
Twentynine Palms Insulation brings attic insulation, spray foam, and air sealing to Yucca Valley homeowners who face freezing winters and triple-digit summers. We have been serving the high desert since 2019 and respond within one business day.

Yucca Valley attics take a beating from both directions - scorching heat all summer and hard freezes through the winter. Proper attic insulation is the single most effective upgrade you can make to keep your home comfortable and your energy bills in check.
The older ranch-style homes that make up most of Yucca Valley's housing stock were built when insulation standards were much lower than they are today. Spray foam fills gaps, seals drafts, and adds real performance to walls and crawl spaces that have been underperforming for decades.
Blown-in insulation is an efficient way to bring attic coverage up to code in Yucca Valley's climate zone without a major renovation. It settles into every corner of an older attic and is a natural fit for the single-story ranch homes that dominate this area.
Stucco-clad desert homes develop cracks around windows, doors, and utility penetrations over time, and those gaps let in heat in summer and cold in winter. Air sealing works best when done alongside insulation upgrades and is especially valuable in Yucca Valley's older housing stock.
Many Yucca Valley homes built in the 1960s and 1970s have little or no wall insulation behind the stucco exterior. Adding insulation to existing walls - using blown-in or injection foam methods - makes an immediate difference in how a home holds temperature through extreme weather.
Yucca Valley has a large number of vacation rental owners who are actively renovating older desert homes to meet guest expectations. Retrofit insulation installs into existing structures without tearing out walls, making it the right fit for occupied or short-term rental properties that need upgrades between stays.
Yucca Valley sits at roughly 3,300 feet above sea level, and that elevation creates a climate that surprises most new residents. Winters bring real cold, with temperatures dropping into the 20s on the coldest nights and frost common from November through March. Summers push into the high 90s and occasionally top 100 degrees Fahrenheit. The desert sun at this elevation is intense, and UV radiation breaks down exterior coatings, caulk, and roofing materials faster than almost anywhere else in California. A home that handles this kind of weather without adequate insulation is an expensive home to live in.
The housing stock adds another layer of complexity. Most homes in Yucca Valley were built between the 1950s and 1980s, well before modern energy codes were established. Simple ranch-style homes with stucco exteriors, flat or low-pitched roofs, and minimal attic depth were the standard. Many of these homes have original insulation that has settled, deteriorated, or was undersized from the start. The wave of new homeowners who have moved into the area from coastal California - often buying fixer-uppers to renovate or use as short-term rentals near Joshua Tree National Park - are now working through deferred maintenance that includes bringing insulation up to current standards.
Our crew works throughout Yucca Valley regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect insulation work here. The town runs along State Route 62 through the center of the Morongo Basin, with older neighborhoods clustered near the commercial corridor and larger properties spreading out toward Pioneertown Road and the edges of town. We encounter the same building types over and over - single-story stucco ranch homes, manufactured housing, and the occasional newer build in the areas that have seen development in the past decade.
We pull permits through San Bernardino County Building and Safety when projects require them. The county office handles permit applications for unincorporated areas and for the town of Yucca Valley itself. For most insulation work in existing homes, permits are not required, but we verify requirements for every project before we start.
We also serve homeowners in Morongo Valley just to the west, where the climate and housing stock are similar to Yucca Valley. Homeowners in both communities often face the same challenges: aging homes, high energy bills, and weather that swings from one extreme to the other. If you are in Yucca Valley or anywhere nearby, we are familiar with your area and ready to help.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form and describe what you are noticing - high bills, drafty rooms, or an older home that just never stays comfortable. We respond within one business day to schedule a visit.
We come to your Yucca Valley home and inspect the attic, walls, and any other areas of concern. We measure what is there, identify gaps, and give you a clear written estimate before any work is agreed to - no pressure.
Once you approve the estimate, we schedule the work around your availability. Most attic insulation jobs in Yucca Valley take a single day. You do not need to vacate your home for most installs.
We clean up fully when the job is done and walk you through what was installed. If you have any questions about the work after we leave, we are easy to reach and stand behind what we do.
We serve Yucca Valley and the surrounding high desert. Free estimates, no obligation, and we respond within one business day.
(442) 214-8650Yucca Valley is a town of about 21,000 people in San Bernardino County, sitting at the edge of the Morongo Basin in the Mojave Desert. It is the largest community in the basin and serves as the commercial hub for smaller surrounding communities. The town runs along State Route 62, with older neighborhoods clustered near the center and newer development spreading outward. Yucca Valley has attracted a mix of longtime desert residents, retirees, and a growing number of remote workers and creative types drawn by affordable housing and the character of the high desert. The historic Old West movie set at Pioneertown, just north of town, and the Hi-Desert Nature Museum are part of what gives the community its distinct local identity.
The housing stock in Yucca Valley is dominated by single-family homes, most of them built between the 1950s and 1980s in the ranch style typical of desert communities from that era. Stucco exteriors, flat or low-pitched roofs, and simple floor plans are the norm. A growing share of homes are used as short-term vacation rentals catering to visitors exploring Joshua Tree National Park, which borders the town. Nearby Joshua Tree to the east shares many of these same housing characteristics and is another community we serve regularly. Homeowners across the basin are working on similar challenges - older homes, high energy costs, and a climate that demands good insulation.
High-density foam delivering superior R-value and moisture resistance.
Learn MoreBlocks ground moisture to protect your crawl space and structure.
Learn MorePrevents condensation damage in walls, floors, and crawl spaces.
Learn MoreCall us today or submit a free estimate request - we know the high desert, we know these homes, and we respond within one business day.