The short version
Old insulation is not automatically bad insulation. Most of the time we get called to "rip it all out and start over," topping up healthy old material is faster and cheaper. But sometimes removal is non-negotiable. Here's the line.
Remove (no exception)
- Rodent contamination. Droppings, urine staining, active or recent nesting. Biohazard. Vacuum-extract and sanitize before reinsulating.
- Water damage. Roof leak, plumbing leak, or HVAC condensate spill that has soaked the material. Wet cellulose grows mold; wet fiberglass loses R-value.
- Smoke or fire damage. Kitchen fires, attic fires, wildfire smoke. The smell does not leave.
- Pre-1990 vermiculite. Gray pebble-like loose-fill. May contain asbestos. Test first; never disturb without testing.
- Major attic remodel. Working over old insulation while framing new ducts or storage is a mess; cleaner to start fresh.
Top up (cheaper, faster, fine)
- Old but clean. 1970s home with original R-11 batts, no rodents, no water — blow new cellulose on top to R-49.
- Settled but intact. Loose-fill settles 10–15 percent over 20–30 years; settled cellulose at R-15 is still working at R-15. Top up to depth.
- Limited rodent activity. A few droppings in one corner — spot remove and bag the affected area, then top up the rest.
Cost comparison (1,500 sq ft attic)
| Approach | Cost | Time |
|---|---|---|
| Top up to R-49 (clean attic) | $2,500 – $4,500 | 4 – 8 hours |
| Remove + reinsulate (contaminated attic) | $5,000 – $9,000 | 1 – 2 days |
| Spot remove + top up (limited damage) | $3,200 – $5,500 | 6 – 10 hours |
How we decide on the first visit
Every removal-or-topup call starts with an attic inspection. We look for visible rodent activity, moisture staining, settled depth, dust accumulation, smell, and material identification. If we suspect vermiculite, we stop and refer to licensed abatement before any insulation work.
We photo-document everything we find and walk you through the decision before we quote. If a contractor pushes removal hard without showing you photos of contamination — get a second opinion.