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Energy Efficiency Consulting for Arkansas Homes & Buildings

The cheapest kilowatt-hour is the one you never use. Our certified building analysts identify where your home wastes energy and implement upgrades that cut utility bills 25% to 45% while improving comfort year-round.

Energy efficient home with modern insulation and smart technology

Comprehensive Energy Efficiency Solutions

From attic insulation to smart thermostats, we address every factor that affects your home's energy performance.

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Insulation Upgrades

Attic, wall, and crawl space insulation to recommended R-values. We use blown-in cellulose, fiberglass batts, and spray foam depending on the application and your budget.

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Air Sealing

Identify and seal air leaks around windows, doors, electrical penetrations, plumbing chases, and attic bypasses using caulk, foam, and weatherstripping.

HVAC Optimization

Duct sealing, system right-sizing, refrigerant charge verification, and equipment upgrade recommendations to maximize heating and cooling efficiency.

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Window Upgrades

Assessment and replacement of single-pane and failing double-pane windows with ENERGY STAR certified units that reduce heat gain and loss.

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Smart Home Integration

Smart thermostats, automated lighting controls, energy monitoring systems, and smart power strips that eliminate phantom loads and optimize usage patterns.

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Lighting Retrofits

Whole-home LED conversion, occupancy sensors for low-traffic areas, and daylight harvesting strategies that reduce lighting energy by 60% to 80%.

Reduce Then Produce

Why energy efficiency should always come before solar panels.

At Energy Future Arkansas, we follow a principle we call "reduce then produce." Before recommending a solar panel system, we first look at how much energy your home wastes and fix those problems. This approach is not just philosophically sound; it saves you real money in two important ways.

First, efficiency upgrades are almost always the lowest-cost way to reduce your electricity bill. Adding R-30 insulation to an under-insulated attic costs $1,500 to $2,500 and can reduce your cooling costs by 20% to 30%. Achieving that same reduction through solar panels would cost $5,000 to $8,000 or more. Efficiency improvements deliver a faster return on investment than any generation technology.

Second, reducing your overall energy consumption means you need a smaller solar system to reach your goals. A home consuming 1,500 kWh per month might need a 10 kW solar system costing $28,500 before incentives. If efficiency upgrades reduce that consumption to 1,050 kWh, you only need a 7 kW system costing $19,950. The efficiency upgrades that achieved that 30% reduction likely cost $3,000 to $5,000, meaning the combined investment is significantly lower while achieving the same outcome: a near-zero electricity bill.

This is why every solar consultation at Energy Future Arkansas begins with an energy efficiency assessment. We want to ensure you are investing in the right improvements in the right order, maximizing your savings and minimizing your total investment.

Common Energy Problems in Arkansas Homes

Our hot, humid summers and variable winters create unique efficiency challenges that generic advice often misses.

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Inadequate Attic Insulation

Arkansas summers push attic temperatures above 140 degrees Fahrenheit. With only R-11 or R-19 insulation, a level common in homes built before 1990, that extreme heat radiates directly into your living space. The Department of Energy recommends R-38 to R-60 for Arkansas attics (Climate Zone 3), yet the majority of homes we inspect fall well below this standard. Upgrading to proper R-values can reduce cooling costs by 20% to 30%.

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Air Leakage in Older Homes

Homes built before energy codes were adopted in Arkansas often have the equivalent of leaving a window open year-round when you add up all the small gaps and cracks. Common leak points include recessed lights penetrating the attic floor, unsealed plumbing and electrical chases, gaps around HVAC registers, and poorly fitted attic hatches. Our blower door tests routinely measure 3,000 to 5,000 CFM50 in older Arkansas homes, where 1,500 to 2,000 is considered acceptable.

Oversized or Undersized HVAC Systems

It is surprisingly common for Arkansas homes to have HVAC systems that are the wrong size. Oversized systems cool quickly but cycle on and off frequently, failing to remove humidity and creating uncomfortable temperature swings. Undersized systems run constantly without reaching set temperature on the hottest days. Both problems waste energy and shorten equipment life. A proper Manual J load calculation, which accounts for insulation, air leakage, window area, and orientation, determines the correct system size.

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Single-Pane and Failing Windows

Many Arkansas homes, particularly those built before 1980, still have original single-pane windows. These windows allow 10 to 25 times more heat transfer than modern double-pane Low-E windows. Even homes with double-pane windows may have failures where the seal between panes has broken, allowing moisture between the glass and eliminating the insulating air gap. Failed seals are visible as a foggy or hazy appearance between the glass layers.

Our Energy Efficiency Solutions

Each improvement is selected based on your home's specific energy audit results, targeting the upgrades that deliver the highest return first.

Professional Energy Audit

Every efficiency project begins with a comprehensive BPI-standard energy audit. Using calibrated blower door equipment, infrared thermal cameras, and combustion safety testing, we create a detailed picture of your home's energy performance. The audit identifies exactly where heat enters and escapes, where air leaks exist, how your duct system performs, and whether your HVAC equipment is operating safely and efficiently. You receive a prioritized report with specific recommendations, estimated costs, projected savings, and available rebates for each improvement.

Attic Insulation and Air Sealing

The attic is almost always the highest-priority target in Arkansas homes. We begin by air sealing the attic floor, closing gaps around wiring, plumbing, duct penetrations, and top plates before adding insulation. This sequence is critical because insulation alone does not stop air movement. After sealing, we add blown-in cellulose or fiberglass to achieve R-38 or R-49 depending on the application. For homes with cathedral ceilings or limited attic access, we may recommend spray foam insulation applied to the roof deck.

Duct Sealing and Insulation

In Arkansas, where ducts frequently run through unconditioned attics and crawl spaces, duct leakage is one of the largest sources of energy waste. A typical leaky duct system loses 20% to 30% of conditioned air before it reaches the living space. We seal all duct joints, connections, and register boots with mastic sealant and reinforce with foil tape. We then verify improvement with a duct blaster test, typically reducing leakage by 60% to 80%. Ducts in unconditioned spaces are insulated to R-8 to prevent heat gain and condensation.

HVAC System Optimization

Before recommending equipment replacement, we optimize your existing system. This includes verifying refrigerant charge, cleaning coils and blower assemblies, checking electrical connections, calibrating thermostats, and measuring airflow across the system. For systems that are 15 or more years old or operating below 12 SEER, we recommend upgrading to modern high-efficiency equipment. We perform Manual J load calculations to ensure any new system is properly sized for your home after efficiency improvements have been made.

Window Assessment and Upgrades

We evaluate every window in your home for air leakage, seal integrity, glazing type, and frame condition. For single-pane windows, replacement with ENERGY STAR certified double-pane Low-E windows delivers significant comfort and efficiency improvements. For homes where full window replacement is not in the budget, we recommend storm windows, window films, and improved weatherstripping as intermediate steps that still deliver meaningful energy savings.

Smart Home Energy Management

Modern smart home technology adds an automated layer of efficiency. We install and configure smart thermostats that learn your schedule and adjust temperatures automatically, saving 10% to 15% on heating and cooling without any behavior change on your part. Whole-home energy monitors provide real-time visibility into your electricity consumption, helping you identify and eliminate wasteful habits. Smart power strips cut phantom loads from electronics that draw power even when turned off, saving $100 to $200 per year in most homes.

Benefits of Energy Efficiency Upgrades

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Lower Energy Bills

Most Arkansas homeowners see a 25% to 45% reduction in monthly utility bills after comprehensive efficiency upgrades, saving $600 to $1,800 per year depending on home size and current condition.

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Improved Comfort

Eliminate hot and cold spots, drafts, and rooms that never seem to reach the right temperature. Proper insulation and air sealing create even temperatures throughout your home in every season.

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Better Indoor Air Quality

Controlled air sealing combined with proper ventilation reduces dust, pollen, and humidity infiltration. Your HVAC system filters air more effectively when it is not fighting uncontrolled air leaks.

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Increased Home Value

Energy-efficient homes appraise higher and sell faster. Buyers recognize the value of lower utility costs, and real estate listings increasingly highlight energy performance features and recent upgrades.

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Reduced Carbon Footprint

Every kilowatt-hour you do not consume is one that does not need to be generated. Efficiency upgrades that reduce consumption by 30% eliminate 3 to 5 tons of CO2 emissions per year for a typical Arkansas home.

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Qualifies for Rebates

Many efficiency upgrades qualify for utility rebates from Entergy Arkansas and SWEPCO, federal tax credits under Section 25C, and weatherization assistance programs for income-qualifying households.

Available Rebates & Incentives in Arkansas

Multiple programs help offset the cost of energy efficiency upgrades for Arkansas homeowners.

Program Eligible Upgrades Incentive Amount Details
Federal 25C Tax Credit Insulation, windows, doors, HVAC, water heaters, energy audits 30% of costs, up to $1,200/year ($2,000 for heat pumps) Claimed on federal tax return. No income limit. Resets annually.
Entergy Arkansas Rebates HVAC upgrades, smart thermostats, insulation, duct sealing $200 – $800 per upgrade Available to Entergy residential customers. Application required.
SWEPCO Home Efficiency Heat pumps, weatherization, smart thermostats $150 – $500 per upgrade Available in SWEPCO service territory in northwest Arkansas.
Arkansas Weatherization Assistance Comprehensive whole-home weatherization Up to $8,009 per home (no cost to qualifying households) Income-qualified program administered through community action agencies.
Electric Cooperative Programs Varies by cooperative; typically HVAC, water heaters, insulation $100 – $500 per upgrade Contact your local electric cooperative for specific programs and amounts.

We help you identify and apply for every rebate and incentive you qualify for. Many of our customers stack multiple programs to significantly reduce out-of-pocket costs.

★★★★★

"Our 1978 ranch home in Pine Bluff was impossible to keep cool in summer without running the AC constantly. Angela's team identified inadequate attic insulation — only R-11 where R-38 is recommended — plus major duct leakage in the crawl space. After upgrades, our summer cooling costs dropped 45% and the house stays comfortable all day."

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Margaret and Roy S.
Pine Bluff, AR • Whole-Home Efficiency Upgrade
Angela Brooks, Customer Relations Director at Energy Future Arkansas

Angela Brooks

Customer Relations Director & Certified BPI Building Analyst

Angela leads Energy Future Arkansas's energy efficiency division with a passion for helping Arkansas families live more comfortably while spending less on utilities. As a BPI (Building Performance Institute) certified Building Analyst, she has conducted over 400 residential energy audits across the state and supervised efficiency upgrades ranging from simple air sealing projects to complete whole-home performance retrofits. Angela holds a degree in Environmental Science from Hendrix College in Conway, Arkansas, and is a trained instructor for the BPI Building Analyst certification program. She volunteers with Arkansas's Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program, helping qualifying families access weatherization services.

Energy Efficiency FAQ

The three biggest energy wasters in most Arkansas homes are inadequate attic insulation, air leakage around windows, doors, and ductwork, and aging or oversized HVAC systems. Attic insulation below R-30 allows massive heat gain during our intense summers, forcing air conditioners to work overtime. Duct leakage alone can waste 20% to 30% of your heating and cooling energy by dumping conditioned air into your attic or crawl space. An HVAC system that is 15 or more years old may operate at half the efficiency of modern equipment, consuming far more electricity to deliver the same comfort.

Some improvements are excellent DIY projects: adding weatherstripping to exterior doors, caulking gaps around window trim, switching to LED light bulbs, and installing a smart thermostat. However, insulation upgrades, air sealing in attics and crawl spaces, duct sealing, and HVAC optimization require specialized equipment like blower doors, infrared cameras, and duct blasters to do correctly and verify results. A professional energy audit identifies exactly where your home loses energy using diagnostic tools, allowing targeted improvements that deliver the highest return on investment rather than guessing at what might help.

Costs vary depending on the scope of work and your home's current condition. A professional energy audit runs $200 to $400. Air sealing typically costs $500 to $1,500. Attic insulation upgrades range from $1,500 to $3,500 for an average-sized home. Duct sealing runs $800 to $2,000. A complete whole-home efficiency package including insulation, air sealing, duct work, and lighting typically falls between $3,000 and $8,000. With available rebates and tax credits, out-of-pocket costs are often 20% to 40% lower. Most homeowners see full payback through utility savings within 2 to 5 years.

A comprehensive energy audit takes 2 to 3 hours and involves diagnostic testing, visual inspection, and a detailed interview about your comfort concerns. We deliver the prioritized report within 3 to 5 business days. Implementation of recommended upgrades typically takes 1 to 3 days for standard packages that include insulation, air sealing, and duct work. More extensive projects involving window replacement or HVAC system upgrades may take 3 to 5 days total. We schedule work to minimize disruption to your daily routine and can often complete the highest-impact upgrades in a single day.

Energy Future Arkansas handles the rebate application process for our customers as part of our service. For utility rebates from Entergy Arkansas, SWEPCO, or your local electric cooperative, we prepare and submit the required documentation including before-and-after measurements, equipment specifications, and proof of installation. For the federal 25C energy efficiency tax credit, we provide the manufacturer certifications and itemized invoices you need to claim the credit on your tax return. During your initial consultation, we identify every rebate and incentive you qualify for so there are no surprises and no missed opportunities.

Energy efficiency and solar panels work together beautifully in what we call the "reduce then produce" approach. By first reducing your home's energy consumption through insulation, air sealing, and other efficiency upgrades, you need a smaller and less expensive solar system to cover your remaining electricity needs. For example, a home consuming 1,500 kWh per month would need a roughly 10 kW solar system. If efficiency upgrades reduce that to 1,050 kWh, a 7 kW system does the job, saving you $6,000 to $8,000 on the solar installation alone. The combined efficiency-plus-solar investment delivers faster payback and lower total cost than solar alone.

Start Saving Energy Today

Schedule a professional energy audit and discover exactly where your home wastes energy and how much you can save. Most audits pay for themselves within the first year through identified savings.