
Old fiberglass batts leave gaps where heat pours in. Open-cell foam fills every crack, seals your air barrier, and cuts energy bills - for the life of your home.

Open-cell foam insulation in Texarkana fills and seals every gap in your attic, crawl space, or wall cavities as a liquid that expands on contact, most residential jobs complete in a single day and the foam is fully cured within 24 hours.
Unlike fiberglass batts, open-cell foam creates a continuous air barrier - not just a heat-slowing layer. If your Texarkana home was built before 1990, chances are the original insulation has compressed, settled, or been disturbed over the decades. Open-cell foam can be sprayed directly in place without tearing out walls.
Many homeowners combine open-cell foam with closed-cell foam insulation in high-moisture areas like crawl spaces, giving each part of the home exactly the right level of protection.
If your electric bill spikes dramatically from May through September and keeps getting worse each year, your insulation envelope is likely failing. Texarkana's long, brutal summers mean your air conditioner is working overtime to compensate for heat pouring in through an under-insulated attic or walls.
If one bedroom stays stuffy all summer while the rest of the house is tolerable, air is finding a way in. This is especially common in Texarkana homes built before 1990, where wall insulation was minimal and no continuous air barrier was installed.
Hold your hand near an electrical outlet on an exterior wall on a hot day. If you feel air moving, you have air leaks in your wall cavities. Open-cell foam seals those penetrations completely - something traditional batt insulation cannot do.
In Texarkana's humid climate, an uninsulated crawl space can accumulate moisture year-round. A musty smell rising through the floor, visible mold on floor joists, or soft spots when you walk are all signs that moisture has been sitting under your home and the insulation needs attention.
We spray open-cell foam in attics, wall cavities, and crawl spaces throughout Texarkana and the surrounding area. For full building coverage, we also offer commercial insulation for business properties that need the same level of air sealing and thermal performance.
When moisture control is the primary concern in a crawl space, open-cell foam pairs well with closed-cell foam insulation, which acts as a stronger moisture barrier. We assess each home individually and recommend the right combination based on what we find - not a one-size-fits-all package.
Suited for homeowners who want a full air seal in the attic without the higher cost of closed-cell foam.
A good fit for pier-and-beam homes where the goal is sealing air movement and addressing moisture from below.
Ideal for older homes where wall insulation has settled or was never adequate to begin with.
For homeowners who want a single continuous air seal throughout the attic, walls, and crawl space in one project.
Texarkana sits in the Ark-La-Tex region where summer temperatures regularly climb above 95 degrees and humidity stays high from May through September. That combination means your attic can reach 140 degrees or more on a July afternoon, and any gap in your insulation lets that heat pour directly into your living space. Open-cell foam seals those gaps completely - something fiberglass batts simply cannot match. Homeowners in Nash, TX and Wake Village, TX deal with the same climate pressures and older housing stock as central Texarkana.
A significant share of Texarkana's neighborhoods were built in the 1950s through 1970s - homes that were typically insulated with fiberglass that has long since compressed or been disturbed. Many also sit on pier-and-beam foundations with open crawl spaces that accumulate moisture from the ground and the humid air outside. Open-cell foam can address both the energy and the moisture problem in a single project, which is why it has become a common upgrade for older homes in this area. Texas also requires insulation contractors to hold a valid license through the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation, so verify your contractor before signing anything.
We'll ask a few basic questions about your home - age, which areas you want insulated, and any comfort or energy problems you've noticed. We reply within one business day and schedule a visit at your convenience.
We walk the areas you want insulated, take measurements, check for moisture, and look at what's already there. This visit is free, and it's your chance to ask every question before any money changes hands.
You receive a written quote spelling out the area to be covered, foam thickness, total cost, and timeline. Every line item is explained - if something isn't clear, ask us and we'll walk you through it.
The crew masks off surfaces, sprays the foam in passes, and builds up coverage quickly - a typical attic job takes a few hours. Before leaving, we walk the finished work with you so you can see the coverage firsthand.
Free estimate, no obligation. We reply within one business day.
(430) 278-0192We hold a valid Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation insulation contractor license. You can look us up in under two minutes on the TDLR website - because a license number you can verify means protection you can count on.
Open-cell foam is visible after installation - you can see the coverage with your own eyes. We walk every completed job with the homeowner before we pack up, so you're not taking anyone's word for it.
Pier-and-beam foundations, pre-1980 framing, and the Ark-La-Tex humidity are what we work in every week. We know what those spaces look like and what they need - which means faster assessments and fewer surprises on installation day.
Unlike fiberglass batts that compress and settle over time, open-cell foam holds its shape and its seal. The Spray Polyurethane Foam Alliance notes properly installed foam can last 80 years or more - so this is a one-time investment, not a recurring cost.
Every one of these commitments comes back to the same thing: you should know exactly what you're getting before the crew shows up and after they leave. That's how we've built our reputation across Texarkana and the surrounding area.
For technical standards on spray foam insulation, see the Spray Polyurethane Foam Alliance (SPFA) and the U.S. Department of Energy insulation guide.
Insulation and air sealing for Texarkana business properties, from small offices to large commercial buildings.
Learn MoreA denser foam option that acts as a moisture barrier - often used in crawl spaces and exterior walls where water exposure is a risk.
Learn MoreTexarkana summers are long - the sooner your home is sealed, the sooner your energy bills drop. Call now or submit a request and we'll reply within one business day.