Rigid foam insulation boards: EPS, XPS, PIR, phenolic for Australian builds
Rigid foam insulation boards for Australian residential builds: EPS XPS PIR phenolic chemistry, R-values, applications, brands, fire performance.
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Rigid foam insulation boards are a different product class from glasswool and polyester batts: instead of a fibrous mat trapping air, the foam is a closed-cell plastic with gas trapped in the cells themselves. The five common chemistries are EPS (expanded polystyrene, the cheapest, lowest R-value per thickness), XPS (extruded polystyrene, denser, water-resistant), PIR (polyisocyanurate, high R-value per thickness, the volume residential premium), phenolic (highest R-value per thickness, fire-rated), and PUR (polyurethane, sprayed or pre-formed). R-values per cm are roughly 2 to 3 times higher than batts: a 50 mm PIR board delivers R2.5; a 50 mm phenolic board delivers R2.7. The trade-off is cost (PIR is 3 to 5 times the cost of glasswool at equivalent R) and fire performance (EPS and XPS fail higher AS/NZS 1530.3 fire tests; PIR and phenolic perform materially better). Where rigid foam dominates: external continuous insulation behind cladding (avoiding thermal bridging through studs), under-slab insulation (compressive strength needed; only XPS and high-density EPS qualify), and high-performance walls where the deeper batt thickness won’t fit. The dominant Australian brand is Kingspan Kooltherm (phenolic) and Kingspan AIR-Cell (foil-faced cellular foam); Bondor, Foamex, and AustralWright cover EPS and XPS supply. Compliance is the same AS/NZS 4859.1:2018 framework as batts, but the fire rating under AS/NZS 1530.3 becomes the deciding factor on multi-residential and FRL-rated projects (verified 2026-05-13).
What it is
Rigid foam insulation is a closed-cell plastic foam manufactured in panel or board form. The foam contains millions of tiny gas-filled cells; the gas (typically a low-conductivity blowing agent like pentane or HFO) is the actual insulator. The foam matrix holds the gas cells in a rigid form that supports its own weight and has compressive strength suitable for structural applications.
The five common chemistries in Australian residential use:
| Chemistry | Acronym | Cell density | UV stability | Where used |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Expanded polystyrene | EPS | Low (white beads visible) | Poor (chalks within months) | Cheap general-purpose, under-slab (high-density only), exterior wall systems with cladding |
| Extruded polystyrene | XPS | Higher (smooth blue/pink/green skin) | Better than EPS but covers needed | Under-slab, basement walls, cold-climate applications |
| Polyisocyanurate | PIR | High (yellow-tan foam between foil facings) | Foil facings protect; bare foam degrades | High-performance walls, roofs, premium residential |
| Phenolic | Phenolic | Highest (pink-brown foam between foil facings) | Foil facings protect | Highest R/cm needed; high fire-rating applications |
| Polyurethane | PUR | Variable (sprayed or pre-formed) | Foil or coating protects | Specialist sprayed-in-place applications, refrigeration |
The two-letter chemistry acronyms are widely used in the trade and on data sheets; they’re not interchangeable. EPS and XPS are similar chemistry families but distinct manufacturing processes producing materially different properties.
R-values per thickness
Rigid foam’s R-value per centimetre is materially higher than fibrous batts. This is the central performance advantage: where batt thickness is constrained (cavity depth, cladding offset, structural detail), foam delivers higher R in less space.
| Chemistry | R-value per 10 mm of thickness | A 50 mm thick board delivers |
|---|---|---|
| EPS (M-grade standard) | R0.27 to R0.30 | R1.4 to R1.5 |
| EPS (HD high-density) | R0.30 to R0.35 | R1.5 to R1.75 |
| XPS | R0.30 to R0.35 | R1.5 to R1.75 |
| PIR | R0.50 to R0.55 | R2.5 to R2.75 |
| Phenolic | R0.55 to R0.60 | R2.75 to R3.0 |
| Polyurethane (sprayed) | R0.55 to R0.60 | R2.75 to R3.0 |
Compare to glasswool: 90 mm thick glasswool R2.5 = R0.28 per cm. PIR delivers double the R per centimetre. For a cavity-constrained wall (e.g. retrofit insulation in a stud wall with limited depth), the 50% R uplift from PIR vs glasswool matters.
Where rigid foam is the right call
External continuous insulation behind cladding: foam panel installed over the framing (outside the studs), under the cladding. The foam covers the entire wall plane without thermal bridging through studs. Common in high-performance and passive-house residential.
Under-slab insulation: slabs in cool-climate housing benefit from under-slab insulation to reduce ground heat loss. Only XPS and high-density EPS have the compressive strength to sit under concrete without permanent compression.
Basement wall insulation: insulating the inside or outside of a basement wall. Closed-cell foam handles the moisture environment better than fibrous batts.
Roof sarking systems: foil-faced PIR or phenolic boards laid over rafters, under the roof sheet, providing both insulation and a vapour barrier. Kingspan AIR-Cell is the volume Australian product in this space.
Retrofit on existing house: where the existing wall cavity is too shallow for a batt at required R-value, an internal layer of PIR adds R-value in less depth.
Cold-storage and refrigeration walls: rigid foam is the standard cold-store wall insulation; same chemistry used in some high-performance residential.
Where rigid foam is wrong
- Budget volume residential where batt depth is available: glasswool or polyester at standard thickness is 2 to 5 times cheaper per R-value-unit.
- Direct UV exposure without cladding: EPS chalks and degrades within months exposed; XPS lasts somewhat longer but ultimately needs UV protection.
- Fire-rated walls and inter-tenancy walls without certified system: standard EPS and XPS perform poorly in fire testing under AS/NZS 1530.3. PIR and phenolic perform better but FRL-rated walls need the specific tested system, not just generic foam.
- Roof spaces with downlights at 0 mm clearance from foam: similar rule as batts; halogen downlights cannot touch foam (50 mm clearance), LED IC-F can.
- Where moisture migration through the wall matters: closed-cell foam is largely vapour-impermeable. In humid Australian climates, an unbroken external foam layer can trap moisture inside the wall cavity if internal vapour control isn’t right.
Australian manufacturers
| Brand | Range | Where supplied |
|---|---|---|
| Kingspan Kooltherm | Phenolic boards, K8 K18 ranges, the high-R premium foam | National (specifier-led, premium residential) |
| Kingspan AIR-Cell | Foil-faced cellular foam, roof sarking and wall systems | National |
| Bondor | Multi-layer panels with foam core (EPS, PIR), some commercial overlap | Commercial residential, structural insulated panels |
| Foamex | EPS, XPS, high-density EPS | National |
| AustralWright | EPS, foam packaging and panels | NSW-focused |
| CSR Hebel | Aerated concrete panels (different product class; sometimes grouped with rigid insulation) | National |
The high-performance market is dominated by Kingspan. Volume EPS and XPS comes through smaller manufacturers and merchant supply.
Fire performance
AS/NZS 1530.3:1999 tests early ignitability, fire propagation, and heat release. Rigid foam performance varies materially:
| Chemistry | AS/NZS 1530.3 typical Group rating | Where this matters |
|---|---|---|
| EPS (standard, including beads) | Group 3 or 4 | Internal applications under plasterboard with fire-rated detailing; not for fire-rated walls |
| XPS | Group 3 | Similar to EPS; not for fire-rated walls without specific testing |
| PIR | Group 1 (with foil facings) | Suitable for many fire-rated wall assemblies |
| Phenolic | Group 1 | Best fire performance of rigid foams; suitable for high-FRL applications |
| Polyurethane | Group 1 to 3 (formulation-dependent) | Check specific product test data |
The Grenfell Tower disaster (UK, 2017) renewed scrutiny of polymer-based external insulation in fire-prone scenarios. Australian residential applications now favour foam with foil facings or with non-combustible cover layers; bare EPS or XPS on external walls is rare in new compliance-conscious builds.
For BAL-rated bushfire applications (under AS 3959:2018), most rigid foam is rated up to BAL-29 with a cladding cover; for BAL-40 and BAL-FZ, non-combustible insulation (mineral wool) is typically required.
Compressive strength and density
Under-slab and basement-wall applications need foam that won’t crush under permanent load.
| Application | Minimum density / compressive strength |
|---|---|
| Under-slab insulation | EPS HD (high-density, 30 kg/m3+) or XPS 100 kPa minimum |
| Basement wall (inside face) | XPS or PIR, foil-faced |
| Basement wall (outside face, below grade) | XPS 200 kPa or higher |
| Cold-room floor under heavy load | XPS 700 kPa specialty grade |
Standard low-density EPS (white packaging foam, ~16 kg/m3) is not acceptable under any structural load. Density is on the data sheet; verify before ordering for an under-slab application.
Vapour properties
Closed-cell rigid foam is largely vapour-impermeable. This is a feature in cool-climate applications (acts as a vapour barrier and insulation in one) and a problem in humid-climate residential where moisture trapped behind the foam can condense and rot the underlying frame.
The detailing rule: continuous external foam needs a vapour-permeable membrane on the inside face of the wall (smart vapour retarder) to balance the wall’s drying capacity. Climate zones 6 to 8 (cool / cold climates) benefit from the foam-as-vapour-barrier; climate zones 1 to 3 (warm humid) need careful condensation analysis.
Common defects and on-site issues
- Open joints between boards: foam panel joints must be sealed (taped or foam-gun expanding foam) to prevent thermal bridging and air leakage. Untaped joints lose ~30% of installed performance.
- UV exposure during construction: foam left on site before cladding is fitted chalks in days. Cover within 1 week.
- Wrong density under slab: standard EPS used under slab compresses 20 to 40% under permanent load, losing R-value. Use HD-grade EPS or XPS only.
- Fire-rated wall non-compliance: generic PIR substituted for the specific tested system. The certifier checks the brand and product code, not just the chemistry.
- Glue / adhesive incompatible with foam: solvent-based adhesives dissolve EPS and XPS. Use foam-rated adhesive (Sika SikaBond AT-Universal, or foam-gun PU foam).
- Cladding mechanical fixings missing thermal break: fixings through external foam create thermal bridges and condensation paths. Use thermal-break washers or oversized fixings.
- Off-gassing during cure (PUR sprayed-in-place): rooms need ventilation for 24 to 72 hours after spray application; occupy after off-gas complete.
- Foam crushed by chippies walking on it: foam in roof spaces or on under-construction subfloors crushes under foot. Use plywood walking boards over foam during install.
Pricing (2026 indicative, ex-GST, supply only)
| Product | Per square metre (50 mm board) |
|---|---|
| EPS M-grade standard | $14-22 |
| EPS HD high-density | $22-32 |
| XPS standard | $30-44 |
| XPS high-compressive (under-slab grade) | $42-60 |
| PIR foil-faced | $36-50 |
| Phenolic (Kingspan Kooltherm K18) | $52-78 |
| Polyurethane sprayed-in-place | $25-40 per m2 (50 mm DFT, application charge separate) |
| Foam taping and joint sealant | $0.50-1.50 per linear metre |
Installed cost depends materially on application: external continuous insulation behind cladding typically adds $50-90 per m2 over the cladding installation alone.
Standards and references
- Standards Australia, AS/NZS 4859.1:2018 Thermal insulation materials for buildings, Part 1: General criteria and technical provisions. https://store.standards.org.au (verified 2026-05-13).
- Standards Australia, AS/NZS 1366.3:1992 Rigid cellular polystyrene, Moulded (EPS). https://store.standards.org.au (verified 2026-05-13).
- Standards Australia, AS/NZS 1530.3:1999 Methods for fire tests on building materials. https://store.standards.org.au (verified 2026-05-13).
- Australian Building Codes Board, NCC 2022 Volume Two Part H6 Energy efficiency. https://ncc.abcb.gov.au/editions/ncc-2022/adopted/volume-two/h-class-1-and-10-buildings/part-h6-energy-efficiency (verified 2026-05-13).
Related
- Glasswool batts
- Polyester batts
- Insulation: where to use what (practical)
- NCC NatHERS energy (compliance)
- AS/NZS 4859 thermal insulation (compliance)
- R-value (glossary)
See also
- Thermal bridge (glossary)
- Condensation (glossary)
- Total R-value (glossary)
- ABCB Housing Provisions (glossary)
- NatHERS (glossary)
- Cladding (glossary)
- Sarking (glossary)
Last updated: 2026-05-13. Verified: 2026-05-13. Quarterly review for AS/NZS 4859 currency, product pricing, and fire rating updates.