glossary Glossary 5 min read

Bulk insulation

Bulk insulation resists heat flow by trapping still air in fibre (glasswool, polyester, wool) or foam. R-value derives from thickness. Standard ceiling/wall insulation.

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Bulk insulation is the family of insulation products that resist heat flow by trapping still air within fibres or closed-cell foam, producing a measurable R-value proportional to the material’s thickness and conductivity. It is the dominant residential insulation type in Australia, used in ceilings, walls, and (less commonly) floors. Unlike reflective insulation, bulk insulation works on direct contact with adjacent surfaces, doesn’t require an airspace, and contributes its R-value as installed (subject to compression and moisture). Verified per AS/NZS 4859.1:2018 (2026-05-16).

Types of bulk insulation:

TypeCompositionTypical R-value/mUse
Glasswool battsSpun glass fibre + binder22-24 W/m K → R3.5-R4.0 at standard thicknessCeilings, walls; most common; cheap
Polyester battsPolyethylene terephthalate (PET) fibres25-28 W/m K → R2.5-R3.5Walls, ceilings; pet-friendly, fewer fibres airborne
Wool batts (sheep’s wool)Natural wool fibre28-32 W/m K → R2.5-R3.0Premium residential; moisture-tolerant
Rock wool / mineral woolStone fibre30-34 W/m K → R3.0-R3.5Fire-rated walls, acoustic, hot environments
Cellulose loose-fillRecycled paper + flame retardant35-45 W/m K → R3.0-R3.5 at 150 mmRetrofit ceilings, blown-in
Rigid PIR boardsPolyisocyanurate22-26 W/m K → R4.0-R4.5/mWalls, under-slab, exposed framing; high-performance
Rigid XPS boardsExtruded polystyrene28-32 W/m K → R3.5-R4.0/mUnder-slab, plinth, foundation walls
Rigid EPS boardsExpanded polystyrene30-35 W/m K → R3.0-R3.5/mCheaper rigid option; SIP panels

Standard residential thicknesses and R-values:

ElementTypical thicknessTypical R-value
Ceiling batt175-300 mmR5.0-R7.0
External wall batt90-150 mm (90 mm framing)R2.5-R4.0
Internal acoustic wall batt70-90 mmR1.5-R2.5 (acoustic-rated; AS 1191 STC)
Suspended floor batt90-150 mmR2.5-R3.0
Under-slab rigid board50-100 mmR2.0-R4.5

NCC 2022 minimum R-values (climate zones):

ZoneClimateCeiling RWall RFloor R
1TropicalR4.1R2.8varies
2Warm temperateR4.1R2.8R1.5
3Hot dryR4.1R2.8varies
4Cool/Cool temperateR5.1R2.8R2.0
5Sub-tropicalR4.1R2.8R1.5
6Mild temperate (Sydney/Melbourne typical)R5.1R2.8R2.0
7Cool temperate (Canberra)R6.0R2.8R2.5
8AlpineR6.0R3.5R3.5

(These are the minimum elemental R-values under DTS. The 7-star whole-house assessment under Specification 42 typically requires higher R-values to balance against window losses and air leakage.)

R-value loss factors:

CauseEffect
Compression (batt squashed into smaller cavity)R-value falls proportional to compression; 50% compression → ~30% R-value loss
Gaps between battsA 5% area gap reduces effective R-value by 50% (gaps shortcut the thermal path)
Settling (loose-fill cellulose)Settles 15-25% over years; less performance over time
Moisture (water absorbed by fibre)Wet glasswool loses 90% R-value; polyester less affected
Mechanical compression (services, cables routed through)Local R-value reduction

A “best practice” install achieves the rated R-value uniformly; a poor install achieves 60-70% of the rated R-value due to compression and gaps.

Bulk vs reflective vs composite:

ApproachMechanismBest for
Bulk (this)Still air in fibre/foamAll conductive heat flow; bedrooms, walls
ReflectiveLow-emittance foil + airspaceRadiant heat (hot roofs in summer)
Composite (foil-faced batt)Combines bulk + reflectiveHigh-performance hybrid; common in modern builds

For most residential applications, bulk does 90% of the work. Reflective is an addition for hot-summer climates.

Common defects:

  • Batts cut to fit awkward cavities and stuffed: compression and tearing; reduces R-value.
  • Batts not extending to the wall plate: gap at the top reduces ceiling R-value at the junction.
  • Downlights cut into ceiling batts without IC-rated separation: fire risk + thermal short.
  • Wet batts left in walls (e.g. rain ingress during construction): wet glasswool stays wet; mould; R-value loss.
  • Wrong batt orientation in walls (long edge facing wrong): batts don’t fit cavity properly.
  • No batts in eaves/soffit cavity: air leakage path; entire ceiling R-value compromised by the connected airspace.

Builder takeaway:

  • Choose product type for the climate (rock wool for fire-rating, polyester for pet/asthma sensitivity, glasswool for cost).
  • Match R-value to NCC minimum for the climate zone + Specification 42 calculation.
  • Install carefully: no compression, no gaps, no moisture.
  • For high-performance builds (8-star, Passive House), use rigid PIR or composite systems to push past glasswool’s practical R-value ceiling.

Also known as: mass insulation; conductive insulation; thermal batts; fibre insulation; mineral wool (specific subtype); thermal insulation (loose term).

Category: Materials.

See also


Last updated: 2026-05-16. Verified: 2026-05-16. Quarterly review for currency.