
Older Bremerton homes lose heat through gaps fiberglass can't reach. Open-cell foam fills every cavity, seals air leaks, and keeps warmth where it belongs - through all the wet, grey months.

Open-cell foam insulation in Bremerton is sprayed as a liquid, expands to fill every gap and crack, and sets into a continuous soft layer that seals air leaks and insulates at the same time - most jobs in a typical home cover an attic or crawl space in a single day.
Unlike fiberglass batts that leave seams and gaps around wires, pipes, and irregular framing, open-cell foam conforms to whatever shape it finds. That matters especially in Bremerton, where a large share of homes were built before 1980 with little to no wall insulation and decades of settling that fiberglass simply cannot fill cleanly. Many homeowners pair this service with commercial insulation or opt for spray foam insulation when they need a denser, vapor-impermeable option for crawl spaces or below-grade walls.
The Department of Energy estimates that air leakage accounts for 25 to 40 percent of the energy used for heating and cooling in a typical home. In Bremerton's long, damp heating season - October through April - those leaks translate directly into higher bills and a harder-working heating system.
If your furnace or heat pump seems to run constantly from fall through spring without ever getting your home truly comfortable, heat is escaping faster than your system can replace it. Bremerton's damp winters pull warmth out of under-insulated walls and ceilings more aggressively than dry cold does. Climbing energy bills without a clear explanation point here first.
Hold your hand near an electrical outlet on an exterior wall on a cold day. If you feel cool air moving, that wall cavity connects directly to the outside. The same test works at the top of walls where they meet the ceiling - a common air leak point in older Bremerton homes. Spray foam addresses both the insulation and the air gap in one pass.
If you can safely look into your attic and the insulation looks compressed, flat, or disturbed by animals, it is no longer performing well. Many Bremerton homes built before 1980 have fiberglass batts that have settled over decades, losing much of their original R-value. Crawl spaces here are also prone to moisture damage that degrades older materials over time.
In Bremerton's humid climate, condensation forming on the inside surface of exterior walls means warm indoor air is meeting a cold surface - which happens when insulation is thin or missing. A persistent musty smell in a wall cavity or attic can indicate moisture has been accumulating long enough to encourage mold growth. Both signs are worth taking seriously.
We install open-cell foam in attics, wall cavities, floors, and rim joists throughout Bremerton and Kitsap County. The foam expands on contact to seal gaps around pipes, wires, and irregular framing - the kind of hidden air paths that fiberglass batts leave open. When the job calls for a denser, vapor-resistant product in a crawl space or against a concrete foundation, we offer spray foam insulation as an alternative that handles below-grade moisture better. For businesses and property managers, our commercial insulation service covers retail, warehouse, and mixed-use buildings across the area.
Every job starts with an in-person assessment to check existing insulation, moisture conditions, and access points before we give you a price. Washington State energy code requires specific R-values depending on where in your home the foam is going, and we pull the required permits so your project is documented and on the record. The U.S. Department of Energy recommends combining insulation upgrades with air sealing for the best energy savings - that combined approach is standard in how we work.
Best for homeowners wanting to insulate an accessible attic floor or rafters and seal air leaks at the top of the thermal envelope in one visit.
Suited for homes with open wall framing during a renovation, or new construction where a continuous, gap-free insulation layer is the priority.
Ideal for insulating the band of framing at the base of exterior walls and floors over unconditioned spaces, where air leaks are common and fiberglass performs poorly.
For pre-1980 Bremerton homes that need a comprehensive overhaul, combining attic, wall, and crawl space work in one project for the most complete improvement.
Bremerton averages around 55 inches of rain per year, and the air stays damp for most of the year. That constant moisture puts pressure on your home's walls, attic, and crawl space from the outside, while your heating system pushes warm air toward those same surfaces from the inside. In a home with thin or missing insulation, that combination drives up your bills and can quietly allow moisture to condense inside walls where you cannot see it. Open-cell foam's ability to fill irregular gaps - including the spaces around knob-and-tube wiring and settled post-war framing that is common throughout Bremerton's older neighborhoods - makes it particularly well-suited to the housing stock here.
We serve homeowners throughout the area, including Silverdale and Port Orchard. Whether your home is on a hillside above the waterfront or out toward the county line, Bremerton's climate challenges are the same: long, wet winters that reward a well-sealed home with noticeably lower heating costs and a more comfortable living space. Washington State's energy code for Climate Zone 4C is among the most demanding in the country, and we ensure every job meets or exceeds those requirements.
We reply within one business day. Tell us what part of your home you want to insulate and what problems you've noticed - you don't need to know every technical detail, just describe what you're experiencing.
We come out to look at your attic, crawl space, or walls in person before quoting a price. We check existing insulation, moisture conditions, and access points - and we'll flag any concerns before work begins.
You receive a written quote covering the area, thickness, and total cost. If a permit is required in Bremerton, we handle pulling it - you won't have to navigate Kitsap County's permit office yourself.
Most jobs are done in a single day. Plan to be out of the treated area for at least 24 hours after spraying. Once the foam cures, we walk through the finished work with you so you can see what was done.
Free estimate, no obligation. We reply within one business day.
(360) 287-4054A large share of Bremerton's housing stock was built before 1980, often with irregular framing, settled cavities, and no wall insulation at all. We have direct experience assessing and insulating these homes - including dealing with the surprises that come with older construction - rather than applying a one-size-fits-all approach.
Washington State's energy code for Climate Zone 4C is specific about minimum R-values, and permitted work must meet those standards. We pull the required permits for every job that needs one, handle the inspection scheduling, and give you documentation you can show a buyer or lender.
We come out in person before giving you a price. That means we can flag moisture issues, access problems, or areas where open-cell foam is not the right choice before anyone picks up a spray gun - not after the job has started and the scope has changed.
The Spray Polyurethane Foam Alliance sets industry training and installation standards for spray foam contractors. We follow those standards on every job, which means even coverage, correct thickness, and proper protective practices - not a rushed coat that looks fine from a distance.
You can verify any Washington State contractor's license and insurance status through the Department of Labor and Industries. We encourage every homeowner to check before signing anything - that quick lookup protects you and separates licensed contractors from unlicensed operators.
Insulation solutions for retail spaces, offices, warehouses, and mixed-use commercial buildings throughout Bremerton and Kitsap County.
Learn MoreHigh-performance closed-cell or open-cell spray foam for attics, walls, and crawl spaces where a continuous, gap-free layer is the priority.
Learn MoreBremerton's heating season starts in October - schedule your assessment now and head into fall with a properly sealed home.