In Minnesota homes, up to 30% of heating energy can be lost through leaky ductwork — before it ever reaches your living spaces. If your furnace is running but some rooms are cold, if your energy bills seem high despite a new furnace, or if your home feels drafty despite sealed windows, your ductwork may be the culprit. Here's everything you need to know about duct sealing.
Why Duct Leakage Is Such a Big Deal
Your ductwork is pressurized when the furnace blower runs. Supply ducts (carrying warm air to rooms) are under positive pressure; return ducts (drawing air back to the furnace) are under negative pressure. Any gaps, holes, or poor connections in these ducts allow:
- Supply leaks: Warm air escapes into unconditioned spaces (attics, crawl spaces, inside walls) instead of reaching your rooms
- Return leaks: Cold, dusty, or unconditioned air is pulled into the system from attics or crawl spaces, reducing efficiency and air quality
The Department of Energy estimates that the average home loses 20–30% of conditioned air through duct leakage. In Minnesota, where heating runs 6+ months per year, that's a massive ongoing waste.
Signs You Have Leaky Ducts
- Cold rooms despite the furnace running: Rooms far from the furnace stay cold if supply ducts are leaking before reaching them
- High heating bills despite a new, efficient furnace: A 96% AFUE furnace loses its efficiency advantage if 25% of the heat goes into the attic
- Dusty home: Return duct leaks pull attic or wall dust into your living air
- Temperature imbalance between floors: Upper floors much warmer than lower floors (or vice versa) can indicate duct issues
- Furnace running excessively: If ducts are leaking, the thermostat never reaches setpoint and the furnace runs longer
- Visible duct damage: Disconnected joints, gaps at boot connections, damaged insulation on ducts in unconditioned spaces
Where Duct Leakage Occurs
Most duct leakage happens at:
- Duct joints and seams: Where duct sections connect, especially in older homes sealed only with tape that's dried out
- Boot connections: Where ducts connect to floor, wall, or ceiling registers
- Plenums: The supply and return plenums at the furnace
- Air handler connections: Where the blower cabinet meets the duct system
- Any penetrations: Where wires, pipes, or other elements pass through ducts
Duct Leakage Testing
Duct Blaster Test
The standard professional test. A technician seals all supply and return vents, then pressurizes the duct system with a calibrated fan (the "duct blaster"). The airflow required to maintain a set pressure tells exactly how much the ducts leak. Results are expressed as CFM25 (cubic feet per minute at 25 pascals of pressure).
Good ductwork leakage: less than 4% of system airflow. Typical leaky older home: 15–30% leakage.
Visual Inspection
For accessible ductwork in basements and mechanical rooms, a visual inspection can find obvious disconnections, gaps, and damage. However, much ductwork runs through walls and ceilings where visual inspection isn't possible.
DIY Duct Sealing
For accessible ductwork (visible in basement, crawl space, or utility room), homeowners can seal leaks themselves:
Materials
- Mastic sealant: A thick, gray paste that brushes onto duct seams and dries flexible. This is the best long-term solution. Don't confuse with "duct tape" — real mastic sealant, not tape.
- Foil-backed tape (UL 181 rated): Pressure-sensitive aluminum foil tape approved for HVAC ducts. Not standard gray duct tape, which fails within years.
- Duct insulation: Wrap any ducts running through unconditioned spaces (attics, crawl spaces) with R-8 duct insulation after sealing.
Process
- Run the furnace and feel for air escaping at joints and seams (or use a stick of incense — smoke will blow away from leaks)
- Turn off furnace before sealing
- Clean dust from joint surfaces
- Apply mastic with a brush, covering all seams and gaps; embed mesh tape in mastic over larger gaps
- Allow to dry (4–8 hours)
- Wrap any newly sealed ductwork in unconditioned spaces with insulation
Professional Aeroseal Duct Sealing
For inaccessible ductwork inside walls and ceilings, Aeroseal is a professional process where aerosolized sealant particles are injected into the pressurized duct system. Particles travel to leak points and accumulate, sealing gaps from the inside. This technology can seal ductwork you could never reach manually.
Cost: $1,500–$4,000 for a typical home. The investment typically pays back in 3–7 years through energy savings.
How Much Can You Save?
| Scenario | Annual Savings Estimate |
|---|---|
| Sealing accessible basement ducts yourself (mastic) | $150–$350/year |
| Professional Aeroseal sealing, average leaky home | $300–$700/year |
| Sealing + insulating ducts in unconditioned spaces | $400–$800/year |
Results vary significantly based on initial leakage level, home size, and gas prices. Homes with severe duct leakage save more; well-constructed newer homes save less.
The Furnace + Duct Sealing Combination
Installing a new high-efficiency furnace without addressing duct leakage means your 96% AFUE furnace delivers only 70–80% of its rated efficiency to your living spaces. The combination of a high-efficiency furnace AND sealed ductwork produces the best results.
If you're replacing a furnace, it's the ideal time to seal and inspect ductwork — contractors are already in the basement and the system is down for service. Ask your installer to do a visual duct inspection at the same time.
Factory-Direct Furnaces for Minnesota Homes
Whether you're replacing a furnace or just starting your HVAC upgrade journey, Furnace Direct offers factory-direct pricing on the full Goodman furnace lineup. Same-day delivery in the Minneapolis-St. Paul metro. Browse models and pricing.
Related Resources
- How to Insulate Your Mechanical Room for Efficiency
- Minnesota Home Heating Costs by City
- What Is AFUE? Furnace Efficiency Explained
- Furnace Replacement vs. Repair: How to Decide
- How to Size a Furnace for Your Minnesota Home
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