
High desert summers and cold winters demand the most from your home's insulation. Closed-cell foam seals air leaks, blocks moisture, and delivers the highest thermal performance per inch available.

Closed-cell foam insulation in Roswell is sprayed on as a liquid that expands and hardens into a dense, rigid layer - sealing air gaps and insulating in one application. Most attic or crawl space jobs for a standard home are completed in one to two days.
What separates closed-cell foam from fiberglass or loose-fill is what it does beyond slowing heat transfer. Because the foam cells are tightly packed and sealed off from each other, the material also blocks moisture vapor from moving through walls - a meaningful advantage during Roswell's summer monsoon season when humidity spikes unexpectedly. It also adds structural stiffness to the surfaces it covers, which can strengthen older framing in Roswell homes built before modern standards.
Many homeowners pair closed-cell foam with open-cell foam insulation in different zones of the same home - closed-cell where moisture or structural strength matters, open-cell in interior areas where cost efficiency is the priority. For a broader look at all your foam options, our spray foam insulation page covers both types side by side.
If your electric bill climbs dramatically from June through August despite no change in habits, your home is likely losing conditioned air faster than your system can replace it. Roswell attics can reach extreme temperatures on a July afternoon, and that heat radiates directly into your living space. An air conditioner running almost constantly despite a steady thermostat setting is a strong signal that insulation and air sealing are the problem.
Walk through your home on a hot summer afternoon or a cold winter night and notice whether some rooms feel noticeably warmer or cooler than others. Uneven temperatures are a classic sign that air is moving through gaps in walls, attic, or crawl space rather than staying where your heating and cooling system put it. This is especially common in older Roswell homes where original insulation has settled or been disturbed.
If you notice a musty odor in your attic or closets after Roswell's July through September monsoon rains, moisture may be getting into spaces that are not properly sealed. This does not always mean a roof leak - sometimes humid air is condensing inside wall cavities or attic spaces that lack vapor protection. Closed-cell foam's vapor resistance addresses this specific problem.
Roswell winters are cold enough that exposed or poorly insulated pipes in crawl spaces and exterior walls can freeze during hard cold snaps. If you have had a pipe freeze, that is a direct sign those spaces are not adequately protected from cold air. Closed-cell foam applied to crawl space walls and rim joists is one of the most effective ways to protect pipes through the next freeze.
We apply closed-cell foam in attics, crawl spaces, basement walls, rim joists, and exterior wall cavities where maximum performance is needed. The application uses professional spray equipment - not DIY kits - that heats and mixes the chemicals to the correct ratio on-site. Before work begins, the crew masks off adjacent surfaces and checks the area for moisture or damage that could affect the result. We also offer open-cell foam insulation for areas where vapor resistance and structural stiffness are not the primary goals.
For homes where closed-cell foam will be installed in the attic, we also offer combined work with our spray foam insulation service, which covers the full attic plane in a single visit. That approach is especially efficient in older Roswell homes where air sealing and insulation have never been done together. You will need to be out of the home for at least 24 hours after application - your contractor will give you a specific re-entry time before work begins.
Best for attics where you want maximum thermal performance and vapor resistance in one layer.
Best for homes with exposed crawl spaces where cold air, moisture, and pests enter from below.
Best for unfinished basements where moisture resistance alongside insulation is a priority.
Best for older homes where wall insulation was never installed or has degraded significantly.
Roswell sits in the Chihuahuan Desert with summer highs that reach the mid-90s and winter nights that drop into the teens and 20s. That temperature range puts steady pressure on your home's ability to hold a comfortable interior temperature, and it means insulation has to work hard in both seasons. Closed-cell foam's high insulating value per inch makes it well-suited to Roswell's dual-season demand - a thinner layer does more work than a thicker layer of fiberglass or cellulose. The foam's vapor resistance is also a real advantage during the July through September monsoon season, when humidity spikes in ways that most Roswell homeowners are not built to expect. The Spray Polyurethane Foam Alliance provides resources on installation best practices and contractor standards.
A significant portion of Roswell homes were built in the 1950s through 1980s with original fiberglass batts that have likely compressed and lost effectiveness over decades. If your home was built before 1990 and has never had an insulation upgrade, there is a good chance you are losing conditioned air through your attic and walls every day. We serve homeowners in Hobbs and Lovington as well, where similar desert conditions and older housing stock make closed-cell foam a reliable upgrade.
We respond within 1 business day. We ask a few basic questions - what area you want insulated, your home's age, and whether you have existing insulation - so we arrive prepared. Because Roswell has fewer foam contractors than larger cities, scheduling two weeks out is a reasonable expectation in busy seasons.
We visit your home to inspect the space in person - check current insulation, look for moisture or damage, and measure the area to be covered. This takes 30 to 60 minutes and is the best time to ask questions. We will not give you a firm price until we have seen the space.
You receive a written estimate covering areas to be covered, target foam thickness, and total cost. We explain every line item. This is also the time to ask about licensing and the re-entry window after spraying. No obligation to decide on the spot.
The crew arrives with a spray rig, masks off surfaces, and applies foam in controlled passes. Standard jobs are completed in one to two days. You will need to be out of the home for at least 24 hours after the last foam is applied - your contractor confirms the exact re-entry time before work begins.
Free in-home assessment, written estimate, licensed installation. We explain what the foam will and will not do before any work begins.
(575) 363-2820New Mexico requires insulation contractors to hold a state license, and spray foam work falls under that umbrella. You can verify our license through the state's online portal before we start work. A licensed contractor carries insurance, meets minimum competency standards, and gives you real recourse if anything goes wrong - something an unlicensed crew cannot offer.
Closed-cell foam requires heated spray rigs that mix the two-part chemicals at the correct ratio. DIY foam kits sold in hardware stores produce inconsistent results and cannot achieve the density that professional equipment delivers. We use the same commercial-grade rigs used on new construction, applied by crews trained in safe handling and correct application thickness.
We work across Roswell and 11 surrounding communities from Artesia to Hobbs to Alamogordo. That regional coverage means we understand the climate conditions, housing stock ages, and seasonal patterns that shape how closed-cell foam performs across southeastern New Mexico - not just in one ZIP code.
The EPA provides guidelines on safe re-entry after spray foam application, and we follow them. Your re-entry window is communicated before work begins - not the day of - so you can make arrangements for your family and pets in advance. A contractor who is vague about this is not one you should hire.
Closed-cell foam is one of the most technically demanding insulation products to install correctly. We bring the equipment, training, and licensing to do it right - and we explain the process before we start, not after.
A softer, more affordable foam option suited for interior walls and attics where vapor resistance is not the primary concern.
Learn moreAn overview of both open-cell and closed-cell foam options with guidance on which suits your specific space and budget.
Learn moreScheduling books out fast before summer. Call today and we will assess your home, explain your options, and give you a written quote with no pressure to decide on the spot.