Lone Star Comfortaire

  • Home
  • About Us
    • Reviews
    • Blog
  • Our Services
    • HVAC Service & Repair
    • HVAC Replacement
  • Products
  • Areas We Serve
    • Plano TX
    • Rockwall TX
    • McKinney TX
  • Contact Us
You are here: Home / Blog / How to Improve Attic Ventilation

How to Improve Attic Ventilation

May 10, 2017 by Vance "Joe" Robbins

If your air conditioning unit is not cooling your home to your expected rate, you’ll automatically put the blame on the dirt buildup on your ducts or your malfunctioning system. Have you ever considered checking your attic? If not, you definitely need to do so. Attic ventilation can also affect the efficiency of your AC. Here’s a guide to improving your attic ventilation.

Reasons to Improve Attic Ventilation

Poor attic ventilation puts heavy strain on your AC.

If your goal is to enjoy full energy efficiency, having high quality heating and cooling systems is not enough. When summer sets in, a high percentage of heat stays in our attic which adds pressure on your AC. If your attic is not properly ventilated, your AC won’t be able to cool your home even at maximum level.

Heat weakens the structure of your home.

The heat in your attic is a quiet threat to the structural strength of your home. It makes the parts and layers below your roof shingles brittle and weakens permanently. This is detrimental in your home’s overall buildup.

Attic ventilation helps in moisture reduction.

This works best for the cold winter season. Attic ventilation allows humidity to leak out of your home. If humidity is locked inside, it’s a big discomfort and can damage proper insulation.

How to properly ventilate your home?

An indication that you need proper ventilation is when your ceiling is extremely hot. Usually, homeowners make use of roof vents and soffit vents. Roof vents are positioned at the topmost part of your roof and in the eaves are soffit vents. The soffit vents allow for air coming from the outside to enter your home while roof vents act as their way out.

When it comes to ventilating your attics, an exhaust fan can be an additional help. If use it with your roof and soffit vents, you can save yourself from unnecessary consumption bill.

Ideally, attics should be balance in ventilation and insulation. This means that when hot air enters you home, equal amount of cool air should help in maintaining the right temperature. Or else, the entire job of maintaining the right comfort in your home is given to your heating and cooling systems, which then gives you an increase on your utility bill.

Don’t forget to call your trusted HVAC contractor and have your home be inspected. Asking the right persons for suggestions about your attic ventilation plan should be your first step and Lone Star Comfortaire experts know just how to help you.

Filed Under: Blog

Areas We Serve

[areas_we_serve id=”1753″]

Operating Hours

8:00am - 6:00pm

Monday - Friday

(Always on Call)

Archives

Categories

Recent Posts

  • 3 Signs That It’s Time to Replace Your Gas Furnace
  • HVAC Maintenance Tips for Winter
  • How Programmable Thermostats Can Benefit Homeowners This Winter
  • 3 Benefits of Installing a Wi-Fi Thermostat
  • Diagnosing Heaters That Don’t Turn On

Copyright © 2026 · Dynamik-Gen on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

  • Home
  • About Us
    ▲
    • Reviews
    • Blog
  • Our Services
    ▲
    • HVAC Service & Repair
    • HVAC Replacement
  • Products
  • Areas We Serve
    ▲
    • Plano TX
    • Rockwall TX
    • McKinney TX
  • Contact Us