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Your contractor is probably recommending spray foam insulation without telling you about the class action lawsuits, permanent installation risks, and potential for years of toxic off-gassing.
In today's episode, I'm breaking down everything you need to know about spray foam insulation before making this permanent decision for your home. While spray foam offers excellent performance as an air barrier, vapor retarder, and insulation all in one, there are serious downsides that most contractors don't discuss: it's permanent (requiring expensive remediation to remove), it can off-gas for years if improperly mixed, and it requires perfect application to avoid moisture trapping and mold issues.
The biggest problem I see is that spray foam isn't just a simple material swap during construction. Closed cell and open cell spray foam have completely different R-values and permeability ratings, and you can't just decide mid-construction to switch to mineral wool or fiberglass without redesigning your entire building assembly. This conversation needs to happen during the design phase, not when your contractor is ready to spray.
In today's episode, we're chatting about:
• Why closed cell vs. open cell spray foam aren't interchangeable (and how this affects your building plans)
• The verification protocols every spray foam project needs (including third-party testing)
• Safer alternatives to spray foam and why they cost 30-50% more
• How to spot greenwashing in "non-toxic" spray foam marketing
• The real costs of spray foam failures and why perfect application is critical
5
4242 ratings
Your contractor is probably recommending spray foam insulation without telling you about the class action lawsuits, permanent installation risks, and potential for years of toxic off-gassing.
In today's episode, I'm breaking down everything you need to know about spray foam insulation before making this permanent decision for your home. While spray foam offers excellent performance as an air barrier, vapor retarder, and insulation all in one, there are serious downsides that most contractors don't discuss: it's permanent (requiring expensive remediation to remove), it can off-gas for years if improperly mixed, and it requires perfect application to avoid moisture trapping and mold issues.
The biggest problem I see is that spray foam isn't just a simple material swap during construction. Closed cell and open cell spray foam have completely different R-values and permeability ratings, and you can't just decide mid-construction to switch to mineral wool or fiberglass without redesigning your entire building assembly. This conversation needs to happen during the design phase, not when your contractor is ready to spray.
In today's episode, we're chatting about:
• Why closed cell vs. open cell spray foam aren't interchangeable (and how this affects your building plans)
• The verification protocols every spray foam project needs (including third-party testing)
• Safer alternatives to spray foam and why they cost 30-50% more
• How to spot greenwashing in "non-toxic" spray foam marketing
• The real costs of spray foam failures and why perfect application is critical
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