance.

EmPower+ provides funding toward the cost of energy efficiency improvements, including air sealing, insulation, heat pumps, heat pump water heaters, and electrical service upgrades. The program is open to income-eligible owners and renters of one- to four-family households.