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Current page: BASC Guide — guides/basement-wall-insulation-interior-rigid-foam
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Basement wall insulation: continuous rigid foam interior face, no fiberglass batts against concrete

BASC Guide — guides/basement-wall-insulation-interior-rigid-foam

Description

Basement walls should be insulated on the INTERIOR with continuous rigid foam (XPS or polyiso, R-10 to R-20 depending on climate zone). NEVER install fiberglass batts directly against concrete or against poly that's against concrete — concrete walls are a moisture source, and any insulation against them will eventually wet, lose R-value, and grow mold. Best practice: 2 in rigid foam on the wall + 2×4 studwall with cavity insulation + drywall. Foam continuous across the rim joist too.

Why this exists

The most common basement-insulation failure mode is fiberglass + poly against concrete — produced as a standard detail in many older builder manuals. Modern foam-on-the-wall is robust against the concrete's moisture and provides a thermal break. Architects should call out the specific basement insulation detail in the wall section, not leave it generic.

Categories

EnergyStructure

Source

PNNL / US DOEno manifest entry
Building America Solution Center (Continuously updated)
Section: guides/basement-wall-insulation-interior-rigid-foam
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.