
Jackson Insulation provides insulation contractor services in Memphis, TN - including home insulation, attic upgrades, and crawl space encapsulation - with licensed, permitted work and free written estimates.
We respond to every inquiry within 1 business day and serve homeowners throughout the Memphis metro.

Memphis has a large, varied housing stock spanning early 1900s Midtown bungalows to sprawling East Memphis brick ranches, and home insulation is often the single most impactful upgrade a homeowner can make. Whether it is the attic, walls, or crawl space, a properly insulated home costs less to heat and cool and feels more comfortable year-round.
Memphis homes - particularly the mid-century brick ranches in Whitehaven, South Memphis, and Frayser - typically have attics that are under-insulated by today's standards. Adding coverage to the recommended R-38 to R-60 range makes a noticeable difference in summer comfort and monthly utility bills.
Midtown's older Craftsman bungalows and Tudor Revival cottages were built with no air sealing at all. Spray foam applied to rim joists, crawl spaces, and exterior wall cavities is the most efficient way to address those gaps and bring older Memphis homes up to modern performance standards.
Memphis receives over 54 inches of rain per year, and homes built on crawl space foundations are especially vulnerable to ground moisture. Insulating and encapsulating the crawl space keeps humidity out of the floor system and prevents the mold and structural damage that follows when moisture is left unchecked.
A large share of Memphis homes were built before air sealing was part of standard construction practice. Closing up gaps around light fixtures, pipes, and framing before insulation goes in is what turns a good insulation job into one that actually shows up on your utility bill.
Memphis is one of the wettest major cities in the South, receiving over 54 inches of rain per year - well above the national average. The city sits on relatively flat terrain with clay-heavy soil that drains slowly and holds moisture for days after a heavy rain. Combined with summers where average highs reach 92 degrees and humidity makes it feel hotter still, Memphis puts unusual stress on a home's insulation and air barrier. Homes that are under-insulated do not just feel uncomfortable - they drive up electricity bills from May through September, when air conditioning runs almost constantly.
A large portion of Memphis's residential housing was built between 1940 and 1980, and much of it was insulated with materials that have now degraded, compressed, or were thin to begin with. Midtown neighborhoods like Cooper-Young and Evergreen have early 1900s Craftsman bungalows and Tudor Revival cottages with original foundations and no air sealing. The brick ranches common in Whitehaven, South Memphis, and Frayser were built in an era when insulation standards were a fraction of what they are today. Upgrading insulation in these homes often produces the most noticeable results - because the starting point is so low. For information on current energy efficiency programs that may apply to Memphis homeowners, the U.S. Department of Energy insulation guide is a reliable reference for recommended R-values and improvement options.
Jackson Insulation serves Memphis homeowners from our base in Jackson, TN - about 85 miles to the east along I-40. We work across the Memphis metro and have become familiar with the different housing types you find in different parts of the city: the older, tightly spaced homes in Midtown near Cooper-Young and the Evergreen neighborhood, the larger East Memphis properties along the Poplar Avenue corridor, and the brick ranch homes that define South Memphis, Frayser, and Whitehaven.
Memphis is a city most people know from Beale Street and Graceland in Whitehaven, but from an insulation standpoint what matters is that homes here vary enormously in age and condition depending on where you are. A pre-1940 bungalow in Midtown has very different needs than a 1970s brick ranch in Whitehaven - and both are different from newer construction in East Memphis near the Quince Road corridor. We also serve homeowners in nearby areas - Bartlett is a suburb just northeast of Memphis where we regularly work on newer subdivisions with attic and wall insulation needs.
We respond within 1 business day. A quick call or online form is all it takes to get the process started - no need to know exactly what you need yet.
We come to you, inspect the attic, crawl space, or walls, and give you a written price before any work is scheduled. There is no obligation, and we tell you honestly what the space needs - not just what would pad the bill.
Where permits are required, we pull them for you and coordinate the inspection. You do not have to manage building department paperwork - that is our job.
Most jobs are finished in a single day. We clean up when we finish, walk you through what was done, and make sure you are satisfied before we leave.
We serve homeowners across Memphis and Shelby County. Call us or fill out the form and we will respond within 1 business day to schedule your free on-site estimate.
(731) 891-0854Memphis is Tennessee's largest city, with a population of roughly 650,000 and a metropolitan area that extends into Shelby County and across the border into Mississippi and Arkansas. It is internationally recognized as the birthplace of the blues and home to Beale Street - one of the most famous music streets in the United States. The city also houses FedEx's global headquarters, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, and Methodist Le Bonheur Healthcare, which together create a large base of stable, long-term homeowners across the city. Learn more about Memphis on its Wikipedia page.
Memphis neighborhoods range from dense urban blocks in Midtown - with tightly spaced early 1900s homes, historic bungalows, and small lots - to the quieter, tree-lined streets of East Memphis with larger homes on bigger lots. South Memphis, Frayser, and Whitehaven (where Graceland draws hundreds of thousands of visitors each year) are dominated by brick ranch homes built from the 1950s through the 1970s. About 45 percent of Memphis housing is renter-occupied, which is well above the national average - but the remaining owner-occupied homes represent a broad mix of property types and ages. The suburbs surrounding the city - including Bartlett to the northeast - add another layer of newer subdivisions that have their own insulation considerations distinct from the older city stock.
High-performance spray foam that seals and insulates in one application.
Learn moreReduce heat loss and lower energy bills with professional attic insulation.
Learn moreLoose-fill insulation blown evenly into attics, walls, and crawl spaces.
Learn moreInsulate and condition crawl spaces to prevent moisture and heat loss.
Learn moreImprove comfort and efficiency with insulation in exterior and interior walls.
Learn moreDense, moisture-resistant foam with the highest R-value per inch.
Learn moreFlexible, breathable foam ideal for interior walls and sound control.
Learn moreHeavy-duty vapor barriers that block ground moisture from entering your home.
Learn moreProfessional installation of vapor barriers in crawl spaces and basements.
Learn moreCommercial-grade insulation for offices, warehouses, and retail spaces.
Learn moreCall Jackson Insulation today or fill out the form. Memphis homeowners get a response within 1 business day and a same-week estimate appointment.