
Moses Lake's extreme temperature swings demand insulation that seals air leaks and holds its value in both heat and cold. Closed-cell foam does both in a single application - and it lasts for the life of your home.

Closed-cell foam insulation in Moses Lake starts as a liquid, expands into a firm dense layer that seals gaps and holds its shape for decades, and most residential jobs - a crawl space, attic, or rim joists - are completed in a single day.
Unlike fiberglass batts, closed-cell foam does two things at once: it insulates and it seals. When the foam is applied, it expands to fill every gap it contacts - around pipes, at corners, in irregular cavities - and then hardens into a solid barrier. That means heat cannot push through the material and cold air cannot sneak around it. For older Moses Lake homes with crawl spaces or rim joists that were never properly sealed, this is one of the most effective upgrades available.
Closed-cell foam also delivers roughly twice the insulating power per inch compared to fiberglass, which matters in tight spaces where you cannot fit a thick layer of traditional material. Many homeowners pair it with spray foam insulation across multiple areas of the home for a comprehensive building envelope upgrade.
If your floors feel noticeably cold in winter - especially in rooms over an unheated crawl space - heat is escaping through the floor. Moses Lake winters can be harsh, and an uninsulated crawl space is one of the most direct paths for that cold to reach your living space. This is one of the most common complaints from homeowners in older Moses Lake neighborhoods.
If your energy bills feel out of proportion to the size of your home, poor insulation and air sealing are often the cause. In Moses Lake's climate - hot summers above 100 degrees and cold winters below 10 - a home that is not well-sealed costs significantly more to keep comfortable. If neighbors in similar-sized homes are paying noticeably less, it is worth having an insulation contractor take a look.
Drafts do not always come from windows - they often come from gaps in the wall cavity behind outlets and baseboards. If you hold your hand near an outlet on an exterior wall on a cold day and feel cool air moving, that is air infiltration. Closed-cell foam seals those gaps rather than just covering them, which is why it addresses the problem in a way that softer insulation materials cannot.
Moses Lake's older homes often have crawl spaces that were not designed to manage moisture well. A musty smell, dark staining on floor joists, or visible moisture under your house are signs that water is getting in. Left alone, this leads to mold, rot, and structural damage. Closed-cell foam applied to the crawl space creates a barrier that keeps moisture out and protects the structure underneath your home.
Closed-cell foam performs best in locations where you need maximum insulating value in a limited space and where moisture resistance matters - crawl spaces, rim joists, basement walls, and attic decks are the most common applications we handle in Moses Lake homes. Because the foam expands to conform to whatever surface it is applied to, it works particularly well in older homes where framing has shifted and gaps are irregular.
For homeowners comparing options, we also offer open-cell foam insulation - a softer, less dense foam that is a better fit for interior walls and large attic areas where moisture resistance is less of a priority and sound dampening matters more. Both are spray-applied and installed in a single day for most residential projects.
Best for homes with unheated crawl spaces that need moisture resistance and maximum insulating power in a low-clearance area.
Targets the band of framing at the top of the foundation wall - one of the single biggest sources of heat loss and cold infiltration in older homes.
Ideal for homeowners who want to convert their attic to conditioned space or close off a vented attic that is difficult to air-seal by other means.
Suited for finished or semi-finished basements where wall space is limited and a high-performance moisture-resistant barrier is needed.
Moses Lake sits in the Columbia Basin, where summer highs regularly push past 100 degrees and winter lows can drop below 10 degrees. That is a temperature swing your home's insulation has to handle in both directions. Closed-cell foam's ability to seal air leaks and hold its insulating value in both extreme heat and extreme cold makes it particularly well-suited to this climate. A significant share of Moses Lake's housing was built in the 1960s through 1980s, when crawl space insulation standards were much lower than today - and many of those homes have little or no insulation under the floor, which means cold floors in winter and higher heating bills year-round. The Columbia Basin is also semi-arid and dusty, and closed-cell foam's air-sealing properties reduce the amount of outdoor dust and dry air that infiltrates through gaps in the building envelope.
We serve homeowners across the area, including Soap Lake and Warden - both communities share Moses Lake's climate conditions and the same mid-century housing stock that benefits most from this type of upgrade. Grant County PUD has also offered energy efficiency rebate programs that can offset part of the installation cost - it is worth asking before you start your project.
We will ask a few basic questions - the area you want insulated, any specific problems like cold floors or high bills, and the size of the space. We reply within one business day and can schedule an on-site visit within a few days.
We walk through the area to be insulated, take measurements, check for existing moisture or insulation, and identify any prep work needed. You receive a written estimate that breaks down the cost and explains exactly what will be done - no surprises.
Before the crew arrives, you will need to clear the work area and make arrangements to be out of the home for at least 24 hours after the foam is applied. The fumes released during application are not safe to breathe in an enclosed space - your contractor will give you a specific re-entry time.
The crew applies the foam in sections - it expands and hardens within minutes. A typical crawl space or attic job takes most of one day. Before leaving, we walk you through the finished work. The foam should cover every surface evenly, with no bare spots or gaps around pipes and wires.
Free on-site estimate, no obligation. We reply within one business day.
(509) 761-4252We follow installation practices aligned with the Spray Polyurethane Foam Alliance - the national industry body that sets quality and safety standards for spray foam contractors. That means proper application thickness, correct surface preparation, and safe re-entry timing.
We hold a current Washington State contractor license. You can look us up on the L&I website before you hire us - it takes about 30 seconds and confirms we are licensed to do this work in Moses Lake.
We have worked on homes across Moses Lake and Grant County since 2020. Older homes with irregular framing and unconditioned crawl spaces are the most common jobs we handle - we know what to look for and how to address it before the foam goes in.
Grant County PUD has offered energy efficiency rebate programs that may apply to your project. We can tell you what we know and point you in the right direction - so you do not leave money on the table that could offset your installation cost.
Spray foam is one of the higher-performance insulation options available, and it needs to be installed correctly to deliver on that promise. We follow industry standards, pull permits when required, and walk you through the finished work so you can see what you paid for before we leave.
A softer, lower-density spray foam better suited for interior walls and large attic areas where sound control is a priority alongside thermal performance.
Learn MoreComprehensive spray foam insulation for walls, attics, and crawl spaces - covering both open-cell and closed-cell options for whole-home upgrades.
Learn MoreMoses Lake winters do not wait - lock in your installation date now and head into the cold with a home that is actually sealed and insulated.