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Current page: ENERGY STAR SFNH §Air Barrier — continuous on all six sides of every conditioned space
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Continuous air barrier on all six sides of conditioned space — including rim joists, knee walls, attic floor

ENERGY STAR SFNH §Air Barrier — continuous on all six sides of every conditioned space

Description

An air-tight, continuous air barrier must be installed at every boundary between conditioned and unconditioned space — including walls (drywall + sealed sheathing), rim joists (rigid foam + sealant), attic floor or sloped ceiling (depending on vented vs unvented attic), and any kneewall behind a finished room. Sealing details at every penetration: top plates, recessed lights, plumbing/electrical, attic hatch, fireplace surround.

Why this exists

Air leakage is THE largest avoidable energy loss in residential. The 6-sided continuous air barrier is a design AND construction discipline: the architect draws it; the contractor builds it; the rater verifies it via a blower-door test (typically targeting ≤ 3.0 ACH50 for ENERGY STAR). Architects designing complex transitions (bay windows, tray ceilings, cathedrals) MUST detail the air-barrier path explicitly.

Measurements

PropertyOperatorValueUnitNote
typicalACH50max3ACH50Typical ENERGY STAR air-leakage target (varies by climate zone)

Categories

EnergyStructure

Source

US EPAno manifest entry
ENERGY STAR Single Family New Homes Program Requirements (Version 3.3 (current as of 2024))
Section: Air Barrier — continuous on all six sides of every conditioned space
Published 2024-01-01 · last verified 2026-05-15

Solver enforcement

Browsable only — the solver does not currently enforce this directive (no spec-level data to check against). This entry exists so the architect personas can cite it in conversation and the user can read what the rule says.

Related directives

Last reviewed 2026-05-15.