If you have an attached garage, insulating your garage door to keep the cold air out and the warm air in can help you save on your home energy costs.

The garage is an energy black hole

Your garage door is likely the biggest door in your home by a mile and it’s also one of the doors that gets opened and closed most frequently. This offers multiple opportunities for warm air to be lost in the winter and cool air to be lost in the summer. This increases your energy costs, because your heating and cooling units have to work harder to compensate.

Insulation can help

The Energy Star website estimates that homeowners can save up to 20 percent annually by insulating what’s called a homes’s “energy envelope,” which is essentially the outer ares of the home. Insulating your garage can help make a big difference in your energy costs. If you have finished walls in your garage, you should look into installing insulation or adding more if you already have insulation.  This solution also helps if you’re wondering – Can Insulation Be Reused Or Recycled? Also learn about Four Essential Spray Foam Safety Tips to get the best insulation. If there is livable space above your garage, such as a bedroom you should insulate not only the walls but also the ceiling. You also want to make sure to keep any internal and external doors to the garage closed at all times and weather strip them to make them as energy-efficient as possible.

Insulating your garage door

All of that other work will be for naught, however, if you don’t insulate your garage door. If you need more information on garage insulation on repair, view more here. There’s nothing you can do about the number of times your door opens and closes each day. According to the science behind the garage opening and closing as explained by Chicago Garage Door website, energy is going to be lost when the door is open. But the real trouble comes if energy is being lost when the door is closed.

The first step to ensuring your garage door is fully insulated is to make sure it fits properly. If your door becomes warped over the years from the elements or if it has been dented, it may not seal properly when closed. These cracks can let in cold or hot air, and no amount of weather stripping is going to seal them. If your doors do look like they aren’t sealing properly when closed, you should have a qualified garage door professional take a look.

Even if your doors do close properly, you are probably still losing some internal air through tiny gaps and cracks. Weather stripping, like the kind you put on regular doors, can help, and while there are do-it-yourself kits available, to get the best garage door insulation energy savings, you should have the work done by a qualified garage door professional. That way you will have quality work, and the work also will be guaranteed.

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