Insulation: where to use it and which type to choose
Ceiling, wall, and underfloor insulation for Aussie residential builders: NCC 2022 R-values by climate zone, bulk vs reflective vs composite, vapour barriers.
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Ceiling insulation delivers the biggest thermal bang in almost every Australian climate: it is mandatory under NCC 2022 Housing Provisions Part 13.2, with R-values ranging from R1.5 (zone 1, hot humid north) to R4.5+ (zones 7 and 8, cool/alpine). Wall and underfloor insulation are also required in mid and cool climate zones (roughly zones 4-8). Bulk insulation (batts) is the workhorse; reflective foil works only where it faces an airspace. Choosing the wrong product for the wrong location, or compressing batts during install, wipes out the declared R-value and kills the NatHERS star rating before a shovel hits the ground. The NCC 2022 raised minimum standards to the equivalent of 7 stars; get a NatHERS assessor on board before locking in specs.
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What insulation does
Insulation slows the movement of heat through the building envelope. In summer, it limits heat entry through the roof and walls. In winter, it limits heat loss through the same paths. Both directions matter: heating and cooling loads drive the NatHERS star rating, which under NCC 2022 must reach a minimum of 7 stars for Class 1 buildings (verified 2026-05-08, ABCB NCC 2022 Housing Provisions Part 13).
Thermal resistance is expressed as an R-value. Higher R = more resistance to heat flow. The R-value printed on a batt is the declared value at standard thickness and density. Compressing the batt or letting it sag reduces the achieved value below the declared value. AS 3999:2015 covers correct installation of bulk insulation to preserve the declared R-value (verified 2026-05-08, Standards Australia AS 3999:2015).
Three insulation types
All insulation sold in Australia for buildings must meet AS/NZS 4859.1:2018 (verified 2026-05-08, Standards Australia AS/NZS 4859.1:2018).
| Type | How it works | Common products | Key limitation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bulk | Traps air in fibres or foam to slow conductive heat transfer | Glasswool batts, polyester batts, rock wool, rigid PIR/XPS boards | R-value drops if compressed or wet |
| Reflective | Low-emittance foil surface reflects radiant heat back toward the source | Foil sarking sheets, concertina batts, multi-cell foil blankets | Requires an adjacent airspace to function; emittance must be 0.05 or less per NCC 2022 Part 13.2 |
| Composite | Bulk core bonded to a reflective foil face | Foil-faced PIR boards, reflective foil-backed batts | Combines the limits of both: airspace still needed for the reflective component to contribute |
NCC 2022 Part 13.2.3 specifies that where reflective insulation is used toward R-value compliance, the surface emittance must be no more than 0.05 and the necessary airspace must be maintained (verified 2026-05-08, NCC 2022 Housing Provisions Part 13.2).
Compliance pathways
NCC 2022 offers two ways to demonstrate energy efficiency compliance for a Class 1 dwelling:
- Option 1: NatHERS energy rating (Specification 42). A NatHERS accredited assessor models the home and must achieve at least 7 stars plus heating/cooling load limits. The actual insulation R-values are driven by the model, not a lookup table.
- Option 2: Elemental (DTS) provisions (Section 13). The builder uses the look-up tables in Housing Provisions Part 13.2 to select R-values for each element. No modelling required, but the tables prescribe minimum values and there is no trade-off flexibility between elements.
The NatHERS pathway gives more design flexibility; the elemental pathway is simpler for straightforward designs. Either way, insulation specifications must be locked in before construction starts (verified 2026-05-08, ABCB NCC 2022 energy efficiency overview).
Where to install it
Ceiling insulation
Ceiling insulation is the single highest-return investment in the building envelope. Heat rises, and in summer the roof receives direct solar radiation all day. The ceiling/roof plane is where the greatest thermal exchange happens.
When: installed before the ceiling is sheeted (new build) or blown/laid on top of existing ceiling boards (retrofit). In new builds, the ceiling batt must go in before plasterboard is fixed to ceiling joists.
NCC 2022 R-value targets (Housing Provisions Part 13.2.3, elemental pathway):
These values are representative indicative minimums for a vented pitched roof with horizontal ceiling, using bulk insulation only. Actual required value depends on roof ventilation, presence of reflective insulation, roof solar absorptance, and roof type (pitched vs flat/skillion). Always confirm against the relevant table for the specific configuration.
| Climate zone | Description | Indicative minimum ceiling R-value |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | High humidity summer, warm winter (far north Qld, NT) | R1.5 |
| 2 | Warm humid summer, mild winter (coastal Qld, northern NSW coast) | R2.5 |
| 3 | Hot dry summer, warm winter (inland Qld, northern WA) | R2.5 |
| 4 | Hot dry summer, cool winter (central NSW, central VIC) | R3.5 |
| 5 | Warm temperate (Sydney, Perth, Adelaide) | R3.5 |
| 6 | Mild temperate (Melbourne, Canberra) | R4.0 |
| 7 | Cool temperate (Hobart, ACT alpine margins) | R4.5 |
| 8 | Alpine (alpine VIC, NSW, TAS) | R4.5+ |
(Source: NCC 2022 ABCB Housing Provisions Standard Part 13.2.3, Tables 13.2.3a-13.2.3i, verified 2026-05-08, NCC 2022 Housing Provisions Part 13.2)
Key installation requirements:
- Install at full thickness across the entire ceiling, including over wall top plates. Gaps at eaves are a common miss.
- Use edge batts (thinner product) in eave spaces where standard-depth batts cannot lie flat without compression.
- IC-rated downlights only, or maintain the required clearance around non-IC fittings. Non-IC downlights in a sealed insulation blanket are a fire risk.
- Metal-framed roofs require thermal bridging mitigation per Part 13.2.3(3): either increased insulation thickness or a continuous insulating layer (minimum R0.2 to R0.6 depending on configuration).
For flat, skillion, and cathedral roofs: separate tables (13.2.3j-13.2.3r) apply. These assemblies have no roof space for bulk insulation above the ceiling, so rigid foam boards or composite sarking-blanket systems are typically used. Higher Total R-Values are required because there is no vented roof cavity to assist cooling.
Wall insulation
Walls are the second-largest thermal exchange surface, though they carry less solar load than the roof. Wall insulation requirements are lower than ceiling requirements in most zones and are zero in zones 1-3 under the elemental pathway for some wall types.
When: installed after framing inspection is passed and before wall lining is fixed. In a timber-framed wall, batts fit between studs at 450 mm or 600 mm centres. In a brick veneer wall, insulation goes inside the cavity-facing stud face or on the inner face of the brick leaf (less common).
NCC 2022 R-value targets (Housing Provisions Part 13.2.5, elemental pathway):
Wall requirements vary significantly by wall construction type (timber frame, metal frame, concrete block, brick veneer, AAC masonry). Representative values below are for standard timber-framed walls with plasterboard lining.
| Climate zone | Indicative minimum wall R-value |
|---|---|
| 1-3 | R0.0 to R2.0 (varies by overhang and configuration) |
| 4 | R2.0 to R3.0 |
| 5 | R1.5 to R2.5 |
| 6 | R2.0 to R2.5 |
| 7 | R2.5 to R3.0 |
| 8 | R3.0+ |
(Source: NCC 2022 ABCB Housing Provisions Standard Part 13.2.5, Tables 13.2.5a-13.2.5l, verified 2026-05-08, NCC 2022 Housing Provisions Part 13.2)
Key installation requirements:
- Batts must fill the full stud cavity without compression. Stud depth drives batt selection: 90 mm stud = 90 mm batt. Using a thicker batt and compressing it does not deliver the declared R-value.
- Pipe and conduit runs in the wall cavity must be set into (not over) the batt; the insulation must still fill the cavity behind services.
- All junctions and corners must be insulated. Corner studs are often missed.
- Metal-framed walls require a thermal break of at least R0.2 per Part 13.2.5, because metal studs conduct heat far more readily than timber.
Vapour permeance for wall insulation (condensation management, Part 10.8):
NCC 2022 introduced vapour permeance requirements for wall materials on the external side of the primary insulation layer. Where a sarking or secondary insulation layer is installed between the primary insulation and the cladding, both materials must be vapour permeable:
- Zones 4 and 5: at least Class 3 vapour control membrane permeance (AS 4200.1)
- Zones 6, 7, and 8: at least Class 4 vapour control membrane permeance (AS 4200.1)
- Zones 1, 2, and 3: no vapour permeance requirement
This matters for reflective foil installed as wall sarking in cool climates: impermeable foil trapped against the warm face of the insulation in zones 6-8 creates a condensation trap. Use vapour-permeable sarking in those zones (verified 2026-05-08, NCC 2022 Housing Provisions Part 10.8).
Floor insulation
Floor insulation is required for suspended floors (timber-framed or suspended concrete) in climate zones 4-8. Concrete slab-on-ground generally does not require underfloor insulation batts, but may require slab edge insulation and perimeter insulation in zones 7 and 8.
When: for suspended timber floors, batts are installed from below, between floor joists, after the frame is inspected and before any sub-floor lining. Hold-in place with acoustic rod, mesh, or reflective foil underlay acting as a brace.
NCC 2022 requirements (Housing Provisions Part 13.2.6, elemental pathway):
Tables 13.2.6d-13.2.6h address suspended floors above enclosed subfloor spaces for climate zones 4-8. Specific R-values depend on floor type and configuration (timber frame, metal frame, suspended concrete). For concrete slab-on-ground, the relevant requirements are slab edge insulation in zones 7 and 8.
Indicative floor insulation targets:
| Climate zone | Suspended floor typical minimum | Slab edge |
|---|---|---|
| 1-3 | Generally not required | Not required |
| 4-5 | R1.5 to R2.0 | Not required |
| 6 | R2.0 | Not required |
| 7 | R2.5 | Required (check tables) |
| 8 | R3.0+ | Required |
(Source: NCC 2022 ABCB Housing Provisions Standard Part 13.2.6, Tables 13.2.6d-13.2.6h, verified 2026-05-08, NCC 2022 Housing Provisions Part 13.2)
Key installation requirements:
- Batts must be snug between joists, supported from below. Sagging batts lose contact with the floor above and lose R-value.
- Do not obstruct underfloor heating duct runs with insulation batts.
- Heavier products (rock wool) can also deliver sound reduction between floors.
- In alpine zones (8), consider rigid foam perimeter insulation to break the thermal bridge at the slab edge.
Choosing between bulk, reflective, and composite
Use this decision logic:
| Location | First choice | When to add reflective |
|---|---|---|
| Ceiling (pitched, vented roof space) | Bulk batts at required R-value | Add reflective sarking under tiles/metal where NCC tables allow a reduction in bulk R-value, or where wind-driven moisture ingress is a risk |
| Ceiling (flat/skillion/cathedral) | Rigid PIR/XPS boards or composite blanket | Reflective layer is usually factory-bonded to the board; no separate choice needed |
| Walls (timber or metal frame) | Bulk batts at stud depth | In zones 1-3 where wall R-values are low, a reflective foil wall wrap can contribute; requires maintained airspace toward the cavity |
| Underfloor (suspended timber) | Bulk batts between joists | Reflective foil underlay can substitute or supplement; particularly useful in zones 1-3 for radiant heat from ground |
| Underfloor (slab-on-ground) | No bulk required; slab edge rigid foam in zones 7-8 | Not applicable |
Reflective foil: the airspace rule. Reflective foil only works where there is an unobstructed, still airspace of at least 20-25 mm adjacent to the reflective surface. The foil reflects radiant heat; without the airspace it just conducts. Foil wedged directly against a substrate contributes zero R-value. This is why reflective foil under a concrete slab does nothing for thermal performance (it performs as a vapour barrier instead) (verified 2026-05-08, ICANZ Where to Insulate).
What can go wrong
| Defect | Cause | Consequence |
|---|---|---|
| Compressed batts | Wrong product depth for stud/joist spacing; installers pushing wires through | Achieved R-value below declared value; NatHERS star rating compromised |
| Gaps at eaves and corners | Ceiling batts not extended to wall top plates; corner studs skipped | Thermal bridges at perimeter; condensation risk in cool zones |
| Reflective foil without airspace | Foil sarking in wall cavity touching both surfaces | Reflective component contributes nothing; insulation system underperforms |
| Vapour-impermeable foil in zones 6-8 | Using standard foil sarking in cool climate walls without checking permeance rating | Condensation behind cladding; potential mould and framing rot |
| Insulation over non-IC downlights | Continuous ceiling insulation blanket covering standard downlights | Fire risk; downlight heat cannot dissipate |
| Floor batts sagging | Batts not supported; staples or rods omitted | Batts lose contact with floor substrate; R-value drops to near zero |
| Wrong product zone | Using CZ6 specification batts in a CZ2 climate | Overspend; no compliance benefit |
| Missing thermal break on metal frame | Metal stud wall without R0.2 continuous insulating layer | Thermal bridging bypasses bulk insulation; wall assembly underperforms by up to 50% |
References
- NCC 2022 ABCB Housing Provisions Standard, Part 13.2 Building fabric (verified 2026-05-08)
- NCC 2022 ABCB Housing Provisions Standard, Part 10.8 Condensation management (verified 2026-05-08)
- ABCB NCC 2022 Overview: energy efficiency and condensation changes (verified 2026-05-08)
- AS/NZS 4859.1:2018, Materials for the thermal insulation of buildings, Standards Australia (verified 2026-05-08)
- AS 3999:2015, Bulk thermal insulation, installation, Standards Australia (verified 2026-05-08)
- ICANZ, Where to Insulate, Insulation Council of Australia and New Zealand (verified 2026-05-08)
Related
- NCC 2022 Volume Two: what’s in it for residential builders
- ABCB Housing Provisions Standard
- Sarking: the membrane layer that works alongside insulation at the roof and wall
- Vapour barrier: moisture management under slabs and in floor assemblies
- Roof tiles installation: where sarking and ceiling insulation integrate with tile installation
- Metal roofing installation: sarking and insulation requirements for metal roof systems
- Energy report: the NatHERS rating that insulation specs feed into
See also
- First fix and second fix sequence: sequencing context for when insulation goes in
- NCC: the code that sets the insulation requirements
- Slab on ground construction: slab edge insulation context
- Weatherboard cladding: wall sarking and insulation integration
- Brick veneer cladding: wall insulation placement in cavity construction
- R-value: the metric that drives all insulation selection
- NatHERS: the rating scheme that insulation specifications feed into
- NCC sound insulation: acoustic insulation requirements alongside thermal
Last updated: 2026-05-08. Verified: 2026-05-08. Quarterly review for currency.