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Spray foam vs. cellulose

Cost per R-value, where each one wins, and the decision framework most San Diego homes need.

The short version

Cellulose blown-in on the attic floor is the right answer for most San Diego attics. About a third the cost of spray foam, performs to R-49 reliably, and resists air movement better than fiberglass.

Spray foam at the roof deck is the right answer when you have a cathedral ceiling you cannot vent properly, when you are conditioning the attic, or when air-sealing matters more than R per dollar.

Cost per R-value (installed)

ProductCost per sq ft of R-49Best assembly
Blown-in cellulose$1.40 – $2.80Vented attic floor
Open-cell spray foam$5.50 – $9.50 (at roof deck depth)Cathedral ceiling, sound
Closed-cell spray foam$7.50 – $13.00 (at roof deck depth)Rim joists, unvented decks

Cellulose is roughly 4 to 5 times cheaper per unit of insulation. That math doesn't lie.

Where spray foam earns its premium

  • Cathedral or vaulted ceilings you cannot vent — open-cell at the roof deck handles the assembly in one product.
  • Conditioned attic conversions — closed-cell at the roof deck moves the HVAC inside the envelope.
  • Rim joists in crawlspaces — two inches of closed-cell foam stops the biggest air leak in the house.
  • Sound assemblies — open-cell foam in interior walls quiets a room better than batts.

Where cellulose wins

  • Attic top-ups on existing R-13 or R-19 — just blow on top.
  • Empty walls in a 1960s tract home — drill-and-fill dense-pack from interior or exterior.
  • Open framing in additions and new construction — loose-fill in attic, batts in walls.
  • Air-movement reduction — dense-pack at proper density resists migration.

The decision framework

If your attic ceiling is flat and your HVAC is up there, blown-in cellulose plus air-sealing wins. Period.

If you have any vault, cathedral, conditioned attic, or rim joist in the scope, spray foam comes into the mix.

If a contractor is selling you spray foam everywhere as the only answer, get a second opinion. Most San Diego attics don't need the most expensive product — they need the right product for the assembly.

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