The Science of What's Below Your Floor

And how it affects every room above it.

Research-backed crawlspace energy science for Kansas City and Des Moines homeowners — backed by DOE, EPA, and Advanced Energy data.

Warm Midwest living room interior with winter light streaming through windows onto hardwood floors — the comfort that proper crawlspace energy management delivers

Why Does Your Home Feel the Way It Does?

If your first floor is cold in winter, your energy bills keep climbing, or your home has a persistent musty smell that air fresheners can't mask — the answer probably isn't a new furnace, better ventilation, or more insulation in your attic. The problem is beneath your feet.

Up to half the air on your first floor comes from your crawlspace. That's not an estimate — it's what building science researchers have measured in hundreds of homes across the Midwest. The stack effect, a well-documented pressure dynamic in residential buildings, continuously pulls air from below your floors into every room above.

Contractor sites skip the science and jump straight to "call us for a free estimate." We built this site to do something different — explain why your home feels the way it does, using the same DOE and EPA research that informs professional building science. When you understand the mechanism, you can evaluate any solution with confidence.

View into a dark crawlspace through the access opening — the hidden space beneath your home that affects every room above it

The space beneath your home that most homeowners never see — but that controls comfort, air quality, and energy costs in every room above it.

How Does Your Crawlspace Affect Every Room in Your Home?

Energy Loss

Unsealed crawlspaces waste 10-30% of heating and cooling energy according to DOE research — costing Midwest homeowners hundreds of dollars every year in conditioned air lost through the floor system.

Air Quality

The stack effect pulls crawlspace air — including mold spores, allergens, and moisture — into your living space. In Midwest summers when outdoor humidity reaches 75-85%, unsealed crawlspaces become amplifiers of indoor air quality problems.

Home Comfort

Cold floors, uneven room temperatures, and drafts trace directly to crawlspace conditions. The floor between your living space and crawlspace is the largest uninsulated surface in most homes — and it sets the baseline comfort level for every room above.

What Does the Research Actually Show About Crawlspace Performance?

10–30% Energy bill reduction DOE-documented savings from properly sealing and insulating crawlspaces in residential buildings.
40–50% First-floor air from crawlspace Measured via the stack effect in homes with unsealed crawlspaces — confirmed by building science field studies.
52% vs 77% Sealed vs. vented crawlspace humidity Advanced Energy study average relative humidity — sealed crawlspaces stay below the 60% mold threshold.
75–85% KC & Des Moines summer humidity Outdoor relative humidity that vented crawlspaces actively introduce — well above the 60% mold colonization threshold.

How Does Your Local Climate Affect Crawlspace Performance?

Crawlspace conditions vary by region. Kansas City's clay soils retain moisture differently than Des Moines' glacial till. Local humidity patterns, frost depth, and housing stock all shape how your crawlspace behaves.

Ready for the Complete Picture?

Our Ultimate Crawlspace Guide walks through everything — from the stack effect physics that connect your crawlspace to every room above, to the research comparing sealed and vented approaches, to a decision framework for choosing the right improvement method.

Read the Ultimate Guide

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Who Publishes Crawlspace Energy Institute?

Crawlspace Energy Institute is an independent educational resource focused exclusively on crawlspace science. Every article, tool, and guide is researched and written by Patrick Smith in collaboration with the experienced crawlspace professionals at JLB Foundation Repair, combining published building science research with hands-on field knowledge from thousands of projects.

The content on this site references peer-reviewed research and published government data. We cite the U.S. Department of Energy for energy savings figures, the EPA for indoor air quality standards, and the Advanced Energy sealed crawlspace study for humidity comparison data. Where local climate data informs our analysis, we use NOAA weather station records for Kansas City and Des Moines.

Learn more about the site, its editorial standards, and the research behind our content on our About page.