Open-Cell vs Closed-Cell Spray Foam

Open-Cell vs Closed-Cell Spray Foam

Open-cell foam is usually lower R per inch and vapor open; closed-cell foam is usually higher R per inch and can change vapor behavior. Both require professional specification and installation.

Quick answer

R-value

Open-cell foam is often around R-3.5 to R-3.8 per inch; closed-cell foam often around R-6 to R-7.

Air sealing

Both can contribute to air sealing when installed correctly, but they are not a substitute for safe detailing.

Moisture and vapor

Closed-cell foam can alter vapor control; open-cell foam may need a separate strategy depending on climate and assembly.

Practical note

How to use this page

The insulation comparison page is best used to narrow options, not to make an automatic design decision. Start with a realistic thickness, compare lambda, R-value, and installation limits, then check shortlisted materials against current data sheets.

The result must be read together with the application. A material that works well on an external wall is not automatically the best choice below a screed, on a flat roof, or in timber construction. Moisture, load, fire behaviour, and fixing method can outweigh a small lambda difference.

When two materials look thermally similar, look at system availability, tolerances, and whether the insulation layer can be made continuous. A slightly weaker material installed cleanly can perform better than a theoretically stronger option with gaps or thermal bridges.

After comparing materials, move to the U-value calculator and test the complete assembly. The comparison table shows material differences, but the full build-up reveals the effect of render, cladding, air spaces, and surface resistances.

If two results are close, do not choose from one number alone. Check moisture behaviour, fire performance, available board formats, system requirements, and whether the layer can be installed continuously without open joints.

For renovation work, also check substrate condition, condensation risk, and details around windows, ring beams, and balconies. A strong lambda value will not fix a layer interrupted at the most important junctions.

The final step should be comparison with the current manufacturer data sheet. The database helps narrow the direction, but the documentation for the exact product matters most for ordering and construction.

In practice, make a short decision table: thermal result, installation difficulty, moisture behaviour, fire behaviour, acoustics, and system availability. That reduces the risk of choosing a material only because one number looks best.

If the comparison is used in a supplier discussion, record the data-check date and assumed thickness. It becomes easier to separate a price or product change from a real change in thermal performance.

A useful comparison includes at least three variants: current state, economical option, and option with margin. That shows whether extra thickness still delivers a meaningful improvement.

If the comparison is tied to legal requirements, do not rely on an internet average. Use the local threshold, the correct calculation method, and data for the product that will actually be installed.

Quick answer

Professional installation note

This page is for planning comparisons only. It does not provide installation instructions for spray foam.

  • Two inches of closed-cell foam at R-6.5 per inch gives about R-13; three inches of open-cell at R-3.7 gives about R-11.
  • Fire protection, ventilation, substrate condition, curing, access, and local requirements must be reviewed by qualified people.
  • Use the spray foam material page for ranges, then the R-value calculator for thickness estimates.
  • Use Open-Cell vs Closed-Cell Spray Foam as a screening page: set the target R-value, compare typical per-inch values, then check a declared product.
  • If two options look close thermally, prioritize fit, moisture control, fire covering, access, and the full assembly before choosing.
  • Keep manufacturer data, local code review, and installer documentation with the calculation so later changes can be checked.
How to use this comparison
Related pages

Spray foam R-value

Compare open-cell and closed-cell planning ranges with installation cautions.

Open page

Insulation R-value calculator

Estimate R-value from thickness and material k-value.

Open page

Total R-value calculator

Sum layer resistances after choosing material options.

Open page
FAQ

No. This page is only for planning comparison. Spray foam needs qualified specification, safety controls, and product instructions.

Closed-cell foam usually has a higher R per inch, but vapor, moisture, fire protection, and cost drivers still matter.

Use Open-Cell vs Closed-Cell Spray Foam as a first-pass reference. Before specifying anything, compare the result with the update review, actual project dimensions, product data sheet, and local requirements.