How to prep your home for winter
The best time to get your home ready for winter is before the really cold days are upon us. There are things to do both indoors and out, so choose a nice fall day for the outdoor work and see if you can get a friend or family member to help.
Getting ready
Prepping your home for winter includes a few things that pay off right away, such as a new filter for your furnace or a new heat pump. There are a few other things you can do, starting with some seasonal outdoor work.
Things to do outside
- Clean the gutters: It’s the time of year that dead leaves are clogging your gutters. When water backs up because it can’t drain properly, it can damage your roof and eaves. Remember, dry leaves are much easier to deal with than wet ones.
- Shut off the outside water: Disconnect hoses from your outside faucets, drain them and store them away. Put weatherproof and insulated covers over your faucets.
- Unheated basement: You can wrap your pipes in insulating tape or cover them with straight sections of the foam tubing that looks like pool noodles.
- Exposed beneath your home: Permanent insulation is the best long-term solution for bare pipes in crawl spaces beneath homes.
- Sheds and garages: Protect any unheated areas you have by draining all water pipes.
Things to do inside
Fireplaces
If you have a chimney, this is the right time to see it’s cleaned of accumulated soot. Check online listings for chimney sweeps and do it early enough to avoid the holiday rush. If you don’t plan on building fires this winter, make sure you block the chimney with something that keeps out cold air, moisture and debris.
Windows
Weatherproofing strips are made to seal around the edges of your windows. They are tapes made of flexible plastic with adhesive backing. Caulk and foam are used to fill in cracks and gaps that let cold air in around windows. Caulk hardens like glue and foam expands upon application to fill all open areas.
Doors
Each time we open an exterior door in the winter, heated air escapes and cold air gets in. We can seal the cracks around doors and block the gaps beneath them.
Beneath the door
This is where the biggest gap exists on most doors and why there are so many products made for keeping out the cold:
- Weather stripping: This is the simplest, least expensive method. You set the rubber strip so it touches the floor and press it to the bottom of your door on the inside. Look for the bottom of the strip to be flexible enough to maintain contact with the floor while also sturdy enough to do it for years.
- Draft stoppers: All are made to attach to your door and block the entire bottom gap. Most are weighted fabric tubes shaped like pool noodles. Draft stoppers attach to the door and slide along with it as it opens and closes.
- Under-door draft stoppers: These are also made in long fabric tubes but two of them are attached by a strip of fabric that connects them under the door and block the gaps on both sides.
- Sliding door draft blockers: These don’t attach to the doors, but are made to be placed by hand. They come in pairs. The long tube blocks the floor gaps across both sliding doors and the short one fits in the gap between the two channels.
What you need to buy for winterizing your home
Outdoor projects
Air Jade Gutter Guard Extendable Bristle Brush
The aluminum pole has four telescoping tubes that expand to 65 inches so you can work without a ladder. The special angled brush is made of hard nylon bristles and the entire tool weighs less than a pound.
Where to buy: Sold by Amazon
Worx Universal Gutter Cleaning Kit for Leaf Blowers
You can forget climbing and moving ladders when you extend the reach of your leaf blower so you can blow debris out of your gutters while standing safely on the ground.
Where to buy: Sold by Amazon
Hometopia Outdoor Faucet Cover 4-Pack
Wrap these waterproof fabric pouches around your outdoor faucets, then secure them with the hook and loop closures. The cotton insulation keeps your faucets from freezing and the covers are reusable for years to come.
Where to buy: Sold by Amazon
Indoor projects
Sealing the door gaps
Products made to block drafts are as useful for interior doors as they are for your front and back doors, because drafts are chillier in the winter when we keep the thermostat lower to save energy. Some draft-stopping methods block sound and light, too.
Home District Sliding Door Draft Stopper
The 6-foot-long gravel-filled tube blocks the bottom gaps of sliding doors to the patio or outdoors, while the 3-foot-long piece fills the doorstop gap between the sliders.
Where to buy: Sold by Amazon
Swiftjet Under Door Draft Stopper
This pair of foam tubes with washable covers attaches to the door with hooks and loops so it won’t slide off. They are made for you to cut to size so you get the perfect fit for your doors.
Where to buy: Sold by Amazon
McDils Weatherproofing Door Seal Strip
This flexible foam and fabric strip is made for heavy use, with strong adhesives and hook and loop attachment pads. You can use it to close gaps of up to 1.3 inches.
Where to buy: Sold by Amazon
Saving energy
This may be the year you’re ready for a smart thermostat that saves you money by wasting less energy.
Amazon Energy Star-Certified Smart Thermostat
With this thermostat, you track and manage your heating and cooling energy use with the Alexa app. You can let Alexa do the programming for you or you can do it yourself remotely.
Where to buy: Sold by Amazon
Google Nest Third Generation Learning Thermostat
This smart thermostat learns your schedule and the temperatures you like so it can program itself to keep you comfortable while saving energy. It knows when you’re away and adjusts itself so you don’t waste energy heating and cooling an empty home.
Where to buy: Sold by Amazon
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