Reflective foil insulation is one of the most effective yet underutilized building insulation technologies. While most contractors are familiar with fiberglass batts and spray foam, reflective foils can dramatically improve building energy efficiency — especially in hot climates where radiant heat is the dominant source of heat gain.

The Science: Radiant vs. Conductive Heat

There are three ways heat transfers: conduction (through materials), convection (through air movement), and radiation (through electromagnetic waves). Traditional bulk insulation primarily addresses conduction. Reflective foil primarily addresses radiation.

In a typical building, radiant heat accounts for:

A radiant barrier with 97% reflectivity can block the vast majority of this heat before it ever enters the building envelope.

Key Applications

Roof / Attic Installing reflective foil under the roof deck or over attic insulation creates a radiant barrier that reflects summer heat back out. In hot climates, this alone can reduce ceiling heat gain by 40-50% and lower attic temperatures by 20-30°F (11-17°C).

Installation tip: The reflective surface MUST face an air space of at least ¾ inch (19mm). Without an air gap, the foil works by conduction, not radiation, and loses most of its effectiveness. This is the most common installation mistake.

Walls Reflective foil installed as a house wrap or within wall cavities provides both a radiant barrier and a vapor barrier. In hot-humid climates, it’s typically installed on the exterior side of the wall assembly. In cold climates, it goes on the interior side to prevent warm, moist indoor air from reaching the cold exterior sheathing.

Floors Over-crawlspace installations reflect ground moisture and radon while providing a thermal break. Under-slab applications prevent ground heat from conducting upward into the living space.

HVAC Ducts Ducts running through unconditioned spaces (attics, crawlspaces) lose 20-30% of conditioned air energy. Wrapping ducts with reflective foil insulation prevents both radiant heat gain and condensation on cold duct surfaces.

Cost-Effectiveness

Reflective foil insulation typically costs $0.15-0.30 per square foot for the material — significantly less than spray foam ($1.50-4.00/sq ft) and comparable to fiberglass batts ($0.30-0.60/sq ft). When you factor in installation labor (foil is lightweight and easy to cut), the total installed cost is often the lowest of any insulation method.

Payback period: Most building owners recoup the cost of radiant barrier installation through energy savings within 2-4 years.

Fire Safety

For commercial and multi-family residential projects, fire-retardant grades are essential. Insulax offers fire-retardant aluminum foil insulation that meets Class B1 flame spread standards. Always verify local building code requirements before specifying.

Choosing the Right Product

For construction applications, we recommend:

Contact our team with your project specifications and we’ll recommend the optimal material and provide technical datasheets for your building permit documentation.