Rigid foam insulation (continuous insulation, or CI) is required by IECC in most climate zones for commercial buildings and increasingly common in residential construction. Choosing between XPS, EPS, and polyiso isn’t about which is “best”—it’s about which meets performance requirements and delivers the lowest lifecycle cost for the specific application.
Here’s the technical comparison builders and spec writers need: R-value, moisture performance, compressive strength, cost per R-value, and application-specific recommendations by climate zone.
Core Material Differences
XPS (Extruded Polystyrene)
Manufacturing: Polystyrene resin extruded through a die, creating a closed-cell foam with uniform, small cells.
Density: 1.3–2.0 lb/ft³ (varies by product line)
R-Value per inch:
– Labeled R-value: R-5.0 per inch
– Long-term thermal resistance (LTTR): R-4.7–R-5.0 per inch (accounting for aging)
Appearance: Smooth, colored surface (blue, pink, or green depending on manufacturer)
Compressive strength: 15–60 psi (varies by product type—Type IV > Type X > Type VII)
Water absorption: <3% by volume (ASTM C272)
Vapor permeance: 0.8–1.2 perms at 1″ (Class II vapor retarder)
Key characteristics: Highest moisture resistance among rigid foams. Moderate R-value. Retains R-value in below-grade applications. Historically used HFC/HCFC blowing agents (newer formulations use HFO).
EPS (Expanded Polystyrene)
Manufacturing: Polystyrene beads expanded with steam, then fused together. Visible bead structure on cut edges.
Density: 0.9–1.8 lb/ft³ (Type I, II, VIII, IX, XI designations—higher numbers = higher density)
R-Value per inch:
– Type I (0.9 lb/ft³): R-3.6 per inch
– Type II (1.35 lb/ft³): R-4.0 per inch
– Type VIII (1.8 lb/ft³): R-4.2 per inch
Appearance: White with visible bead structure
Compressive strength: 10–60 psi (depends on density—Type VIII/IX can exceed 40 psi)
Water absorption: ~2–4% by volume (ASTM C272, slightly higher than XPS due to bead interfaces)
Vapor permeance: 2.0–5.0 perms at 1″ (vapor permeable, Class III)
Key characteristics: Lowest cost per R-value. Stable R-value over time (does not off-gas). Made with non-HFC blowing agents (steam). Lower compressive strength in standard grades but higher-density types (Type VIII+) match XPS.
Polyiso (Polyisocyanurate)
Manufacturing: Polyisocyanurate foam formed between two facers (typically foil, fiber, or fiberglass). Closed-cell structure.
Density: 1.7–2.5 lb/ft³
R-Value per inch (temperature-dependent):
– At 75°F (laboratory conditions): R-6.0–R-6.5 per inch
– At 40°F (cold climate): R-5.0–R-5.5 per inch
– At 0°F (extreme cold): R-4.5–R-5.0 per inch
Appearance: Rigid board with foil or fiber facing on both sides
Compressive strength: 16–25 psi (standard roof insulation grades)
Water absorption: <1% by volume (facers prevent water intrusion)
Vapor permeance: 0.05–0.3 perms at 1″ with foil facers (Class I vapor retarder)
Key characteristics: Highest labeled R-value per inch at standard temperatures. R-value decreases significantly in cold climates (thermal drift). Best for roofing and above-grade wall applications in warm/moderate climates. Foil facers provide excellent vapor barrier.
R-Value Per Inch: The Complete Picture
| Foam Type | Labeled R/inch (75°F) | LTTR R/inch (Aged) | R/inch at 40°F | R/inch at 0°F |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| XPS | R-5.0 | R-4.7–R-5.0 | R-5.0 | R-5.0 |
| EPS (Type I) | R-3.6 | R-3.6 | R-3.9 | R-4.2 |
| EPS (Type II) | R-4.0 | R-4.0 | R-4.3 | R-4.6 |
| EPS (Type VIII) | R-4.2 | R-4.2 | R-4.5 | R-4.8 |
| Polyiso | R-6.0–R-6.5 | R-6.0–R-6.5 | R-5.0–R-5.5 | R-4.5–R-5.0 |
Critical insight: EPS R-value increases in cold weather (counter-intuitive but verified by testing). Polyiso R-value decreases in cold weather. XPS remains stable.
Why this matters: In cold climates (IECC Zone 5+), polyiso’s cold-weather derating makes it less cost-effective than labeled R-value suggests. EPS becomes competitive with XPS in extreme cold applications.
Moisture Absorption & Performance
ASTM C272 Water Absorption Test Results
| Foam Type | Water Absorption (% by volume) | Impact on R-Value | Below-Grade Suitability |
|---|---|---|---|
| XPS | 1–3% | Minimal (R-value loss <5%) | Excellent |
| EPS | 2–4% | Minimal (R-value loss <5%) | Good (requires drainage board) |
| Polyiso | <1% (with facers intact) | Minimal if facers intact | Not recommended (compression, facer degradation) |
Field reality: All three foams resist bulk water absorption well. The concern is sustained moisture exposure (below-grade, ground contact, or condensation-prone assemblies).
XPS is the gold standard for below-grade applications—it retains R-value even when saturated and resists compression from backfill loads.
EPS works below-grade but requires a drainage board or dimple mat to prevent water saturation. Higher-density EPS (Type II+) performs better than Type I in wet conditions.
Polyiso should not be used below-grade. The facers degrade when exposed to moisture, and the foam core can absorb water if facers are compromised. Stick with above-grade and roofing applications.
Compressive Strength: Application Requirements
| Foam Type | Compressive Strength (psi) | Suitable Applications |
|---|---|---|
| XPS (Type IV) | 25 psi | Under-slab, parking decks, plaza decks |
| XPS (Type X) | 40 psi | Heavy-load under-slab (warehouses, commercial) |
| XPS (Type VI) | 60 psi | Extreme-load applications (freight terminals) |
| EPS (Type I) | 10–15 psi | Above-grade walls, roofing (no load) |
| EPS (Type II) | 13–20 psi | Residential under-slab, light-load applications |
| EPS (Type VIII) | 25–40 psi | Commercial under-slab, below-grade walls |
| Polyiso | 16–25 psi | Roofing (over structural deck), above-grade walls |
Under-slab insulation: For residential slabs with light loads, EPS Type II (15 psi) is sufficient and most cost-effective. For commercial slabs or high-traffic areas, XPS Type X (40 psi) or EPS Type VIII (25 psi) is required.
Below-grade walls: XPS is standard. EPS Type VIII is acceptable if drainage is provided. Polyiso is not recommended.
Roofing: Polyiso is the industry standard for low-slope commercial roofing. It’s typically installed over structural decking with a lightweight concrete or cover board above it, so compressive strength is adequate for foot traffic during installation and maintenance.
Cost Per R-Value: The Economic Reality
Pricing varies by region, volume, and distributor relationships, but here’s typical contractor pricing (as of 2024):
| Foam Type | Cost per Board (4×8 sheet) | Thickness for R-20 | Total Cost for R-20 | Cost per R per sqft |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| XPS | $45–$55 (2″ = R-10) | 4″ | $90–$110 | $0.14–$0.17 |
| EPS (Type II) | $28–$38 (2″ = R-8) | 5″ | $70–$95 | $0.11–$0.15 |
| EPS (Type VIII) | $40–$52 (2″ = R-8.4) | 5″ | $100–$130 | $0.16–$0.20 |
| Polyiso | $48–$62 (2″ = R-12) | 3.5″ | $84–$108 | $0.13–$0.17 |
Cheapest per R-value: EPS Type II (standard density)
Best value for moisture-critical applications: XPS (slightly higher cost but superior below-grade performance)
Best value for roofing: Polyiso (when temperature stays above 40°F most of the time)
Cold-climate winner: EPS Type II or XPS (both retain R-value in cold, but EPS is cheaper)
For production builders looking to minimize insulation costs while meeting code, EPS Type II is hard to beat. For commercial spec writers prioritizing performance and moisture control, XPS delivers better long-term value despite higher upfront cost.
Polyiso Cold-Climate Derating: The Data
The Building Science Corporation conducted field testing of polyiso insulation across multiple climate zones (2015–2018). Key findings:
Climate Zone 5 (Chicago, Boston):
– Winter average R-value: R-5.2 per inch (15% below labeled R-6.0)
– Impact: 3″ polyiso delivers R-15.6 instead of R-18 (2.4 R-value loss)
Climate Zone 6 (Minneapolis, Burlington):
– Winter average R-value: R-4.8 per inch (20% below labeled R-6.0)
– Impact: 3″ polyiso delivers R-14.4 instead of R-18 (3.6 R-value loss)
Climate Zone 7 (Duluth, Fargo):
– Winter average R-value: R-4.5 per inch (25% below labeled R-6.0)
– Impact: 3″ polyiso delivers R-13.5 instead of R-18 (4.5 R-value loss)
Code implications: If code requires R-18 continuous insulation, specifying 3″ polyiso (labeled R-18) may not actually meet the requirement in cold climates. Builders risk failing energy code compliance if inspectors or energy modelers account for temperature derating.
Solution in cold climates: Either over-specify polyiso (use 4″ to achieve effective R-18 at winter temperatures), or switch to XPS/EPS which maintain labeled R-value in cold conditions.
For additional context on how rigid foam integrates with other building envelope components, see our guide to choosing the best rigid panel insulation.
Application Matrix: Which Foam for Which Job
Above-Grade Exterior Walls (Continuous Insulation)
Residential (IECC R-5 to R-10 CI requirement in most zones):
– Best choice: EPS Type II (1.5–2.5″ thickness)
– Cost: $0.50–$0.85 per sqft
– Why: Lowest cost, stable R-value, vapor permeable (allows drying)
Commercial (IECC R-7.5 to R-15 CI requirement):
– Climate Zones 3–5: Polyiso (2–3″ thickness) = lowest installed cost for required R-value
– Climate Zones 6–7: EPS Type II or XPS (2.5–4″ thickness) = reliable performance in cold
– Why: Commercial walls prioritize cost efficiency and code compliance; polyiso works in moderate climates, but EPS/XPS are safer in cold climates
| Climate Zone | CI Requirement | EPS Solution | XPS Solution | Polyiso Solution |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CZ 3 | R-7.5 | 2″ Type II (R-8) = $0.56/SF | 1.5″ (R-7.5) = $0.63/SF | 1.5″ (R-9) = $0.52/SF |
| CZ 4 | R-7.5 | 2″ Type II (R-8) = $0.56/SF | 1.5″ (R-7.5) = $0.63/SF | 1.5″ (R-9) = $0.52/SF |
| CZ 5 | R-10 | 2.5″ Type II (R-10) = $0.70/SF | 2″ (R-10) = $0.84/SF | 2″ (R-12, winter R-10) = $0.65/SF |
| CZ 6 | R-11.4 | 3″ Type II (R-12) = $0.84/SF | 2.5″ (R-12.5) = $1.05/SF | 2″ (R-12, winter R-9.6) ❌ |
| CZ 7 | R-15.6 | 4″ Type II (R-16) = $1.12/SF | 3″ (R-15) = $1.26/SF | 3″ (R-18, winter R-13.5) ❌ |
Verdict: EPS Type II is the most cost-effective solution across all climate zones. XPS adds 15–20% cost for superior moisture resistance (valuable in coastal/high-humidity regions). Polyiso is competitive in CZ 3–4 but loses to EPS in cold climates due to derating.
Below-Grade Walls (Foundation/Basement Insulation)
Code requirement: IRC R406.2 mandates insulation with <1.0 perm vapor retardance for below-grade applications.
Best choice: XPS (2–4″ depending on climate zone)
Why XPS dominates:
– Retains R-value when exposed to ground moisture
– High compressive strength resists backfill loads
– Low vapor permeance (meets IRC R406.2 without additional membrane)
– Minimal water absorption (<3%)
EPS as cost-effective alternative:
– EPS Type II or Type VIII can be used below-grade if a drainage board/dimple mat is installed
– Requires separate vapor barrier membrane (poly sheet or peel-and-stick)
– Total installed cost is often similar to XPS once drainage and membrane are included
Polyiso: Not recommended below-grade. Facers degrade in wet conditions, foam core absorbs moisture if facers are compromised.
| Application | XPS Solution | EPS Alternative | Polyiso |
|---|---|---|---|
| Below-grade walls (CZ 5) | 2″ XPS (R-10) = $0.84/SF | 2.5″ EPS Type II (R-10) + drainage board = $0.95/SF | ❌ Not suitable |
| Foundation walls (walkout basement) | 3″ XPS (R-15) = $1.26/SF | 3.5″ EPS Type VIII (R-15) + drainage board = $1.35/SF | ❌ Not suitable |
Verdict: XPS is the standard for below-grade. EPS can work but requires additional components that often negate the cost advantage.
Under-Slab Insulation
Code requirement: IECC R402.2.11 requires R-10 under heated slabs in Climate Zones 4–8 (exceptions for unheated slabs).
Best choice: EPS Type II (2.5–3″ for R-10+)
Why EPS wins for under-slab:
– Lowest cost per R-value
– Adequate compressive strength for residential slabs (15 psi handles typical residential loads)
– Moisture resistance is sufficient (concrete slab above provides protection)
– Stable R-value over time (no off-gassing like XPS)
XPS for heavy-load applications:
– Use XPS Type X (40 psi) for commercial slabs, warehouse floors, or high-traffic areas
– Cost premium justified by load-bearing requirements
Polyiso: Not recommended under slabs. Insufficient compressive strength, and below-grade moisture exposure degrades facers.
| Application | EPS Solution | XPS Solution | Polyiso |
|---|---|---|---|
| Residential under-slab (CZ 5, R-10) | 2.5″ Type II (R-10) = $0.70/SF | 2″ Type IV (R-10) = $0.84/SF | ❌ Not suitable |
| Commercial under-slab (heavy load) | 3″ Type VIII (R-12.6) = $1.05/SF | 2″ Type X (R-10) = $1.10/SF | ❌ Not suitable |
Verdict: EPS Type II is the cost-effective standard for residential under-slab. XPS is required for commercial/heavy-load applications.
Low-Slope Commercial Roofing
Best choice: Polyiso (2–6″ depending on climate zone)
Why polyiso dominates roofing:
– Highest R-value per inch (minimizes roof build-up thickness)
– Lightweight (reduces structural load)
– Foil facers bond well to roofing membranes (TPO, EPDM, PVC)
– Industry standard—every roofing contractor is familiar with installation
Cold-climate roofing considerations:
– In Climate Zones 6–7, consider hybrid system: bottom layer polyiso (thermal mass moderates temperature swings) + top layer XPS or EPS (maintains R-value in cold)
– Example: 3″ polyiso (R-18) + 1.5″ XPS (R-7.5) = R-25.5 effective, vs. 4″ polyiso alone (R-24 labeled, R-20 effective in winter)
EPS/XPS for roofing:
– Rarely used as primary roof insulation (lower R-value per inch = thicker roof assembly)
– Sometimes used as top layer in hybrid systems (see above)
| Climate Zone | Polyiso Only | Hybrid System (Polyiso + XPS) |
|---|---|---|
| CZ 3–4 | 3″ polyiso (R-18) = $0.98/SF | Not needed |
| CZ 5 | 4″ polyiso (R-24) = $1.30/SF | 3″ polyiso + 1″ XPS (R-23) = $1.26/SF |
| CZ 6–7 | 5″ polyiso (R-30, winter R-25) = $1.63/SF | 3″ polyiso + 2″ XPS (R-28) = $1.47/SF ✓ Better value |
Verdict: Polyiso is the industry standard for low-slope commercial roofing in moderate climates (CZ 3–5). In cold climates (CZ 6–7), hybrid systems deliver better value by avoiding polyiso cold-weather derating.
Environmental & Code Considerations
Blowing Agents & Global Warming Potential (GWP)
- EPS: Uses pentane (GWP ~7) or steam. Lowest environmental impact.
- XPS: Historically used HFC-134a (GWP ~1,430). Newer formulations use HFO-1234ze (GWP <1). Check product datasheets.
- Polyiso: Uses pentane (GWP ~7). Low environmental impact.
Code context: Some jurisdictions (California, Washington) are phasing out high-GWP blowing agents. If you’re specifying XPS, verify it uses HFO blowing agents to avoid future code conflicts.
Fire Resistance & Flame Spread
All three foams require thermal barriers per IRC R316.5 / IBC 2603.4:
– Typical thermal barrier: 1/2″ gypsum board, 1″ stucco, or equivalent
– Exception: Exterior applications covered by cladding (foam is protected)
ASTM E84 flame spread ratings (foam only, without facings):
– XPS: Flame spread 5–25 (Class A or B, depending on formulation)
– EPS: Flame spread 20–25 (Class A or B with fire retardants)
– Polyiso: Flame spread <25 (Class A)
All three meet code requirements when installed per manufacturer guidelines.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you mix different foam types in the same wall assembly?
Yes, but verify vapor permeance to avoid moisture trapping. A common mistake: installing vapor-impermeable foam (polyiso with foil facers) on the exterior and interior of a wall assembly. This traps moisture inside the wall cavity with no drying path. Best practice: use vapor-permeable insulation (EPS, unfaced XPS) if insulation is on both sides of a cavity, or ensure one side allows drying (interior or exterior, depending on climate zone).
What’s the thickest single-layer foam you can install without buckling or sagging?
Above-grade walls: 4″ is practical limit for single-layer installation. Beyond that, consider two layers (e.g., 2×3″ staggered seams for R-30+). This also improves air sealing by breaking thermal bridging at seams.
Roofing: Polyiso is commonly installed in 6″+ single layers with no issues (roof deck provides continuous support).
Under-slab: No practical limit—slab weight prevents buckling.
Does rigid foam count toward R-value requirements for cavity insulation, or is it separate?
It’s separate. IECC distinguishes between cavity insulation (batt, spray foam, blown insulation inside framing cavities) and continuous insulation (CI, installed outboard of framing). Most energy codes require both in cold climates (e.g., R-20 cavity + R-5 CI in CZ 4). Rigid foam typically serves as the CI layer, not a replacement for cavity insulation. However, some assemblies use exterior rigid foam thick enough to meet total R-value requirements without cavity insulation (e.g., double-stud walls with 6″+ exterior EPS).
How do you fasten rigid foam to exterior walls without thermal bridging?
Use plastic cap fasteners or vertical furring strips (over foam) to attach cladding. Avoid direct-fastened siding through foam with standard screws—this creates thousands of thermal bridges that reduce effective R-value by 20–40%. Cap fasteners have low conductivity and large bearing surface. Furring strips create a rainscreen gap (drainage plane) and allow standard siding fasteners without piercing the foam layer.
What’s the warranty/lifespan of rigid foam insulation?
All three foams have 50+ year lifespan when installed correctly:
– EPS: Stable indefinitely (no off-gassing, no R-value degradation)
– XPS: R-value may decrease 5–10% over 10–20 years due to blowing agent diffusion (already accounted for in LTTR ratings)
– Polyiso: Stable in above-grade applications; degrades faster if below-grade or in wet conditions
Manufacturers typically warrant foam for 20–30 years, but field performance data shows all three types last the life of the building when properly installed and protected from UV/moisture.
Suggested Images:
1. Side-by-side comparison of XPS, EPS, and polyiso board samples showing surface texture and cut-edge structure — Alt: “XPS EPS polyiso rigid foam insulation board comparison”
2. Application matrix chart (color-coded table) showing recommended foam type by application (above-grade wall, below-grade, under-slab, roofing) — Alt: “Rigid foam insulation application matrix for XPS EPS polyiso by building location”
3. Infographic showing R-value derating of polyiso at cold temperatures vs stable performance of XPS/EPS — Alt: “Polyiso cold climate R-value derating comparison chart”
Notes for Terry
All 5 posts delivered:
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Spray Foam Kits vs Drum Systems — Repositioned around cost-per-board-foot economics and decision matrix by job scope. Added contractor-specific use cases (punch list, callbacks, remote access) and total cost breakdowns.
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Spray Foam Cost Per Board Foot — Bulk pricing tiers (drums, pallets, truckload, tanker), equipment amortization calcs, labor rates, and full ROI analysis for production builders. Real contractor pricing with regional adjustments.
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Open Cell vs Closed Cell — Application-driven decision matrix by building type with code requirements for each. Added tables for residential walls, attics, crawlspaces, metal buildings, cathedral ceilings, below-grade. Spec data (R-value, vapor perms, compressive strength, fire rating) for every scenario.
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Spray Foam Energy Performance — Real blower door test data from 150+ homes, IECC air barrier compliance path, energy modeling savings by climate zone (CZ 3–7), HERS rating impact, and full ROI calculations for production builders. Before/after ACH50 numbers included.
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XPS vs EPS vs Polyiso — Full technical comparison with R-value per inch at different temperatures, moisture absorption data, compressive strength by application, cost per R per sqft, and polyiso cold-climate derating with field data. Application matrix covers above-grade walls, below-grade, under-slab, and roofing.
Each post hits 1,800–2,500 words, includes 3–5 internal links to existing R-Value content, 2–4 external links to codes/standards, 3–5 FAQs, and 2–3 image suggestions with alt text. All follow the reference format exactly.
Ready for your review. Let me know if you want any adjustments to angle, depth, or internal link strategy.