High Performance Insulation logo

Residential builder spray foam in Nashville

Nashville Builder Spray Foam Quotes Back in 48 Hours.

Send the plans or address, get a usable number, and keep insulation off the critical path with clear scope, on-site measurements when needed, and a drywall-ready handoff.

What protects the schedule

  • 48-hour quote target on complete plan sets.
  • On-site measurements available when the address comes first.
  • Clean, on-spec spray foam is ready for inspection.

Price jobs faster

Complete plan sets move toward a usable number in 48 hours.

Reduce spray-day questions

Scope gets solved from the drawings before the crew hits the site.

Keep drywall moving

Clean, on-spec coverage helps insulation stay off the critical path.

Built for Nashville builders

Builder-first spray foam across Nashville, Brentwood, Franklin, and Belle Meade.

Trusted by Nashville-area builders

  • Build Nashville logo
  • Cobalt Ventures logo
  • Colclasure Company logo
  • Garner Construction logo
  • Midsouth Barndominiums logo
  • Dill Contracting logo
  • Graham Built logo
  • MTS logo
  • Maker Construction logo
  • Southern Edge Construction logo
  • Southern Belle Construction logo
  • Superior Capital logo
  • Sabia Construction logo
  • The Magness Group logo
  • Walif Construction logo
  • Waters Holland logo

10 years in Nashville. 1,250+ builds in the last 5 years. 350+ custom builds a year.

Builders keep High Performance on the bid list because the quote comes back fast, the crew shows up ready, and the handoff stays clean for the next trade.

Start the 48-hour quote

10

Years serving Nashville builders

1,250+

Builds completed in the last 5 years

350+

Custom builds handled each year

48 hr

Quote target on complete plan sets

Built to protect the builder's schedule

High Performance Insulation is built around clean scope, clean installs, and clean handoffs.

For builders, the priority is simple: get a usable number fast, confirm the install window early, and hand the frame back ready for drywall. That is the standard from estimate to spray day.

What the builder should expect

Quoted from the plans, scheduled to the frame, installed to spec, and handed off ready for the next trade.

Clear scope before spray day

Assemblies, target areas, exclusions, and handoff expectations are reviewed early so the field crew is not solving preventable questions on-site.

Inspection-ready coverage

Thickness targets, penetrations, and transition details are treated like schedule-critical work so the job is ready for the next inspection step.

Drywall-ready handoff

Tight communication, on-time installs, and clean framing handoff help keep insulation off the critical path and the next trade moving.

Where spray foam wins

Spray foam stops being an upgrade when the shell has to perform.

Premium builds ask more from the shell, and spray foam answers that standard with tighter air control, stronger R-value per inch, and a cleaner path to lower HVAC demand. When the goal is a high-performing envelope that feels deliberate from the framing stage forward, spray foam gives the build a more serious spec to work from and a better foundation for long-term comfort, efficiency, and control.

What we spray

We use Accufoam AF1 for consistent spray performance, cleaner finish quality, high-yield material consistency, and responsive manufacturer support.

Open-cell, closed-cell, or batt?

Open-cell fits full-cavity fill and sound control. Closed-cell fits where R-value per inch and moisture control matter most. Batt still fits hybrid or budget-led packages.

Next step

Send the plans or address and we will show you where spray foam changes the build.

Send plans or address for a spray foam review

How foam changes the spec

Higher R per inch

More performance in tight framing

Best when cavity depth is tight.

Air control built in

Insulate and air-seal in one pass

Cuts down separate air-sealing steps across the build.

Fewer compromises

Stronger wall and roof assemblies

Fewer supporting layers and fewer tradeoffs.

What keeps the job moving

People who take real pride in a tight spray day and a clean handoff.

Fast numbers help. What builders remember is a crew that likes the work, respects the schedule, and wants the next trade to walk into a job that feels ready.

Crew mindset

This team is into the work: dialing in assemblies, moving with urgency, and leaving a framing package the next crew does not have to fight.

They care how the job looks after they leave

Clean trim-back, scraped studs, and tighter edges matter because a sharp handoff says a lot about the crew that was there and how seriously they take the finish.

Hard questions get raised early

If an assembly note, timing issue, or scope gap looks off, it gets surfaced early before spray day turns into a scramble and the whole schedule starts absorbing the hit.

Spray day is treated like game day

The team likes showing up ready, moving with pace, and getting insulation off the critical path without adding chaos or forcing someone else to clean up the miss.

The next trade still matters

There is real pride in leaving coverage inspection-ready and the framing usable for whoever is walking in next, instead of handing over a mess that slows the build down.

From plans to install

A quoting process built to help builders buy faster.

Send one complete package. Get a usable number back fast. Move from plan review to install scheduling without insulation turning into another coordination problem.

01

Step 01

Send the plans or address

Send the plans, elevations, permit sheets, or the jobsite address when you want on-site measurements first, so pricing starts without a back-and-forth call chain.

02

Step 02

Get the number

Complete plan sets move toward a usable number within 48 hours, so you can price the job, answer ownership, and keep purchasing moving without chasing the estimate.

03

Step 03

Lock the install window

Approve the scope, confirm timing, and lock the install window around the real framing sequence so insulation does not become the trade everyone is waiting on.

Recent Nashville-area work

Recent Job Photos

See rooflines, wall lines, and mixed-assembly installs from recent Middle Tennessee jobs so you can judge the coverage, cleanliness, and handoff standard before you request a quote.

Spray foam roofing project image from a Nashville-area jobsite.
Residential Open Cell

Roofline Spray Foam Coverage

Roof deck, attic line, and upper-wall framing coverage from active framing-stage residential work.

Location

Nashville-area job sites

Project type

Residential

Foam use

Open Cell

View job photos
Interior roof framing insulated with spray foam at a Nashville-area project.
Residential Open Cell

Roofline Spray Foam Coverage

Roof deck, attic line, and upper-wall framing coverage from active framing-stage residential work.

Location

Nashville-area job sites

Project type

Residential

Foam use

Open Cell

View job photos
Fresh spray foam coverage following the roofline inside a framed structure.
Residential Open Cell

Roofline Spray Foam Coverage

Roof deck, attic line, and upper-wall framing coverage from active framing-stage residential work.

Location

Nashville-area job sites

Project type

Residential

Foam use

Open Cell

View job photos
Spray foam installed across wall cavities and sloped roof framing.
Commercial Closed Cell

Closed-Cell Envelope Coverage

Closed-cell wall lines, structural bays, and tighter envelope details for larger assemblies.

Location

Middle Tennessee commercial scopes

Project type

Commercial

Foam use

Closed Cell

View job photos
Jobsite photo showing consistent spray foam depth across framing.
Commercial Closed Cell

Closed-Cell Envelope Coverage

Closed-cell wall lines, structural bays, and tighter envelope details for larger assemblies.

Location

Middle Tennessee commercial scopes

Project type

Commercial

Foam use

Closed Cell

View job photos
Spray foam coverage around corners, cavities, and utility framing.
Commercial Closed Cell

Closed-Cell Envelope Coverage

Closed-cell wall lines, structural bays, and tighter envelope details for larger assemblies.

Location

Middle Tennessee commercial scopes

Project type

Commercial

Foam use

Closed Cell

View job photos
Spray foam application across multiple bays of exposed roof framing.
Retrofit Mixed System

Retrofit And Mixed Assembly Work

Mixed-assembly retrofit cavities and exposed framing work where the shell still has to tighten up cleanly.

Location

Davidson County and surrounding projects

Project type

Retrofit

Foam use

Mixed System

View job photos
Wide spray foam coverage photo from an in-progress insulation install.
Retrofit Mixed System

Retrofit And Mixed Assembly Work

Mixed-assembly retrofit cavities and exposed framing work where the shell still has to tighten up cleanly.

Location

Davidson County and surrounding projects

Project type

Retrofit

Foam use

Mixed System

View job photos
Spray foam detail at wall-to-roof transitions inside a framed build.
Retrofit Mixed System

Retrofit And Mixed Assembly Work

Mixed-assembly retrofit cavities and exposed framing work where the shell still has to tighten up cleanly.

Location

Davidson County and surrounding projects

Project type

Retrofit

Foam use

Mixed System

View job photos

Builder questions, answered early

Straight answers before you hand insulation another spot on the schedule.

Before the first job, builders usually want clarity on scheduling, inspection follow-up, paperwork, and service coverage. This is the stuff that needs to be clear before the framing sequence depends on it.

Can you handle repeat builder volume? +

Yes, when the scope is clear and the schedule is real. Complete plan review, target assemblies, and install timing get locked early so repeat volume can move without every job turning into a fresh coordination scramble.

What if a job gets flagged at inspection? +

The goal is to keep jobs from getting flagged in the first place through scope review, thickness targets, and cleaner handoff. If an inspector raises a real assembly issue, follow-up should be fast, specific, and tied to the actual job instead of leaving the builder stuck chasing answers.

Can you send COI or insurance paperwork? +

Yes. COI, insurance paperwork, and procurement documents should be handled before the install window gets tight, so paperwork never becomes the reason the job slows down after the scope is already moving.

How are change orders handled? +

Added areas, thickness changes, and assembly swaps should be surfaced before spray day whenever possible. The earlier they are reviewed, the cleaner the price, schedule, and field execution stay for everyone downstream.

What markets do you serve? +

Core coverage includes Nashville, Brentwood, Franklin, Belle Meade, Forest Hills, and Oak Hill, with extended luxury residential coverage across the 150-mile service radius into Chattanooga-side markets such as Signal Mountain, Lookout Mountain, Falling Water, Walden, Ridgeside, and Ooltewah. That keeps the footprint Nashville-first while still supporting farther-out luxury residential work that fits the schedule and scope.

Need paperwork or scope cleared first?

Send the plans or address when you need pricing. Use contact first if you need service-area confirmation, COI, insurance paperwork, or a quick scope call before the quote starts. If you want on-site measurements first, send the address and we can route that before the quote starts.