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Insulation Cost in Kansas 2026 — Average: $2,175 — illustrated 2026 guide
Home Improvement · Kansas

Insulation Cost in Kansas

2026 estimates — blown-in, spray foam, batt, and rigid insulation

$1,479
Low estimate
$2,175
State average
$3,371
High estimate

1,200 sqft attic blown-in insulation, Kansas labor rates. Updated June 2026.

Calculate Your Kansas Insulation Cost

Insulation Cost by Type — Kansas 2026 (1,200 sqft)

Type 1,200 sqft (KS) Per sqft
Blown-in (attic) $940 $0.78/sqft
Batt / roll insulation $783 $0.65/sqft
Spray foam (open-cell) $1,879 $1.57/sqft
Spray foam (closed-cell) $2,610 $2.17/sqft
Rigid foam board $1,462 $1.22/sqft

Installed cost including material and labor. Spray foam qualifies for 30% IRA federal tax credit (up to $1,200). Kansas rates applied.

FAQs — Insulation Cost in Kansas

Home insulation in Kansas averages $2,175 for a typical 1,200 sqft attic project in 2026 — below the national average. Blown-in cellulose for a 1,200 sqft attic runs $940; spray foam $2,610 for the same area.

For Kansas: attic insulation — blown-in cellulose or fiberglass ($0.78/sqft) is the best cost-per-R-value choice. Walls — batt insulation ($0.65/sqft) for open cavities during remodel; spray foam for retrofit without opening walls. Crawlspace/basement — closed-cell spray foam ($2.17/sqft) is best for moisture resistance. Rim joists — spray foam is the gold standard for air sealing.

Kansas is in climate zone mixed-dry. DOE recommended R-values: attic (uninsulated): R-49 to R-60 in zones 4–8; R-38 in zones 2–3; R-30 in zone 1. Walls (2×4 framing): R-13 minimum, R-15 recommended. Walls (2×6 framing): R-19 minimum, R-21 recommended. Basement/crawlspace walls: R-10 to R-15. The colder your climate zone, the higher the R-value needed. Adding insulation beyond minimum code shows diminishing returns but still improves comfort.

Properly insulating an attic reduces heating and cooling costs 10–20% annually. For a Kansas home spending $2,400/year on energy, that's $240–$480/year in savings. Payback period: 3–7 years for attic insulation; 5–10 years for wall insulation. The 30% federal tax credit (up to $1,200) under the Inflation Reduction Act significantly improves the payback math for insulation projects completed through 2032.

Yes — the Inflation Reduction Act offers a 30% federal tax credit for home insulation and air sealing, up to $1,200 per year, available through 2032. In Kansas, a $2,500 insulation project yields a $750 tax credit. To qualify: product must meet IECC energy code standards, and you need manufacturer certification. File IRS Form 5695. Some Kansas utilities also offer rebates on qualifying insulation — check your local utility for additional savings.

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