Ground Floor Insulation: Crawl Space and Slab Methods
Why Insulate the Ground Floor?
The ground floor is the building element that separates your living space from the ground or an unheated area (crawl space, earth, cellar). Without insulation, it can account for 7 to 10% of a home’s heat losses. It is also a major source of discomfort: a cold floor creates an unpleasant sensation even when the air temperature is adequate.
Under France’s RE2020 regulations, the target thermal resistance for a ground floor is at least R = 4 m².K/W, which requires substantial insulation thicknesses. It pays to choose the right technique from the outset.
💡 Tip — Ground floor insulation is one of the most cost-effective improvements in terms of cost-to-comfort ratio. Even if you need to prioritise your budget, do not skip this element.
The 3 Ground Floor Configurations
Before choosing your insulation technique, identify your floor configuration:
| Configuration | Description | Suitable insulation technique |
|---|---|---|
| Slab on grade | The slab rests directly on the ground | Insulation below the slab or below the screed |
| Crawl space | Ventilated gap between the ground and the floor | Insulation on the underside of the floor |
| Basement / cellar | Unheated space below the floor | Insulation on the underside of the floor |
Technique 1: Insulation Below the Slab (Slab on Grade)
This is the most common solution for new builds on grade. The insulation is laid before the slab is poured.
Suitable Materials
The insulation must withstand compression and moisture:
| Material | Conductivity (λ) | Thickness for R = 4 | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EPS (expanded polystyrene) | 0.032 W/m.K | 13 cm | Lightweight, affordable, easy to lay | High carbon impact |
| XPS (extruded polystyrene) | 0.029 W/m.K | 12 cm | Excellent moisture and compression resistance | More expensive than EPS |
| PUR (polyurethane) | 0.022 W/m.K | 9 cm | Very high performance, low thickness | Expensive, not bio-sourced |
| Cellular glass | 0.038 W/m.K | 16 cm | Incompressible, rot-proof, load-bearing | Very expensive, heavy |
Step-by-Step Installation
- Excavate and level the natural ground
- Lay a drainage bed (20/40 mm gravel, minimum 20 cm thick)
- Level the gravel bed with a straightedge and compact
- Roll out a polyethylene membrane (vapour barrier) with 20 cm overlaps between sheets
- Lay the insulation boards edge to edge, staggered joints, in one or two crossed layers
- Install the welded mesh reinforcement (as per structural calculations)
- Pour the concrete slab (minimum 12 cm)
- Ensure insulation upstands at the perimeter to address the slab-to-wall thermal bridge
⚠️ Warning — Do not neglect the thermal bridge at the slab edge. This is the weak point of this technique. Provide a vertical insulation return (thermal break or L-shaped insulation) around the entire perimeter.
Technique 2: Insulation Below the Screed (Renovation or Existing Slab)
When the slab already exists, you can insulate on top by laying insulation then a floating screed.
Installation
- Check the flatness of the existing slab (apply levelling compound if needed)
- Lay a polyethylene membrane on the slab
- Lay the insulation boards (EPS, PUR, or high-density wood fibre)
- Roll out a separation film
- Pour a floating screed (minimum 5 to 6 cm) or lay dry screed boards
- Fit resilient perimeter strips to decouple the screed from the walls
💡 Tip — Be mindful of the floor level increase: every centimetre of insulation eats into your ceiling height. In renovation, you will typically lose 10 to 15 cm. Check that your doors and thresholds remain compatible.
Technique 3: Underside Insulation (Crawl Space or Cellar)
This is the simplest technique when an accessible space exists beneath the floor. The insulation is fixed under the floor, within the crawl space or cellar.
Suitable Materials
| Material | Conductivity (λ) | Thickness for R = 4 | Fixing method | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spray PUR | 0.022 W/m.K | 9 cm | Direct spray application | Excellent continuity, no thermal bridges |
| Semi-rigid mineral wool | 0.035 W/m.K | 14 cm | Adhesive + mechanical fixings | Affordable, readily available |
| Graphite EPS | 0.031 W/m.K | 13 cm | Adhesive or mechanical fixings | Good performance/price balance |
| Wood fibre | 0.038 W/m.K | 16 cm | Adhesive + mechanical fixings | Bio-sourced, excellent thermal lag |
Installation
- Clean the underside of the floor (dust, laitance)
- Deal with services: move or protect pipework before installation
- Apply adhesive in dabs or beads on the boards
- Press the boards firmly against the underside of the floor
- Supplement with hammer-in fixings (4 to 6 per m²)
- Seal joints between boards with mastic or expanding foam
- Do not block the crawl space vents — they must remain functional to prevent condensation
⚠️ Warning — In a crawl space, the insulation must be rot-proof or protected from moisture. Unprotected mineral wool without a vapour barrier degrades quickly in a damp environment. Prefer spray PUR or EPS if moisture is present.
Target Thermal Resistances by Regulation
| Regulation | Minimum ground floor R | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| RT2012 | R ≥ 3.0 m².K/W | Sufficient at the time |
| RE2020 (zone H1) | R ≥ 4.0 m².K/W | Common recommendation |
| RE2020 (zone H3) | R ≥ 3.5 m².K/W | Milder climate |
| E+C- label / PassivHaus | R ≥ 6.0 to 8.0 m².K/W | For very high-performance projects |
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Failing to treat the thermal bridge at the slab perimeter (slab edge)
- Forgetting the polyethylene membrane below the insulation (rising damp)
- Using insulation that cannot withstand compression under a slab
- Neglecting crawl space ventilation after underside insulation
- Under-specifying insulation thickness to save a few euros
- Forgetting to run ducts and services before pouring the slab
- Not cross-layering insulation boards (continuous joints = thermal bridges)
- Using unprotected mineral wool in a damp environment (crawl space)
Key Takeaway
Ground floor insulation is an often underestimated but essential element for the comfort and energy performance of your home. Choose your technique based on your configuration (slab on grade, crawl space, cellar), aim for at least R = 4 m².K/W, and pay attention to the details — particularly the treatment of thermal bridges at the perimeter. If the budget allows, bio-sourced insulation (wood fibre) offers an excellent balance between performance, thermal lag, and low carbon impact.