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ADJACENCIES · July 17, 2026

R-49 Insulation: Where It’s Required, Cost, and Depth

R-49 insulation: which climate zones require it under the 2021 IECC, what it costs by material, and whether to pick batts or blown-in.

R-49 insulation is a thermal resistance rating, not a product or a fixed thickness. It tells you how strongly a layer of attic insulation resists heat flow, and it sits near the top of what building codes ask for in ceilings. Whether R-49 counts as a code minimum, a retrofit target, or already below code depends on your climate zone and which energy code your state has adopted. This guide covers where R-49 is required, what it costs, and how to reach it.

What R-49 insulation means

R-49 means a completed insulation layer resists conductive heat flow to a rating of 49, on a scale where a higher number slows heat loss more. R-value is additive: two R-25 layers stacked read as roughly R-50. R-49 is a whole-assembly target for an attic floor or ceiling, reached by any material once it is installed to the right depth.

No single product is “R-49.” You hit the number with fiberglass batts, blown fiberglass, blown cellulose, mineral wool, or spray foam, each at a different depth. That is why the same R-49 can be 7 inches of closed-cell foam or 16 inches of blown fiberglass. For the exact depth math by material, see our R-49 insulation thickness by material breakdown.

Where R-49 insulation is required

R-49 is the 2021 IECC ceiling minimum only in climate zones 2 and 3. In zones 4 through 8, the 2021 code raised the ceiling minimum to R-60, so R-49 no longer meets new-construction code there unless a specific truss exception applies. Many states still enforce the older 2018 IECC, under which R-49 remains the ceiling minimum across zones 4 through 8. Your jurisdiction decides which applies.

New construction under the 2021 IECC

Under 2021 IECC Table R402.1.2, ceiling insulation minimums step up by zone. R-49 satisfies zones 2 and 3. Colder zones now require R-60. If your state adopted the 2021 code, R-49 in a zone 5 or 6 attic would fail inspection unless the raised-heel exception is used.

Climate zone 2021 IECC ceiling minimum Where R-49 fits
Zone 1 R-30 Exceeds the minimum
Zones 2 and 3 R-49 Meets the minimum
Zones 4 through 8 R-60 Below minimum unless the raised-heel truss exception applies

Adding insulation to an existing attic

For retrofits, ENERGY STAR ties the target to what is already there. An uninsulated attic in zones 2 and 3 should reach R-49, while zones 4 through 8 should reach R-60. An attic that already holds 3 to 4 inches of insulation in a cold zone should be topped up to about R-49. This is where R-49 stays a common real-world target even in cold climates.

Climate zone Uninsulated attic target Attic with 3 to 4 inches existing
Zone 1 R-30 R-25
Zones 2 and 3 R-49 R-38
Zones 4 through 8 R-60 R-49

The raised-heel truss exception

The 2021 IECC includes exception R402.2.1: R-49 is allowed in zones 4 and higher when the insulation extends over the top of the wall plate at full thickness, which a raised-heel (energy-heel) truss makes possible. Standard trusses pinch insulation depth at the eaves, so this exception rewards framing that keeps full R-value out to the edge. Ask your builder whether the roof uses raised-heel trusses before assuming R-49 will pass.

How thick R-49 insulation is by material

R-49 lands at very different depths depending on the material, because each has its own R-value per inch. Fiberglass batts and blown cellulose reach R-49 near 13 to 14 inches, blown fiberglass runs deeper at 14 to 16 inches, and closed-cell spray foam gets there in about 7 inches. The table below is a quick reference; the full per-material math is in the R-49 thickness guide.

Material Approx. depth for R-49 R-value per inch
Fiberglass batts (stacked) 13.5 to 14 in 3.1 to 3.4
Blown fiberglass 14 to 16 in 2.5 to 2.7
Blown cellulose 13 to 14 in 3.2 to 3.8
Closed-cell spray foam 7 to 7.5 in 6.5 to 7.0

Depth matters for more than the number. In a shallow attic or against roof rafters, closed-cell foam reaches R-49 in half the space of blown fiberglass. In an open attic floor with room to spare, blown material is far cheaper per R. See the full insulation R-value chart for every material and zone.

R-49 vs R-60: which to install

R-60 adds roughly 20 percent more thermal resistance than R-49 and is the 2021 IECC minimum for zones 4 through 8. The jump from R-49 to R-60 means about 4 to 6 more inches of blown material and delivers diminishing returns: each added R-value cuts a smaller slice of remaining ceiling heat loss. In a cold zone new build, R-60 is usually the code answer; in a retrofit, R-49 is often the practical target.

Factor R-49 R-60
Blown depth 14 to 16 in 18 to 22 in
2021 IECC role Zones 2 and 3 minimum Zones 4 through 8 minimum
Relative ceiling heat loss Baseline Roughly 10 to 15 percent less than R-49
Best fit Warm-zone code, cold-zone retrofit Cold-zone new construction

If your attic has the depth and you are already paying for a blower, topping to R-60 often costs only a modest amount more per square foot. Our R-60 insulation thickness guide shows the depth by material.

What R-49 insulation costs

Reaching R-49 in a 1,000 square foot attic typically runs about $1,000 to $3,000 installed with blown material or batts, and more with spray foam. Blown fiberglass and cellulose are the cost-per-R leaders for open attic floors. Batts can be the cheapest in materials but need two stacked layers for R-49, which adds labor. Prices vary by region, attic access, and whether old insulation must be removed first.

Material Installed cost to R-49 (per sq ft) 1,000 sq ft attic
Fiberglass batts $1.00 to $2.50 $1,000 to $2,500
Blown cellulose $1.40 to $2.80 $1,400 to $2,800
Blown fiberglass $1.50 to $3.00 $1,500 to $3,000
Closed-cell spray foam $4.50 to $7.50 $4,500 to $7,500

The federal 25C insulation credit (30 percent of materials, capped at $1,200 a year) applied to installs placed in service through December 31, 2025. For 2026 projects, state and utility rebates are the main path, and many blown-in upgrades still qualify. Check current rules in our attic insulation tax credit and rebates guide before you count on a discount.

Batts or blown-in for reaching R-49

Blown-in insulation reaches R-49 in one pass and fills irregular cavities and gaps that batts leave open, which is why most attic top-ups use it. Batts can match the R-value and suit a clean, open joist bay, but hitting R-49 means stacking two layers with the second run perpendicular, and any gap around wiring or framing cuts real-world performance. For a full attic floor, blown material usually wins on speed and coverage.

Factor Fiberglass batts Blown-in
Reaching R-49 Two stacked layers Single pass
Coverage of gaps Leaves gaps at obstructions Fills irregular cavities
DIY difficulty Doable by hand Needs a blower rental
Settling None Cellulose settles about 10 to 20 percent

Whichever you pick, air seal the attic floor first, because insulation slows conductive heat loss but does little against air leaks. For a full material rundown, see our guides to blown-in insulation and the best insulation for your attic.

Frequently asked questions

Is R-49 insulation enough for an attic?

R-49 is enough in climate zones 2 and 3, where it meets the 2021 IECC ceiling minimum. In zones 4 through 8, the 2021 code calls for R-60, so R-49 is below new-construction code unless a raised-heel truss exception applies or your state still enforces the 2018 IECC. For a cold-zone retrofit, R-49 is a common and acceptable ENERGY STAR target.

How many inches is R-49 insulation?

R-49 is about 13.5 to 14 inches of stacked fiberglass batts, 14 to 16 inches of blown fiberglass, 13 to 14 inches of blown cellulose, or roughly 7 inches of closed-cell spray foam. The depth changes because each material has a different R-value per inch. Blown fiberglass is the deepest common option; spray foam is the shallowest.

Is R-49 the same as R-60?

No. R-60 provides about 20 percent more thermal resistance than R-49 and needs roughly 4 to 6 more inches of blown material. Under the 2021 IECC, R-49 is the ceiling minimum for zones 2 and 3, while R-60 is the minimum for zones 4 through 8. The gain from R-49 to R-60 is real but shows diminishing returns.

Does R-49 insulation meet code?

It depends on your climate zone and adopted code. Under the 2021 IECC, R-49 meets ceiling code in zones 2 and 3 but not zones 4 through 8, which require R-60. Under the older 2018 IECC, still enforced in many states, R-49 meets code across zones 4 through 8. Confirm which code your local building department uses.

How much does R-49 insulation cost?

Reaching R-49 in a 1,000 square foot attic usually costs about $1,000 to $3,000 installed with batts or blown material, and $4,500 to $7,500 with closed-cell spray foam. Cost per square foot depends on material, region, attic access, and whether old insulation is removed first. Blown fiberglass and cellulose are the cheapest way to add R over an open attic floor.

Can you get R-49 with fiberglass batts?

Yes. R-49 with fiberglass batts usually means two stacked layers, such as an R-30 batt topped with an R-19 batt run perpendicular, reaching about 13.5 to 14 inches total. Batts work best in clean, open joist bays. Any gaps around wiring, framing, or fixtures reduce the real R-value, so many installers prefer blown-in for full attic coverage.

Reviewed by The Roofing Brief Team. Last reviewed July 2026.