Top 5 Home Energy Saving Hacks That Save You Thousands — Ranked by ROI
Most homeowners lose money every single month through their attic, windows, doors, and garage. These five upgrades are ranked by how fast they pay you back — and every single one works for both winter and summer.
Why This Matters
The Energy Your Home Is Losing Right Now
Heat is relentless. In winter it pushes out through every poorly insulated surface. In summer it pushes in. The upgrades on this list address the largest, most preventable sources of that transfer — starting with the highest bang-for-buck.
At ECO Glass Windows And Doors, we’ve helped hundreds of homeowners cut their energy bills dramatically. What follows is the exact prioritized list we give our customers — ranked by how fast you get your money back.
“Builder-grade homes are built to pass inspection — not to perform. The gap between ‘meets code’ and ‘truly energy efficient’ is where thousands of dollars disappear every year.”
1. Attic Insulation · 2. Triple-Glazed Windows · 3. Energy-Efficient Entry Doors · 4. Patio Doors · 5. Insulated Garage Doors
Hack #1
Attic Insulation — Best ROI in Home Improvement
Proper Attic Insulation
If you do one thing on this list, make it your attic. Heat rises — and an under-insulated attic is the single largest source of preventable energy loss in most homes. In winter, expensive heated air escapes straight up. In summer, your attic becomes a superheated oven forcing your A/C to run constantly.
Current standards recommend R-49 to R-60 for most of Canada. Many homes — including newer builds — sit at R-20 or lower. The gap is costing you money every single day.
The best part: attic insulation is almost always additive. Blow new insulation over existing material — no demolition, no drywall work, no mess. A typical install takes half a day and pays for itself in 2–4 years.
Seal gaps around light fixtures, plumbing penetrations, and the attic hatch with acoustic sealant or spray foam first. Air sealing combined with insulation dramatically outperforms insulation alone — warm air bypassing gaps defeats the entire purpose.
Hack #2
Triple-Glazed Windows — R-5 to R-6 Performance
Replace Builder-Grade Windows
Windows are your home’s most thermally vulnerable surfaces. A single-pane window is about R-1. A standard double-pane is R-2. A high-performance triple-glazed window reaches R-5 to R-6 — eliminating cold spots, condensation, and drafts entirely.
What builders skip: New-build homes are routinely fitted with windows that barely meet minimum code. “Passed inspection” and “energy efficient” are very different things. Upgrading after move-in is one of the highest-ROI improvements you can make on a newer home.
Our triple-glazed window systems at ECO Glass Windows And Doors use thermally broken frames with warm-edge spacers that eliminate condensation at the glass edge — a common failure point in cheaper units.
| Window Type | U-Value | R-Value | Rating |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single Pane | 1.04 | R-1 | Poor |
| Standard Double Pane | 0.49 | R-2 | Moderate |
| Triple-Glazed (ECO Glass Windows And Doors) | 0.17–0.18 | R-5 to R-6 | Excellent |
(ECO Glass Windows And Doors)
Triple-glazing plus low-emissivity (low-e) coatings gives you the best of both worlds — keeping heat in during winter and reducing solar heat gain in summer. Ask about argon or krypton gas fill between panes for peak thermal performance.
Hack #3
Energy-Efficient Entry Doors — Replace Builder-Grade
Replace Your Builder-Grade Entry Door
Builder-grade entry doors are one of the most overlooked sources of heat loss in Canadian homes. A poorly insulated steel door with a hollow core, worn weatherstripping, and a single-pane glass insert can have an effective R-value as low as R-2 — barely better than a window.
A high-quality insulated fiberglass or steel door with a proper polyurethane foam core reaches R-5 to R-6. Combined with a compressed foam weatherstrip system and thermal break, it virtually eliminates drafts and air infiltration at your most-used entry point.
The cavity matters too: When replacing, ensure the rough opening cavity is properly insulated and air-sealed before the new frame is set. This step is frequently skipped and is responsible for a significant portion of door-related energy loss.
Browse our range of energy-efficient entry doors at ECO Glass Windows And Doors — steel and fiberglass, engineered for Canadian winters.
Decorative glass inserts in entry doors look beautiful but dramatically reduce insulation performance. If you’re choosing a door with glass, opt for a triple-glazed insert with a thermally broken frame — not the standard double-pane insert that ships with most builder-grade units.
Hack #4
Patio Door Replacement & Proper Sealing
Replace Your Patio Door — & Insulate the Cavity
Patio doors cover a large surface area, are opened frequently (wearing out seals), and builder-grade models come with thin glass, poor framing, and almost no insulation in the rough opening cavity around the frame. That cavity is invisible from the outside but a massive thermal bridge.
If your patio door feels cold to the touch in winter, shows condensation between panes, or lets in a draft — it is costing you money every day.
Browse our range of energy-efficient patio doors at ECO Glass Windows And Doors — sliding, French, and lift-and-slide configurations engineered for Canadian winters.
Many production builders frame door openings but leave the rough opening cavity with little to no insulation before installing the unit. When replacing, always have the cavity properly foamed and sealed — not just the frame and glass.
Hack #5
Insulated Garage Doors — Skip the Windows
Upgrade to a Solid Insulated Garage Door
Most standard garage doors have virtually zero insulation — a single layer of steel or aluminum with nothing inside. For an attached garage, that uninsulated door chills the shared walls, floor, and ceiling of your home every cold night.
Upgrade to a polyurethane foam-core door. ECO Glass Windows And Doors garage door panels achieve R-17 to R-18 — among the highest available. The improvement in comfort and bills is immediate and measurable.
The window rule: Window inserts in garage doors look attractive but cut R-value by 30–50%. If efficiency is the goal — especially for an attached garage — choose a solid insulated panel with no windows.
| Door Type | R-Value | Rating |
|---|---|---|
| Standard Uninsulated | R-0 to R-2 | Poor |
| Insulated w/ Windows | R-6 to R-9 | Moderate |
| Solid Insulated Panel (typical market) | R-13 to R-15 | Good |
| Solid Insulated Panel (ECO Glass Windows And Doors) | R-17 to R-18 | Excellent |
(typical market)
(ECO Glass Windows And Doors)
Ready to Start Saving? Let’s Talk.
ECO Glass Windows And Doors specializes in triple-glazed windows, energy-efficient doors, patio doors, and insulated garage doors — all engineered for Canadian winters and long-term performance.