
Cold floors in January. Stuffy rooms in July. If your home never feels comfortable, gaps in your insulation are likely the reason - and spray foam fixes both problems at once.

Spray foam insulation in Moses Lake seals air leaks and slows heat transfer in a single step, most jobs in a crawl space or attic take one to two days.
Most insulation materials slow heat but do nothing about drafts. In Moses Lake, where Columbia Basin winds push cold air through every gap in a home, that matters. Spray foam expands to fill cracks around rim joists, plumbing penetrations, and irregular spaces that batts and blown-in materials simply cannot reach. If you have noticed that your home feels drafty even with the heat running, this is likely the fix. Many homeowners in older Moses Lake neighborhoods also pair spray foam with attic insulation to address both the ceiling and the floor of the living space in one project.
Spray foam is particularly valuable in homes built before 1980, when insulation standards were a fraction of what Washington State requires today. If your home has never had any insulation work, the comfort difference after a proper spray foam installation is often noticeable within the first heating or cooling season.
If your energy costs jump sharply from October through February, your home is losing heat faster than your furnace can replace it. In Moses Lake, where winter temperatures can stay below freezing for weeks, a poorly insulated home puts constant pressure on your heating system - high bills, cold rooms, and a furnace that runs almost nonstop are the clearest signs.
Moses Lake sits in one of the windier parts of Washington State, and drafts that seem to come from nowhere are often air pushing through gaps in your crawl space, rim joists, or wall cavities. If certain rooms feel colder when the wind picks up, or your floors are cold even with the heat running, wind-driven air infiltration is likely the cause.
Homes in Moses Lake built during the post-war growth period were constructed before modern energy codes existed. If you have never had an energy audit or insulation upgrade, there is a good chance your crawl space, attic, and wall cavities are well below today's standards. A home more than 40 years old with no insulation history is worth having someone assess.
Moses Lake summers regularly hit triple digits, and if your cooling system is working hard but certain rooms stay stuffy and warm, heat is entering through an under-insulated attic or through gaps in the building envelope. Spray foam in the attic or crawl space can make a noticeable difference in how well your home holds a comfortable temperature on the hottest days.
We install spray foam in crawl spaces, attics, rim joists, basement walls, and exterior walls - wherever air is finding a way in or out of your home. Every job starts with a walkthrough so we know exactly what we are dealing with before foam touches a surface. For homes where spray foam is paired with added depth in the ceiling, we also offer attic insulation to bring the overall thermal barrier up to Washington State energy code.
The type of foam matters as much as where it goes. Closed-cell foam insulation is the right choice for crawl spaces, basement walls, and anywhere moisture is a real concern - it is denser, stronger, and blocks vapor as well as air. Open-cell foam is softer and more flexible, suited to interior walls and attics where vapor control is less critical and cost is a bigger factor. We walk you through which type fits your situation before any work is scheduled.
Best for crawl spaces, basement walls, and exterior applications where moisture control is as important as air sealing.
Well suited to interior walls and attic rafters where flexibility and cost matter more than vapor blocking.
Combines spray foam with vapor control to seal the crawl space from both air and ground moisture.
Targeted foam application at the highest-priority air leak points in most homes, often providing the fastest comfort improvement.
Moses Lake sits in the Columbia Basin, where winters drop into the teens and summers push past 100 degrees Fahrenheit. That two-season swing means your home's insulation is working hard in both directions - keeping heat in during January and keeping it out during July. The Basin is also one of the windier parts of Washington, and sustained wind pressure pushes cold air through every small gap in a home's envelope. Spray foam addresses both the thermal and the air infiltration side of the problem, which is why it tends to outperform other options in this specific climate.
A large portion of Moses Lake's housing stock was built in the 1950s through 1980s, when the town grew fast after the Columbia Basin irrigation project brought water to the region. Those homes were built to the standards of their era - which means minimal crawl space insulation, no rim joist sealing, and gaps around plumbing and electrical penetrations that have never been addressed. We serve homeowners across the area, including communities like Ephrata and Quincy, where the same post-war housing challenges are common. If your home is older and has never had insulation addressed, the baseline problem is likely worse than you expect.
We will ask a few basic questions about your home's age and the areas you want insulated. We respond within 1 business day, typically the same day.
We visit your home to inspect the spaces in question - crawl space, attic, rim joists - and check for moisture issues or existing insulation before quoting anything.
If a permit is required through Grant County, we handle the application. You do not need to navigate that process yourself.
The crew arrives, masks off areas you want protected, and applies foam in controlled passes. Most single-area jobs finish in one day. We walk through the finished work with you before we leave.
We come to your home, look at the spaces you want insulated, and give you a clear written quote before you decide anything. No pressure, no obligation.
(509) 761-4252Every contractor working legally in Washington must hold a current license with the Department of Labor and Industries. Ours is current and verifiable. That means you have recourse if something goes wrong - and it means we carry the insurance that protects your home during the job.
When work requires a permit through Grant County, we handle the application and any required inspections. Work that is on record protects you if you ever sell or refinance - and it confirms the installation meets Washington's current energy standards, not just our word.
We have insulated homes throughout Moses Lake's established neighborhoods - the post-war ranch houses, the 1970s split-levels, the homes that were built fast when the Columbia Basin irrigation project brought growth. We know what to look for and what to flag before any foam goes in.
Before the crew packs up, we walk through the finished work with you. You can see the coverage, ask about any area that looks thin, and leave with a clear picture of what was installed and where. No guessing about whether the job was done right.
Every one of these proof points comes down to the same thing: we treat your home the way we would want a contractor to treat ours. That is the standard we hold ourselves to on every job.
Add depth to your attic's thermal barrier and meet Washington State's current R-value requirements for the Columbia Basin climate zone.
Learn MoreThe denser, moisture-blocking option for crawl spaces, basement walls, and anywhere vapor control is as important as air sealing.
Learn MoreWinter cold arrives fast in the Columbia Basin - lock in your installation date now before the season rush fills up our schedule.