
Hobbs Insulation is the insulation contractor Roswell, NM homeowners call for blown-in insulation, attic insulation, and spray foam services — a locally owned operation with free on-site estimates and same-week scheduling available across Chaves County.

Roswell has a large stock of mid-century ranch homes built with little or no wall insulation, and many attics have insulation that has settled or compressed over decades of intense summer heat. Blown-in insulation reaches into enclosed wall cavities and attic floors without requiring demolition, making it the most practical retrofit option for the city's older housing stock.
Roswell averages around 192 sunny days per year, and attic temperatures can exceed 130 degrees F on summer afternoons. Upgrading attic insulation is the single most effective way to reduce heat gain and lower cooling bills in Roswell's single-story ranch homes, where the ceiling is the only barrier between the attic and the living space.
Spring wind gusts in Roswell regularly reach 40 to 60 mph, and that wind pushes dust and outdoor air through every unsealed gap in older homes. Spray foam seals and insulates in one step, making it the right choice for crawl spaces, rim joists, and any area where controlling airflow is as important as thermal resistance.
Older Roswell homes lose conditioned air — and let outdoor air in — through gaps around plumbing penetrations, recessed lights, and window and door framing. Air sealing closes those pathways before insulation is installed, maximizing the impact of the insulation and reducing the load on your HVAC system through the long Roswell summer.
Many mid-century Roswell homes still have their original fiberglass batts or early blown-in material, which has often settled, been disturbed by pest activity, or become contaminated over the decades. Safe removal and disposal clears the way for a full upgrade and should be handled by a contractor with the proper equipment.
Retrofitting insulation into an existing home without a full renovation is a common need in Roswell, where most of the housing stock was built long before current energy codes existed. Retrofit methods — including dense-pack blown-in and injection foam — allow contractors to add meaningful thermal resistance to walls and attics in homes that are already occupied.
Roswell is the county seat of Chaves County, a mid-size city of about 47,000 people sitting at 3,600 feet elevation on the flat Pecos Valley floor. The city gets roughly 192 sunny days per year, and summer highs regularly reach the mid-90s. Attic temperatures on summer afternoons can climb well past 130 degrees F, pushing heat down into living spaces faster than most air conditioning systems can remove it. That problem is made worse in Roswell because such a large share of the housing stock dates to the 1940s through 1970s, when insulation standards were far lower than they are today. Many homes have original single-pane windows, minimal wall insulation, and attic insulation that has settled or degraded over decades of extreme heat cycles.
Winters in Roswell are generally mild but not without risk. Temperatures drop below freezing regularly from November through February, and pipes in uninsulated walls and crawl spaces can freeze during cold snaps that push overnight lows into the teens. The city also contends with strong spring winds that regularly gust to 40 or 60 mph, driving dust and sand through every unsealed gap in older construction. Monsoon season from July through September brings intense afternoon thunderstorms that can overwhelm drainage and cause moisture problems in older homes with flat or low-slope roofs. Addressing insulation, air sealing, and moisture control together protects against all of these seasonal stresses.
Our crews have completed insulation projects across Roswell, working in everything from 1950s stucco ranch homes near downtown to newer construction on the northwest side of the city. We regularly pull permits through the City of Roswell Building Permit Office for residential projects that require them under New Mexico code. Knowing the difference between the older homes in the central neighborhoods and the newer builds near the city edges matters when deciding which insulation method will work and which will not.
Roswell is a city most people know by name long before they arrive, and that reputation brings visitors to Main Street and the International UFO Museum downtown. But the residential neighborhoods we work in tell a different story: steady communities of long-term homeowners near landmarks like New Mexico Military Institute on the north side, ranch homes on concrete slab foundations throughout the central grid, and a mix of older and newer construction as you move toward the city edges. We also serve homeowners in nearby Artesia, NM, about 40 miles south on US-285.
Reach us by phone at (575) 665-9727 or fill out the contact form. We reply within one business day and can often schedule an estimate within the same week.
We visit your home, assess the existing insulation conditions, measure the areas to be treated, and provide a written quote that clearly states the scope, material, and R-value. No cost, no obligation.
Our crew arrives with all materials and equipment ready to go. Most blown-in attic jobs in Roswell are completed in a single day. Larger projects covering attic and wall cavities typically take two days.
We walk through the finished work with you and answer any questions. For spray foam jobs, we provide written curing instructions and a 24-hour window before you re-enter the treated space.
Free estimates, no pressure. We serve all of Roswell, NM and reply within one business day.
(575) 665-9727Roswell is the county seat of Chaves County and one of the larger cities in southeastern New Mexico, with a population of roughly 47,000 people. The city sits at about 3,600 feet elevation on the flat Pecos Valley floor, surrounded by farmland and semi-arid rangeland. The local economy runs on a mix of agriculture and ranching, oil and gas, and the presence of New Mexico Military Institute, a state-funded military college that has anchored the north side of downtown since 1891. Most Roswell residents live in single-family homes spread across a fairly compact city grid, and about 60 percent are owner-occupied. The city is best known nationally for the 1947 incident that draws visitors to the International UFO Museum on Main Street, but the residential neighborhoods throughout the city are home to long-term owners who take their homes seriously.
Roswell's residential neighborhoods are dominated by single-story ranch homes built on concrete slab foundations, most of them constructed between the 1940s and 1970s. These homes feature low-pitched roofs, attached garages, and stucco or wood-frame exteriors, and they make up the bulk of the city's housing stock from the central grid outward to the established neighborhoods near landmarks like Bottomless Lakes State Park to the east. Newer construction has gone up on the north and northwest sides of the city, where modern energy codes apply and building practices differ from the older core. We also serve homeowners in nearby Portales, NM, about 90 miles north on US-70.
High-performance spray foam that seals and insulates in one application.
Learn moreLoose-fill insulation blown in to fill gaps and hard-to-reach cavities.
Learn moreInsulate basement walls and rim joists to prevent heat loss below grade.
Learn moreDense, moisture-resistant closed-cell foam for maximum R-value.
Learn moreLightweight open-cell foam ideal for interior walls and sound control.
Learn moreCommercial-grade insulation for offices, warehouses, and industrial spaces.
Learn moreDurable vapor barriers that protect crawl spaces from moisture damage.
Learn moreProfessional vapor barrier installation to guard against humidity and rot.
Learn moreAdd insulation to existing homes without major renovation or disruption.
Learn moreServing these cities and communities.
Our crew understands how Roswell's housing stock and climate affect your home's efficiency, and we are ready to help you fix it.