If your floors are always cold in winter and your energy bills seem higher than they should be, your crawl space is the likely culprit โ and crawl space encapsulation is the fix that pays for itself.
Most Greenville homeowners don't realize that their crawl space is their home's biggest energy leak. An unencapsulated, vented crawl space is essentially an open connection between your home's conditioned air and the outdoors โ running 24/7/365.
Cold air in your crawl space contacts the bottom of your subfloor โ the thermal boundary of your home. Without proper insulation and air sealing, this creates three simultaneous energy losses:
Heat energy transfers directly from your warm living area through the subfloor into the cold crawl space below โ especially in Greenville winters when crawl space temps can drop to 35โ45ยฐF.
Cold air from the crawl space moves through pipe penetrations, electrical chases, and subfloor gaps into your living area โ forcing your HVAC system to work harder to maintain temperature.
Humid crawl space air that enters your home's air supply dramatically increases the latent load on your AC in summer โ making it run longer and cost more to remove moisture from the air.
Studies by the Advanced Energy Corporation and Department of Energy show that properly encapsulated crawl spaces reduce heating and cooling costs by 15โ25% in climates like Greenville's. For the average Greenville home spending $2,000/year on utilities, that's $300โ$500 in annual savings.
"Our heating bill dropped $140 per month after encapsulation. The job paid for itself in under 4 years โ and we no longer have cold floors or a musty smell." โ Sarah L., Simpsonville SC
Many Greenville homeowners try adding more fiberglass insulation between joists โ but this doesn't stop air infiltration and actually holds moisture against the wood. The real fix is air sealing and encapsulation, not just adding more insulation.
Learn About Insulation Replacement โOur free inspection includes an honest assessment of your energy loss through the crawl space and what encapsulation would realistically save you. No obligation.