Homeowners with high utility bills or rooms that never get comfortable want to know their current R-value, what the DOE recommends for Kansas City, and what the Evergy or Spire rebates will cover. A website that answers those questions earns the estimate call. Free mockup, no commitment.
For Attic Insulation in KC
Web Design for Attic Insulation Companies in Kansas City
Attic insulation customers are typically motivated by one of three things: high utility bills in summer and winter, uncomfortable rooms on the top floor of their home, or a contractor or home inspector who told them their existing insulation is insufficient. They want to understand the R-value system — DOE recommends R-49 to R-60 for attics in Kansas City's climate zone — and they want to know what their home likely has now (older homes often have R-11 to R-19 of batts or settled blown-in) compared to what they need. Insulation type choice — blown-in fiberglass, blown-in cellulose, or spray foam for the attic deck — affects cost, air sealing effectiveness, and whether existing batts should be removed or left in place. The rebate question is important: Evergy offers rebates for added insulation, and the federal 25C tax credit covers 30% of the installed cost up to $1,200 per year — customers who know about these credits make much faster decisions. Crawl space insulation and air sealing are natural extensions that homeowners with attic insulation projects often add. A well-built insulation website that explains current vs. recommended R-values, walks through the material choice, mentions utility rebates, and makes scheduling a free energy assessment easy earns the homeowner who has been putting this off.
What homeowners research before hiring an insulation contractor
- R-value explained — what it means, what DOE recommends for KC, what their home likely has now
- Insulation types — blown-in fiberglass, blown-in cellulose, spray foam — differences and when each is used
- Air sealing — why it matters alongside insulation, top plates, penetrations, recessed lights
- Utility rebates — Evergy and Spire rebates, federal 25C tax credit, how to document and claim them
- Old insulation — whether to remove or add on top, asbestos testing for older batts
What your attic insulation website would include
- R-value guide — current KC recommendations, how to check what your home has, what the upgrade achieves
- Insulation types — blown-in fiberglass vs. cellulose vs. spray foam — pros, cons, best use cases
- Air sealing — what gets sealed, why it matters, how it works with insulation to reduce energy loss
- Rebates and credits — Evergy rebate program, federal 25C tax credit, documentation requirements
- Crawl space and walls — other insulation services beyond attic, whole-house assessment option
- Free estimate form with home age, current R-value if known, utility bill concern, square footage
What clients say
“Insulation is one of those things homeowners know they should do but keep putting off because they do not understand it. Without a website, I was explaining R-values, material choices, and the Evergy rebate from scratch on every estimate call. The new site with our R-value guide, our material comparison, and our rebate section clearly written changed everything. Customers came to the estimate already knowing what they needed and asking about the tax credit. Jobs that used to take three callbacks to close now close in one visit.”
— M. Eriksen, insulation contractor, Overland Park, KS
Simple pricing
An insulation site with R-value guide, services, and estimate form starts at $225. A full site with material comparison, rebate section, and crawl space page is $425–$850. One whole-house insulation job covers the cost. No contracts, no monthly fees.
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