Service area #1
Spray Foam Insulation in St. George, UT
Home base. St. George passed 100,000 residents recently and keeps adding thousands a year, so the work here runs the full range, from foaming the roofline on a 1990s home to insulating a brand-new build in a corridor like Little Valley or Desert Color. Whatever the project, an attic that hits 140 degrees in July is the common enemy.
St. George is where this work has the widest range in the service area. A foam job here might be a south-side retrofit for retirees in Sun River who want to flatten their cooling bill. The next one might be a Tonaquint custom up on the west bench. Add the metal building work going up near Tech Ridge, plus pretty much every other type of foam job a desert home or shop can need, and the variety here speaks for itself. The common thread is the desert summer, that’s what punishes any home insulated with old fiberglass batts above the ceiling. The right foam and the right application come out of looking at the actual property. Response is usually quickest here since this is the home base, and the installer has been in enough St. George attics to know the typical issues before even opening the access panel.
Project types covered in St. George: attic and roofline foam, closed-cell, open-cell, new construction, and metal building / pole barn insulation. See full service list →
Service area #2
Spray Foam Insulation in Washington, UT
Washington City just north of St. George is one of the fastest-growing cities in the state, with new residential and commercial construction going up along the I-15 corridor every year. A lot of spray foam work here happens at the framing stage on new homes, where foam costs less and seals better than a retrofit ever will.
Washington’s growth keeps pushing up the hillsides above the old Telegraph Road corridor, into developments like Sienna Hills where the lots step up the slope and the homes face out toward the Virgin River bench. Foam at the framing stage is the smart move on builds like these, since the geometry of a hillside home rarely fits standard batt cavities cleanly. There’s a lot of these going up right now, and the smoother projects are the ones where the foam installer gets on the plans before framing starts. For older homes down on the original Washington City grid, the conversation is usually retrofit attic and roofline work, the same as everywhere else in the desert. The drive between the new builds at the top of the slope and the older builds at the bottom is about three minutes.
Project types covered in Washington: attic and roofline foam, closed-cell, open-cell, new construction, and metal building / pole barn insulation. See full service list →
Service area #3
Spray Foam Insulation in Hurricane, UT
Hurricane has grown steadily for decades and lands on Utah's fastest-growing list year after year. It's also spread out, with a mix of older homes near downtown and newer construction pushing toward Sand Hollow. Older roofs and attics here are usually the priority, since that's where desert heat does the most damage to a cooling bill.
Hurricane sits below the Hurricane Cliffs, with the Hurricane Mesa rising above to the north. That terrain shapes where the housing has gone. Older homes spread out across the valley floor, newer subdivisions filling in toward the edges. Foam work here splits between the two patterns. Older homes get retrofit attic and roofline work, since most were never sealed properly to begin with. Newer construction in the developing pockets gets foam at framing when builders or homeowners spec it. Different parts of the same town, same climate problem to solve. The drive over from St. George is short enough that response time on Hurricane jobs is close to local, which is something the homeowners who’ve waited weeks for a contractor from somewhere else have learned to appreciate.
Project types covered in Hurricane: attic and roofline foam, closed-cell, open-cell, new construction, and metal building / pole barn insulation. See full service list →
Service area #4
Spray Foam Insulation in Santa Clara, UT
Santa Clara is a smaller community west of St. George that's still seeing new development, including new housing breaking ground as recently as 2026. It's the kind of place where we handle both new builds and retrofits on established homes, and the red rock summer heat makes a sealed envelope worth it on either one.
Santa Clara has a heritage angle most of the service area doesn’t share. Settled by Swiss pioneers in the 1850s and home to historic sites around Heritage Square, the older parts of town carry building stock that goes back further than most of the rest of Washington County. Anyways, building age and insulation reality don’t always line up the way people expect. Even a home from the 1970s here, much less the older heritage-area homes, is usually running on insulation that’s well past its useful life. A retrofit attic or roofline foam job brings that envelope into something that actually performs in a desert summer. On the newer side, west-end developments keep adding homes that benefit from foam at framing rather than batts by default. Both patterns are common here, and the work splits about evenly between them.
Project types covered in Santa Clara: attic and roofline foam, closed-cell, open-cell, new construction, and metal building / pole barn insulation. See full service list →
Service area #5
Spray Foam Insulation in Ivins, UT
Ivins sits out near Snow Canyon and Kayenta, and a good share of the housing is view-focused custom homes with the kind of irregular rooflines and open layouts that fiberglass batts struggle with. Spray foam fills those awkward cavities and seals the envelope in a way batts just can't match.
Ivins sits between some of the most striking geography in Southern Utah. Tuacahn’s red rock cliffs rise to the north, and Padre Canyon cuts through the area to the west. Red Mountain Resort draws visitors who often end up wanting to build here. That mix shows up in the housing, custom homes designed to take in the views and feel different than a production build in town. Open rooflines and glass facing the rocks are part of what makes the geometry hard for batts to follow cleanly. Spray foam handles those cavities the way fiberglass never could, and the air-seal across an oddly shaped envelope is what keeps the interior comfortable through the temperature swings the desert delivers. Foam work in Ivins is usually a conversation about which foam for which part of the home rather than whether foam at all.
Project types covered in Ivins: attic and roofline foam, closed-cell, open-cell, new construction, and metal building / pole barn insulation. See full service list →
Service area #6
Spray Foam Insulation in La Verkin, UT
La Verkin is a small Washington County city right next to Hurricane, with a housing stock that's mostly newer, the median home went up around 1997, with a wave of construction in the 2000s. Those homes are old enough now that the original insulation is worth a second look, especially in the attic.
La Verkin sits where La Verkin Creek meets the Virgin River, at Confluence Park, and the town has built itself out across the bench above the two waterways. Most of the homes here went up in the 90s and 2000s, which means a lot of them are at the age where the original insulation has had time to settle and the air-sealing is whatever it was when the batts went in. The attic and roofline are usually the main place to start, since the desert summer hits the same way here as anywhere else in Washington County, and every one of these older homes are showing the same wear pattern in the attic by now. For projects on the newer side of town, foam at framing is the cleaner option whenever a builder will work it into the schedule. The drive over from St. George is straightforward off SR-9.
Project types covered in La Verkin: attic and roofline foam, closed-cell, open-cell, new construction, and metal building / pole barn insulation. See full service list →
Service area #7
Spray Foam Insulation in Toquerville, UT
Toquerville is a small city north of St. George that's set up for major growth, with the Toquerville Parkway and thousands of planned new homes over the coming years, including a 55+ community. Most of the spray foam opportunity here is new construction, where insulating at the framing stage is the cheaper, cleaner path.
Toquerville is one of the smaller towns on the list and one of the ones about to change the most. The old character is still here, the dirt road north of town that leads up to Toquerville Falls, the quiet lots that back up toward the Ash Creek Reservoir. The new character is the Parkway and the housing pipeline behind it. Foam work here is mostly the new construction version, since the building wave coming through expects modern insulation specs and the foam stage is the same job on a Toquerville build as it is anywhere else in the county. For the few older homes that haven’t been touched, the conversation is the exact same retrofit attic story we have everywhere, just on a smaller volume than the bigger cities for now. Toquerville’s foam-work volume is going to look different in three years than it does today.
Project types covered in Toquerville: attic and roofline foam, closed-cell, open-cell, new construction, and metal building / pole barn insulation. See full service list →
Service area #8
Spray Foam Insulation in Cedar City, UT
Cedar City sits about 50 miles north up I-15, and at roughly 5,800 feet of elevation it runs noticeably cooler than St. George. It's growing fast, with thousands of new homes in the development pipeline, but the insulation priorities flip a bit here, cold winters matter as much as hot summers, and spray foam handles both.
Cedar City is the one place in the service area where the insulation conversation flips. The Brian Head ski area sits just up the road and Cedar Breaks isn’t far either, both at elevations that get serious winter, and Cedar City itself catches a real winter season too which means the insulation has to hold heat in as much as it has to keep heat out. That changes the math on what foam goes where. Closed-cell makes more sense on more jobs here than in St. George, since the higher R-value per inch and the moisture-handling matter at elevation in a way they don’t down at desert floor. New construction in Cedar’s pipeline tends to spec foam more often than the southern cities do; the climate practically requires it. Coal Creek runs through downtown and the older neighborhoods around it carry the same retrofit needs the older cities carry, just with a colder side of the calendar to plan around.
Project types covered in Cedar City: attic and roofline foam, closed-cell, open-cell, new construction, and metal building / pole barn insulation. See full service list →
Service area #9
Spray Foam Insulation in Bloomington Hills, UT
Bloomington Hills is an established St. George neighborhood built around the city golf course, with development that started in the 1980s and continues today. That means a real mix of housing ages side by side. The older homes are prime candidates for an attic and roofline upgrade, since insulation standards have moved a long way since then.
Bloomington Hills sits in the southern part of St. George, north of the Virgin River and across from Black Hill, with the golf course running through the middle of the neighborhood. The homes here go back to the early 1980s and the development has been adding new phases ever since, which means walking a block in this neighborhood you can pass a 1985 ranch, a 1995 two-story, a 2005 contemporary, and a 2015 new build, all on the same street. The insulation story is different in each phase. The older homes are usually overdue for an attic upgrade by now, while the newer ones are typically running on builder-grade fiberglass that meets code but doesn’t deliver much. Foam upgrades a 1985 home more dramatically then a 2015 home, but it improves both. The conversation is just about where to start and how much to do at once.
Project types covered in Bloomington Hills: attic and roofline foam, closed-cell, open-cell, new construction, and metal building / pole barn insulation. See full service list →
Every insulation work project is different and will be priced and scoped to fit your specific property, square footage, and timing. Submit your details for a free quote from a local St. George-area contractor.