Reducing Solar Gain on Your Home Saves Energy!
In the hot summer months of the year, about half of the heat that accumulates in your home comes from solar gain; the other half comes from air leaks and heat-producing activities inside the home. The time you spend reducing or eliminating conditions that add heat (and humidity) to your home will be well spent! Heat Gain as it relates to the suns effect on your home is the difference between the temperature outside and the temperature inside, and the lower you can get it, the lower your annual cooling bill.
9 Ways to Reduce Heat Gain
- Shade south and west windows to keep out the solar heat. Stopping the sun's warmth before it gets into your home with awnings or exterior solar screens is best. If that's not possible, close inside blinds and curtains during the day; light colors will reflect the most heat.
- Keep the doors and windows closed during the day. But on cool, low-humidity nights, open the windows and use natural ventilation (with or without fans) to cool your home.
- Build a sunshade over a concrete patio. A concrete slab will become a large reflective heat sink during summer months, reflecting sunlight and radiating heat into your house. A shading structure will solve both problems, as well as making the outdoor space more usable on hot days.
- If you're building a room addition, keep cooling in mind. Besides adequately insulating and weatherizing the new space, add 24-inch (or wider) overhangs to shade windows on the sunny sides of the new room. Also ask your contractor if your present cooling system can handle the additional load; if not, consider an energy-efficient supplemental system, like a mini split air conditioner.
- Cover pots and pans on the cooktop or stove, and always run the vent fun. Cooking creates lots of heat and humidity, so contain it as much as possible.
- Run your dishwasher late at night. Start the dishwasher when you go to bed. If it has a timer, set the dishwasher to run during non-peak hours in the middle of the night.
- Check the temperatures in the refrigerator and freezer. The temperatures should run 38 to 40 degrees in the refrigerator and 0 to 5 degrees in the freezer. Setting colder temperature levels wastes energy and makes these heat-producing appliances run too often.
- Use exhaust fans in the kitchen and bathrooms. Vent steam and heat from cooking to the out-doors, and reduce humidity by running the fan while you're in the shower. However, don't let either one run too long, or they'll pull cooled air out of your entire house.
- Dry clothes on an outdoor clothesline. Wet clothes on an indoor clothesline will add humidity to your home and increase the load on your air-conditioning system.
This article was reprinted and slightly edited from the Iowa Energy Center. Since it applies to all areas of the country, it is a good fit.






