For Florida Home Builders in Collier and Lee County: A failed insulation inspection is a profit-killer. It’s a red tag that starts a domino effect of rescheduled trades, busted timelines, and angry clients. You’re losing money every hour the job site sits idle.
It’s not your fault. The Florida Building Code is a labyrinth, especially when it comes to the energy calc sheet. You’re expected to be an expert on everything, but a small miscalculation on R-value or the wrong choice between a vented and unvented attic means you pay the price.
That price is steep: rework costs, crew downtime, and a reputation for delays right here in Southwest Florida.
This guide ends that. This is the definitive playbook for new construction insulation in SWFL. Read this, and you will never fail an insulation inspection again.
Let's cut through the noise. For 99% of new residential builds in Florida, the attic insulation code comes down to two numbers. Your energy calc sheet will tell you which one applies:
Meeting these numbers is non-negotiable. The real question is how you meet them. The answer depends entirely on one critical decision.
This is where most inspections go wrong. The insulation choice must match the attic design.
Here, insulation goes on the attic floor. The goal is to keep the scorching attic heat out of the house.
The Common Choice (Blown-in/Batts): You can pile 12-14 inches of fiberglass to hit R-38. The Problem: It’s an air-permeable blanket over a ceiling full of holes (lights, vents, hatches). It meets the R-value on paper but fails on performance.
Here, insulation is applied to the underside of the roof deck, sealing the attic and making it a conditioned space.
The Bulletproof Solution (Closed-Cell Spray Foam): Just ~5.5 inches gets you to R-38. This is your all-in-one solution: R-value, air barrier, moisture barrier, and structural reinforcement. For builders in hurricane-prone areas like SWFL, the added roof strength is a powerful selling point.
The Value Option (Open-Cell Spray Foam): You'll need ~8 inches for R-38. It delivers the same air seal but lacks the moisture barrier and structural rigidity of closed-cell foam.
Wood Frame Walls (R-13 Requirement):
Concrete Block (CMU) Walls (R-4 Requirement):
Floors Over Garages/Unconditioned Space (R-13 Requirement):
You build homes in Collier County, Lee County, and the surrounding areas. We ensure they pass inspection. Stop gambling with your timeline and profits.
At Ideal Insulation, we are the authority on the Florida Building Code for insulation in Southwest Florida. We don't sell foam; we sell certainty. With a 100-mile service radius, we are your local partner.
Here is our grand slam offer:
Send us your plans and energy calc sheet. We will provide you with a free, no-obligation insulation estimate that guarantees you will pass inspection in your municipality. We’ll show you the good, better, and best options for your project so you can offer your clients real value.
Stop letting insulation be the reason your projects stall.
Call us now at 239-455-2002 or email your plans to estimates@idealinsulationinc.com
Let's get your next project in Collier or Lee County passed, the first time.