Homeowners dealing with rodent contamination or old wet and compressed insulation want to understand what the removal process looks like, whether the old material is hazardous, and what R-value they should target when re-insulating. A website that explains the full process earns the inspection call. Free mockup, no commitment.
For Attic Insulation in KC
Web Design for Attic Insulation Removal Companies in Kansas City
Attic insulation removal customers are homeowners who have discovered rodent activity in the attic (mice or squirrels nesting in and contaminating blown-in fiberglass or cellulose), have old vermiculite or batt insulation that may contain asbestos and needs testing or abatement, or have wet and compressed insulation from a roof leak that has lost all thermal value. The removal process involves a commercial vacuum and hose system that removes old loose-fill material from the attic and transfers it directly into disposal bags outside — the process typically takes one to two days for a standard attic. Rodent contamination jobs require protective gear, sanitizing the attic deck after removal (antimicrobial spray), and sealing entry points before re-insulating. Hazardous material concerns: fiberglass and cellulose are not hazardous and can be vacuumed without special disposal; vermiculite from certain mines (particularly pre-1990 product) may contain asbestiform minerals and requires testing before removal. Re-insulation after removal is the second service: blown-in fiberglass (Owens Corning AttiCat, CertainTeed) or cellulose are both common — cellulose has higher recycled content and better air sealing ability when dense-packed, fiberglass does not settle over time. The Department of Energy recommends R-49 to R-60 for KC attics (Climate Zone 4). Air sealing before re-insulation — foam-sealing penetrations around light fixtures, plumbing and electrical penetrations, and the attic hatch — doubles the energy performance of the new insulation. A website that explains the vacuum removal process, the contamination cleanup steps, and re-insulation R-value targets earns the homeowner who has just found the problem and needs to understand what comes next.
What homeowners research before hiring an attic insulation company
- Removal process — how the vacuum system works, how long it takes, what happens to the old material
- Rodent contamination — what needs to be done after rodents in the attic, sanitizing, entry point sealing
- Hazardous material — whether old insulation is dangerous, when asbestos testing is required
- R-value targets — what R-49 to R-60 means for KC, how much insulation depth is needed to achieve it
- Air sealing — why sealing penetrations before blowing insulation matters, what gets sealed
What your attic insulation website would include
- Removal process — vacuum system explanation, disposal method, typical timeline for standard attics
- Contamination cleanup — rodent remediation steps, antimicrobial treatment, exclusion work, re-sealing
- Hazardous materials guide — what is and is not hazardous, when to test, vermiculite asbestos risk
- R-value guide — KC recommendation R-49 to R-60, current depth assessment, target depth for re-insulation
- Air sealing — what we seal before blowing, why it matters, energy performance impact
- Quote form with attic size, reason for removal, contamination type, current insulation, timeline
What clients say
“Rodent contamination calls are the most urgent jobs I get — homeowners are disturbed and they want it handled fast. But they also have a lot of questions about what the process looks like and whether the old material is dangerous. Without a website I was giving the full explanation on every emergency call. The site with the removal process walkthrough, the contamination cleanup steps, and the re-insulation R-value guide meant customers understood the full scope before they called. They were calling to book, not to get educated.”
— D. Nakamura, attic insulation specialist, Kansas City, MO
Simple pricing
An attic insulation site with removal process, contamination guide, and quote form starts at $200. A full site with hazardous materials section, air sealing guide, and R-value page is $425–$750. One full removal and re-insulation job covers the cost. No contracts, no monthly fees.
Ready to get started?
Get a free mockup — no obligation. Fill out the form below, or give me a call.