
Roswell Insulation provides licensed insulation contractor services in Clovis, NM - blown-in insulation, attic upgrades, and spray foam for the area's postwar ranch homes and stucco-clad houses, with every inquiry answered within 1 business day.

A large share of Clovis homes were built in the 1950s and 1960s, and most of their attics fall well short of the insulation depth recommended for eastern New Mexico's climate. Our blown-in insulation service brings those attics up to standard in a single day - filling corners, covering joists completely, and improving comfort in every room above.
Clovis summers push attic temperatures well above 100 degrees, and that heat radiates straight into your living space through an under-insulated ceiling. Upgrading your attic insulation is the single highest-return improvement most Clovis homeowners can make, and it reduces the heat load your air conditioner has to fight all summer.
Clovis's clay soil expands and contracts with every rain and dry cycle, which opens up small gaps around foundations, pipes, and framing over time. Spray foam fills those irregular gaps and seals air at the same time - a combination that significantly reduces heat loss in winter and heat gain in summer on the open, windy Llano Estacado.
Eastern New Mexico's spring windstorms push outdoor air through every gap in a home's exterior - and the Llano Estacado's flat, exposed terrain means wind arrives with nothing to slow it down. Sealing those entry points before insulation goes in is what actually makes the energy savings show up on your bill, rather than being lost to air movement around the insulation.
Many Clovis homeowners bought older homes without a full history of what maintenance has been done. Retrofit insulation adds coverage to walls, attics, and crawl spaces in existing homes without a full gut renovation - making it a practical, cost-effective option for the many ranch-style homes in Clovis that have never had a proper insulation upgrade.
Clovis stucco and brick homes from the 1950s through 1970s were often built with empty wall cavities or minimal insulation that has long since settled. Insulating those walls dramatically reduces how much outdoor heat penetrates in summer and how much warmth escapes during the hard freezes that Clovis sees every winter.
Clovis sits at about 4,280 feet on the Llano Estacado - a high, flat plateau where there is nothing to block the wind coming in from the Texas Panhandle. Winter temperatures regularly drop below 20 degrees, and spring windstorms with gusts topping 60 mph are a fact of life. That wind-chill effect combined with genuine cold means a poorly insulated Clovis home loses heat fast once temperatures fall. And in summer, the same flat, open terrain bakes under intense high-desert sun, sending attic temperatures well past what your air conditioner can easily counter. The soil adds another complication: the clay here expands when wet and shrinks when dry, so the ground under Clovis homes is constantly moving. That movement opens small gaps around slab edges and pipe penetrations over years, creating new pathways for air and moisture to enter.
The housing stock in Clovis reflects its postwar growth, partly tied to Cannon Air Force Base. A large share of homes were built between the 1940s and 1975 - now 50 to 80 years old - with brick or stucco exteriors on slab foundations. Those homes were built when insulation standards were a fraction of what is recommended today, and whatever was originally installed has settled, shifted, or simply worn out. Many have no wall insulation at all, and attic coverage that is far too thin for the temperature swings Clovis experiences every year. The result is higher energy bills, rooms that never quite reach the right temperature, and HVAC systems that run too hard and wear out too fast.
We work on homes across eastern New Mexico, and Clovis is part of our regular territory. The ranch-style homes that dominate the city's established neighborhoods - particularly those east of Main Street and south toward the Cannon Air Force Base side of town - are homes we know well. Slab foundations with stucco or brick exteriors, minimal attic depth, and wall cavities that have never seen insulation are the norm in that housing stock. When Clovis projects require permits, we coordinate with the City of Clovis Building Division before work starts - our crews handle the permit process so you do not need to.
Clovis is a compact city, and we cover it from the older neighborhoods near Norman Petty Studios on the historic west side to the newer subdivisions spreading north near Ned Houk Park. We also serve the communities just down US-70 from Clovis. Homeowners in Portales deal with the same Llano Estacado climate and much of the same postwar housing stock, and our crews are on that road regularly. Further north toward the Texas border, Hobbs is another oil-patch community we serve where open-country wind and older brick homes create similar insulation demands.
We answer every inquiry within 1 business day. Let us know the age of your home and what you have been noticing - high bills, uneven rooms, or drafts near windows. That tells us what to bring and helps us prepare an accurate estimate for your specific Clovis home.
We measure what is in your attic, check walls and crawl spaces, and look for air leaks around pipes and fixtures. You get a written estimate before we leave - no verbal-only quotes. We explain what we found, what we recommend, and what it costs, including whether your project may qualify for a federal tax credit.
Most Clovis attic jobs finish in a single day. We lay drop cloths, seal air gaps first, then install the insulation. For blown-in work, a hose runs from the truck outside into your attic - the actual blowing typically takes one to three hours. You can stay home; just keep pets and children away from the work area.
Before leaving, we walk you through the finished work and confirm coverage meets the target depth. We clean up the work area and hand over any documentation you will need for a tax credit claim or future home sale record - useful in a market where older Clovis homes often lack clear improvement histories.
We serve Clovis and Curry County. Licensed New Mexico insulation contractor. Every inquiry answered within 1 business day.
(575) 363-2820Clovis is a city of about 39,000 in Curry County, sitting on the flat Llano Estacado plateau in far eastern New Mexico near the Texas Panhandle border. The city is a regional hub for the surrounding agricultural communities - ranching and farming have shaped Curry County for over a century - and it serves as a commercial center for a wide stretch of eastern New Mexico. Cannon Air Force Base lies just west of the city and is one of the area's largest employers, bringing a steady rotation of military families into the Clovis rental market. The residential mix is overwhelmingly single-family, with established neighborhoods built from the 1940s through 1970s close to downtown and newer subdivisions spreading north toward Ned Houk Park and west along the base corridor. Most homes are single-story ranch style with brick or stucco exteriors - practical and durable in the dry climate, but built before modern insulation standards.
About 60 percent of Clovis housing units are owner-occupied. Median home values are modest - well below the national average - which means homeowners here tend to think carefully about what home improvements are worth the investment. Insulation upgrades consistently rank among the highest-return projects in this climate because of the wide temperature swings between seasons. The historic west side of Clovis near Norman Petty Studios contains some of the city's oldest housing stock, while the north and west sides have newer construction. Communities nearby share similar conditions: homeowners in Portales to the south deal with the same plateau climate and older housing stock, while Hobbs to the southwest faces open-country wind and a similar inventory of postwar brick homes.
Expand-and-seal spray foam for superior air sealing and energy efficiency in walls, attics, and crawl spaces.
Learn moreProperly insulate your attic to reduce heat loss and lower heating and cooling costs year-round.
Learn moreLoose-fill insulation blown into attics and wall cavities for fast, effective coverage with minimal disruption.
Learn moreComprehensive whole-home insulation solutions that improve comfort and reduce energy bills.
Learn moreSafe removal of old, damaged, or pest-contaminated insulation to prepare your space for a fresh install.
Learn moreInsulate your crawl space to prevent moisture, mold, and energy loss from below the floor.
Learn moreAdd insulation to exterior and interior walls to stop drafts and improve thermal performance.
Learn moreSeal gaps, cracks, and penetrations throughout your home to stop conditioned air from escaping.
Learn moreInsulate basement walls and rim joists to keep lower levels warm and dry while saving energy.
Learn moreDense, rigid closed-cell spray foam providing the highest R-value per inch plus a vapor barrier.
Learn moreLightweight open-cell spray foam ideal for interior walls and attics where sound dampening matters.
Learn moreIndustrial-grade insulation solutions for commercial buildings, warehouses, and new construction.
Learn moreHeavy-duty vapor barriers that block ground moisture and protect your crawl space and home structure.
Learn moreProfessional vapor barrier installation in crawl spaces and basements to prevent moisture damage.
Learn moreSeal attic bypasses and penetrations before adding insulation for maximum energy savings.
Learn moreAdd or upgrade insulation in existing homes without major demolition using proven retrofit techniques.
Learn moreServing these cities and communities.
Call us or fill out our contact form and we will reply within 1 business day. Serving Clovis and the surrounding Curry County area.