MotorCity Blog

Spray Foam vs. Batt Insulation: Which Is Right for Your Michigan Building?

July 6, 2026

If you’re insulating a home, garage, or pole barn in Michigan, the choice usually comes down to two options: spray foam or batt insulation. Both work. They just work differently, and the right pick depends on the building and the budget.

How they’re different

Batt insulation is the familiar blanket-style product that fits between studs and joists. It’s affordable, quick to install in open framing, and does a solid job when it’s fitted carefully.

Spray foam is applied as a liquid that expands to fill the cavity. Instead of resting between the framing, it bonds to it — sealing gaps, seams, and penetrations at the same time it insulates. That air-sealing is the big deal: in a Michigan winter, most of the heat you lose escapes through air leaks, not through the middle of a wall.

When spray foam wins

  • Pole barns and metal buildings — foam bonds directly to the shell, stops condensation from dripping off cold metal, and stiffens the panels.
  • Rim joists and crawl spaces — the leakiest parts of most homes, and nearly impossible to seal well with batts.
  • Buildings you heat or cool hard — shops, garages with a furnace, finished basements. The air seal pays you back every month.

When batt makes sense

  • Open interior walls on a budget — batts deliver good R-value per dollar in standard framing.
  • Sound control between rooms — a well-fitted batt wall does a lot for noise.
  • Paired with foam — a common combo is foam where the sealing matters most and batt or blown-in cellulose everywhere else. You get most of the benefit without the full foam price.

The honest answer

There’s no one right answer — it depends on the building, how you use it, and what you want to spend. That’s exactly what a free on-site estimate is for. We look at the space, talk through the options, and give you a straight price on each.

Request a free estimate or call (248) 983-2004 and we’ll help you pick.

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