A few simple tweaks could make your home drastically more comfortable
That mysteriously cold guest room in your home isn’t haunted—it’s likely the result of a poorly balanced HVAC system. Learning how to balance airflow in your ducts can help you banish chills from the coldest rooms in your house and reduce your energy bills.
However, balancing is not a cure-all for all your air circulation problems. For anything more than a minor adjustment, you’ll need to hire a pro to inspect, repair, or replace parts of your HVAC system.
A forced air system has many individual elements and controls that should work in harmony to keep your home feeling uniformly comfortable from room to room. When the balance gets thrown out of alignment, one room may be too hot while another is too cold. Air balancing helps restore the system to its intended state, keeping each room at the same temperature.
Aside from maintaining an even temperature throughout the home, air balancing can:
Extend the lifespan of your HVAC system by reducing the amount of time it runs
Lower your energy bills as the system runs more efficiently
Even out the humidity throughout the home
Improve air quality since unbalanced systems can unexpectedly pull in allergy-filled outdoor air through cracks in the walls
Ideally, when you set the thermostat to 70 degrees, every room in the home should be 70 degrees. Here are signs you may need to balance the airflow in your home:
One floor or one room of your home is at least two degrees cooler or hotter than the others
The HVAC system regularly seems to turn on unnecessarily
Your heating and cooling bills are markedly higher than they should be
One or more rooms in your home have minimal airflow even when the vent dampers are fully open
One or more vents have too much airflow or slightly whistle when closed partway
Here are a few tips to try when your airflow seems unbalanced.
Before balancing your system, make sure the filter is clean. A blocked furnace filter reduces airflow throughout the home and could prevent adequate airflow even if the system is properly balanced. Plus, keeping your filters clean will extend the lifespan of your HVAC system and reduce your energy bill.
Trace your way through your home’s HVAC system. The dampers closest to the furnace and air conditioning unit typically have the most airflow, while those furthest away have the least.
Tape a piece of paper to the top of each vent, leaving the bottom free to blow. Turn on your system fan and note which vents are getting more or less airflow than the others.
Adjust the dampers throughout your home until the airflow is more or less even, proportional to the room’s size.
Turn off the fan, then monitor the temperature of the rooms in your home for a few days to see if your efforts helped. Note how the house feels both day and night.
If you have multiple floors, you may want to adjust the dampers seasonally. Since heat rises, you want to open the registers on the upper floors more than the lower floors during the summer and reverse these settings during the winter.
When locating your dampers, look for furniture, curtains, artwork, or other home items that could be blocking the airflow in your home. Restricting airflow will make the room less comfortable and stuffier while further straining your HVAC. Each vent should have 18 inches of space in all directions. If you can’t avoid a restriction, purchase an air deflector to improve circulation away from the object.
If you have a multi-story home with a thermostat on each floor, you don’t need to adjust the dampers each season. Instead, set the upstairs temperature two degrees cooler or warmer (depending on the season) to ensure the heater runs less upstairs during the winter and the air conditioning less downstairs during the summer.
If these methods still don’t work, look at the accessible portions of your ductwork. Most homes lose 20% to 30% of the air in their HVAC system through holes and gaps in their ducts. A DIY duct leakage test can help you identify if this is a problem in your house. Don’t forget to reinstall insulation around the ducts when you’re done.
If you have leaks in the accessible ductwork, applying mastic and foil tape along gaps and seals could help increase the air coming through your vents. If you seem to be losing a lot of air in the inaccessible areas of your ductwork, you’ll need an HVAC contractor or local duct installer to repair them.
While it goes a long way toward helping the problem, balancing ducts isn’t the only way to even out temperatures in your home. Try these tricks to maximize comfort throughout the house:
Don’t close the vents all the way: While it may seem reasonable to cut off airflow to a room you don’t use, completely shutting the vent off can cause significant problems in your HVAC system.
Improve your home’s insulation: Any gaps or cracks around your doors or windows can let in air from outside, making the room cooler or hotter than the rest of the home.
Invest in quality window treatments: By blocking hot sunlight in the summer and better insulating your home from the cold in the winter, quality window coverings can keep your home’s temperature more comfortable.
Adjust your ceiling fan: During the summer, you want fans to rotate counterclockwise, pulling hot air up to the ceiling. Reverse the settings in the winter to circulate hot air from the ceiling around the room.
Evaluate the thermostat's location: It should be away from drafty areas, hot electronic devices, direct sunlight, cooking appliances, and anything that could affect its temperature readings. If it cannot accurately measure the air temperature, the thermostat will activate the HVAC unit at the wrong times. If your thermostat is in the wrong place, you may need an electrician to move it.
For some people, adjusting the dampers will be enough to balance the airflow in their home. However, others may need to hire an HVAC contractor who can utilize more advanced air-balancing methods. A professional will perform several tests to determine if you need a basic comfort air balance, which involves making small adjustments to the blower fan and dampers, or a more comprehensive service.
While you can adjust your dampers for free, professional air balancing costs $75 to $150 per damper, totaling around $750 to $2,000 for the whole home. Prices can increase dramatically if the professional needs to seal ductwork, insulate ducts, or replace parts of the HVAC system. Because the DIY process is simple and inexpensive, it pays to balance the airflow as best you can before calling a professional. If that doesn’t solve the problem, call an expert.
You can adjust uneven airflow in your home by adjusting the dampers on the vents. However, if the temperature feels consistent throughout the home, don’t worry too much about uneven airflow. Generally speaking, larger rooms should receive more airflow than smaller rooms, especially if they only have one vent.
A blocked vent is the most common cause of poor airflow in a duct system. However, there are many other reasons for inadequate airflow, including crushed or improperly sealed vents, a clogged filter, a poorly balanced HVAC system, a blocked condenser unit, or an undersized furnace or air conditioner. If you can’t identify any obvious issues in your system, contact an HVAC professional.
There are many reasons one bedroom may be hotter than the rest of the house. The sun will quickly heat a south-facing bedroom with a large window, especially if it lacks quality curtains. If the room has poor insulation, this could let more warm outside air in. Upstairs bedrooms are often hotter than ground-floor rooms because heat rises. Finally, rooms further away from the air conditioning unit may heat up a lot if the system is not properly balanced.