Waco & Central Texas

Seal out the Central Texas heat. Watch your power bill drop.

Waco summers run in the 90s and 100s for months, and humid Gulf air keeps overnight lows near 80°. That's months of AC running flat out. Spray foam seals your building envelope so the heat and humidity stay outside — and your cooling costs come down.

90s–100ssummer highs
for months (NOAA)
R-38attic target,
Zone 3A (IECC)
Freeon-site estimate
& R-value plan

Get a free estimate

Tell us about your home, shop, or metal building. We'll come measure, recommend open- or closed-cell, and give you a written quote — no pressure.

No obligation. We'll call to schedule your on-site quote.

Why spray foam here

In a humid subtropical climate, air-sealing is the whole game.

Traditional fiberglass slows heat, but it doesn't stop air. In Central Texas that's the problem — our summers aren't just hot, they're humid and long. Waco sits in a humid subtropical climate where July and August highs sit in the 90s and regularly top 100°F, and Gulf moisture keeps some nights from dropping below 80°. Every gap around your attic, walls, and can lights lets that hot, damp air leak in while your conditioned air leaks out — so the AC never gets a break.

Spray foam is different because it does two jobs at once: it insulates and it air-seals. It expands into every gap and crack to form a continuous barrier against both heat transfer and air infiltration. In our climate, cutting that air leakage is often where the real savings live.

The U.S. Department of Energy puts Waco in Climate Zone 3A, where code targets around R-38 in the attic. Spray foam hits that with less thickness than fiberglass — and seals the leaks fiberglass leaves behind.

What we do

Spray foam for every Central Texas building.

Homes, businesses, and the metal buildings and barndominiums all over McLennan County. Open-cell or closed-cell, matched to the job.

What foam fixes

If any of this sounds like your building…

These are the signs that air leakage and weak insulation are costing you comfort and money.

Summer electric bills that keep climbingWhen the AC runs nonstop from May to October, air leakage and thin attic insulation are usually the reason.
Rooms that are always too hotOne bedroom that never cools down often sits under an unsealed, superheated attic.
An attic that feels like an ovenA vented attic in Central Texas can hit 130°F+, radiating heat straight into your living space.
Humidity you can feel indoorsMuggy, sticky air inside means outdoor moisture is leaking in faster than your AC can remove it.
A new metal shop or barndominiumBare metal roofs and walls sweat and bake — closed-cell foam stops both before they start.
Old or damaged insulationCompressed, wet, or rodent-fouled insulation has stopped doing its job and needs to come out.
Free estimate

Get a free spray foam estimate.

Tell us about your project and we'll come measure. You'll get an R-value recommendation and a written quote before you spend a dollar.

  • Free, no-obligation on-site estimate
  • Open-cell & closed-cell — matched to the job
  • Built for Central Texas heat and humidity
  • Homes, businesses & metal buildings

Call (254) 978-8027

No obligation. We'll call to schedule your on-site quote.

Where we work

Serving Waco and Central Texas.

From the older homes near downtown and Baylor to the new subdivisions in Hewitt and the metal buildings out toward China Spring and West.

Waco, TXHewitt, TXWoodway, TXMcGregor, TXRobinson, TXChina Spring, TXWest, TX Lorena, TXBellmead, TXLacy Lakeview, TXBruceville-Eddy, TXCrawford, TX

See all service areas →

Answers

Frequently asked questions

How much does spray foam insulation cost in Waco?

It depends on the area being sprayed, the foam type (open- or closed-cell), and the thickness needed to hit your R-value target. Open-cell costs less per board foot and suits attics and interior walls; closed-cell costs more but delivers roughly double the R-value per inch plus moisture resistance. Rather than guess, we measure your space and give a written estimate — free.

Will spray foam really lower my electric bill?

In a hot, humid, air-leaky climate like Central Texas, sealing the envelope is often the biggest single lever on cooling costs, because your AC stops fighting constant infiltration of hot, moist outdoor air. The exact savings depend on your current insulation, ductwork, and how leaky the building is now — we'll give you a realistic picture during the estimate rather than a inflated promise.

Open-cell or closed-cell — which do I need?

Short version: open-cell (~R-3.6/inch) is a cost-effective air seal for attics and interior walls; closed-cell (~R-6 to R-7/inch) is denser, adds moisture resistance and rigidity, and is the right call for metal buildings, crawl spaces, and anywhere space is tight. We walk you through it on our comparison page and recommend based on your specific building.

Do you insulate metal buildings and barndominiums?

Yes — it's one of the most common jobs in Central Texas. Closed-cell foam sprayed on a metal roof and walls stops the condensation and radiant heat that make bare metal buildings miserable, and it adds rigidity to the structure.

Is the estimate really free?

Yes. We come to your property, measure, talk through open- vs closed-cell and the R-value that fits your goals, and leave you with a written quote — no obligation.

Sources behind the claims on this page

R-value, climate-zone, and local weather figures cited above are drawn from public, authoritative sources so you can verify them independently.

  1. U.S. Department of Energy / ENERGY STAR — Recommended Levels of Insulation by climate zone.
  2. International Energy Conservation Code (IECC 2021) — Climate Zone 3 insulation requirements (attic R-38, above-grade walls R-20). Waco / McLennan County is Climate Zone 3A (warm-humid).
  3. U.S. DOE Building America — “Which Spray Foam Is Right for You?” guidance on open-cell vs closed-cell R-value and application (open-cell ~R-3.6/in; closed-cell ~R-6 to R-7/in).
  4. NOAA / National Weather Service — Waco climate normals and records (1991–2020; humid subtropical, summer highs in the 90s–100s°F).

Stop paying to cool the great outdoors.

A sealed building envelope is the difference between an AC that keeps up and one that never shuts off. Get your free estimate.

Get your free estimate
(254) 978-8027