Floor R-value calculator
Use this floor R-value calculator for floors over crawl spaces, garages, basements, and other unconditioned spaces. Enter existing R-value if there is already insulation, then add material and thickness. Floors often have practical constraints such as joist depth, fire protection, vapor control, pests, access panels, and service penetrations, so the calculated R-value is only one part of the decision.
Educational estimates only. Always check local building code and product documentation before specifying insulation.
Floor R-value calculator
Floor R_total = R_existing + added thickness × R per inch.
- Formula
R_total = R_existing + thickness_in * R_per_in- Example
- Example: R-5 existing floor insulation plus 3.5 in at R-3.7 per inch adds R-13 and reaches about R-18.
Working calculator
Enter the core dimensions and check the result directly on this page.
Typical R-value per inch
Use this table as a planning starting point. Real values vary by product, density, temperature, aging method, and installation quality.
| Material | Typical R/in | Typical US k | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fiberglass batt | 3.2 | 0.313 | common cavity batt planning value |
| Mineral wool | 4.2 | 0.238 | often denser than fiberglass batt |
| Loose-fill cellulose | 3.5 | 0.286 | depends on settling and blown density |
| EPS foam board | 4.0 | 0.250 | varies by board grade |
| XPS foam board | 5.0 | 0.200 | check long-term declared value |
| Polyiso board | 5.6 | 0.179 | can vary with temperature |
Worked examples
Example 1
Inputs
R_existing = 19thickness_in = 6R_per_in = 3.7
Formula
R_total = R_existing + thickness_in * R_per_in
Steps
6 * 3.7 = 22.219 + 22.2 = 41.2
Result
R_total = R-41.2
Related calculator
Added insulation R-valueExample 2
Inputs
R_existing = 10thickness_in = 4R_per_in = 5.0
Formula
R_total = R_existing + thickness_in * R_per_in
Steps
4 * 5.0 = 20.010 + 20.0 = 30.0
Result
R_total = R-30.0
Related calculator
Roof R-valueFloor R-value calculator
Example: R-5 existing floor insulation plus 3.5 in at R-3.7 per inch adds R-13 and reaches about R-18.
This calculator gives educational estimates only. Always check local building code and product documentation.
How to interpret the calculator result
Floor R-value calculator is intended for quick option checks and technical discussion before detailed execution. The result depends on the selected units, declared material values, and chosen surface resistances, so each change in layer or thickness should be treated as a separate variant.
The calculator does not automatically verify every local rule, thermal bridge, moisture condition, structural connection, or installation tolerance. If the result is close to a requirement, treat it as a reason for deeper verification rather than a final decision.
For better comparisons, test several realistic thicknesses, check current product data sheets, and review the complete assembly. A calculated value is most useful when the assumptions are clear: material, thickness, layer order, units, and data source.
For insulation or U-value tools, layer order and correct units are especially important. For concrete, electrical, plumbing, or heating tools, the result should be read as a quick quantity or plausibility check before standards and execution conditions are reviewed.
Save the result with the date, material name, and assumptions. If the product, diameter, cable section, or thickness changes later, do not compare the numbers alone without checking which inputs changed.
For calculator pages, clear separation between inputs and result is essential. If a value looks surprising, check units and default fields first, then review the project assumptions.
Floor R-value Calculator
Estimate floor insulation R-value for crawl spaces, garages, basements, and cold floors.
Assembly thickness
Thickness is estimated from target R-value, existing R-value, and material R per inch. The result is shown in inches and millimeters.
U-value
R-values can be added for layers in the same heat-flow path, but framing, gaps, compression, air leakage, and moisture details can reduce real assembly performance.
How it works
Material values vary
Floors over unconditioned spaces need continuity at rim joists, edges, and service penetrations.
Limitations
For slabs and metric layer reports, use the floor U-value calculator alongside this nominal R-value check.
Floor R-value Calculator
Floor R_total = R_existing + added thickness × R per inch.
Use this floor R-value calculator for floors over crawl spaces, garages, basements, and other unconditioned spaces. Enter existing R-value if there is already insulation, then add material and thickness. Floors often have practical constraints such as joist depth, fire protection, vapor control, pests, access panels, and service penetrations, so the calculated R-value is only one part of the decision. Example: R-5 existing floor insulation plus 3.5 in at R-3.7 per inch adds R-13 and reaches about R-18.
Calculation assumptions
The calculators use visible formulas and explicit unit conversions. Treat the result as a preliminary check, not a complete building design.
- SI and US units are converted separately; R, RSI, U-value, and U-factor are not mixed without the unit factor.
- Enter positive values and compare the result with the selected product datasheet.
- Local codes, thermal bridges, fasteners, and installation quality can change the requirement.
- Last formula review: 2026-04-27.
See how formulas, unit conversions, rounding, and limitations are handled. Methodology details.
US R-value mini-hub
Move between R-value calculators, material tables, insulation comparisons, and assembly calculators without scanning the whole navigation.
R-value calculators
Material R-values
Insulation comparisons
Assembly calculators
Reference tables
Using European units?
Open the U-value, lambda, and metric insulation thickness tools.
Materials and comparisons
Check lambda values, insulation comparisons, and reference pages before choosing layers.