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How to Insulate a Solid Wall – DIY Guide

Insulation & Damp Walls

How to Insulate a Solid Wall

DIY Guide

Cut heat loss through solid walls with internal or external insulation done properly.

Quick Answer

Solid wall insulation reduces heat loss through uninsulated brick or stone walls. Choose internal dry-lining with rigid insulation boards or external render-based systems. Both methods significantly improve thermal performance and can lower heating bills in older properties without cavity walls.

Before: Solid Wall Insulation Guide
Before
VS
After: Solid Wall Insulation Guide
After
Difficulty
Advanced
Time
2–5 Days
Cost
£400–£2,000+
Tools Needed
  • Tape measure
  • Spirit level
  • Cordless drill and bits
  • Notched adhesive trowel
  • Utility knife
  • Plasterer’s float
  • Mixing paddle
  • Safety goggles and dust mask
Materials
  • Rigid insulation board (PIR or EPS)
  • Thermal bonding adhesive
  • Plasterboard (vapour-check type for internal walls)
  • Wall plugs and insulation fixings
  • Jointing tape and filler
  • Basecoat render (for external systems)
  • Reinforcing mesh
  • Finishing skim plaster or external top coat
How To

Step-by-Step Guide

1

Choose your insulation method

Decide between internal and external solid wall insulation before buying anything. Internal dry-lining is the DIY-accessible option — it uses rigid insulation boards fixed to the inside face of the wall and finished with plasterboard. External insulation involves a full render system over boards fixed to the outside face; it preserves internal room size and avoids disrupting skirting boards and electrics, but is complex and typically requires scaffolding. For most DIYers tackling one or two rooms, internal insulation is the practical choice. Check your local planning rules if you live in a conservation area or a listed building — permitted development rights may not apply. See our Insulation & Damp Guide for a full overview of wall types and appropriate solutions.

2

Check the wall for damp and defects

Never insulate over a wall that is harbouring moisture — doing so traps damp and causes rot, mould, and structural damage. Run a damp meter across the full wall surface and check the external face for cracks, failed pointing, or damaged render. Repair any defects and allow the wall to dry thoroughly before proceeding. If you find persistent rising or penetrating damp, diagnose and treat the cause first. Any gaps around window frames or external penetrations should also be sealed at this stage to prevent cold bridging and draughts.

3

Mark out and prepare the wall surface

For internal insulation, clear the room back from the wall and remove skirting boards, architraves, and any electrical socket faceplates — a qualified electrician will need to extend sockets forward once the insulation thickness is added. Mark the finished wall line on the floor and ceiling using a chalk line or straightedge so you have a consistent reference. If the existing wall surface is uneven, use a notched trowel to apply thermal bonding adhesive in a thick, consistent layer to bridge gaps and ensure full contact. For external systems, the wall must be clean, sound, and free of any loose material.

4

Fix the insulation boards to the wall

Apply thermal bonding adhesive to the back of each rigid insulation board in a continuous perimeter bead plus three or four central dabs — this is the same principle as dot and dab plasterboard fixing. Press each board firmly against the wall, check it is plumb and level, and knock in mechanical insulation fixings (at least four per board) through to the masonry behind once the adhesive has grabbed. Stagger board joints like brickwork — never allow four corners to meet at a single point, as this creates a line of weakness. Seal all board edges and joints with either expanding foam or insulation tape to prevent thermal bridging and air infiltration between boards.

5

Board over with plasterboard and finish

Fix vapour-check plasterboard over the insulation layer using the same dab adhesive method or by screwing through the insulation into timber battens if you chose a batten-and-board system. Tape all joints with jointing tape, apply two coats of joint filler, and allow each coat to dry fully before sanding. The wall is then ready for a thin skim plaster coat — see our guide on how to cut and fit plasterboard for accurate panel cutting around openings. For external systems, a proprietary basecoat render is applied over the boards, reinforcing mesh is pressed in while wet, and a finish coat or silicone render is applied once cured. Reinstate skirting boards, architraves, and extended socket boxes once the wall is finished and fully dry.

6

Ventilate the room and monitor for condensation

Solid wall insulation makes a room significantly more airtight, which increases the risk of condensation if ventilation is not addressed. Fit trickle vents to window frames or install a wall vent to maintain background air movement — the HSE and Building Regulations Part F both require adequate ventilation in insulated spaces. Run a dehumidifier for the first few weeks after completion and check the wall junctions at ceiling and floor level for any cold spots or condensation. If you notice any damp patches appearing after insulation, investigate immediately — a cold bridge at the wall edge is usually the cause. Addressing condensation damp early prevents mould from taking hold behind your new boards.

Watch Out

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Insulating over a damp wallTrapping moisture behind insulation boards accelerates rot in any embedded timber, feeds black mould growth, and can cause the insulation adhesive to fail — the entire installation may need stripping out.
Leaving cold bridges at the edgesStopping insulation short of the floor, ceiling, or window reveals creates a cold strip where condensation gathers. This produces persistent damp patches and mould along the exact lines where the insulation ends.
Forgetting to extend electrical socketsFixing insulation and plasterboard over existing socket positions without extending the back boxes is a fire risk and fails Building Regulations — a qualified electrician must bring all sockets forward to the new wall face before the work is signed off.
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How much space does internal solid wall insulation take up?

A typical internal system using 60–100 mm rigid insulation board plus plasterboard will reduce the room’s floor area by around 100–120 mm on each insulated wall. For a standard bedroom this is rarely noticeable, but factor it in before insulating all four walls of a small room.

Do I need planning permission for solid wall insulation?

Internal insulation generally requires no planning permission. External solid wall insulation is permitted development on most homes, but conservation areas, listed buildings, and some flats are excluded — always check with your local planning authority before starting.

Can I get a grant to help pay for solid wall insulation?

Yes. The Great British Insulation Scheme and the Energy Company Obligation (ECO4) scheme may fund solid wall insulation for eligible households — check gov.uk for current eligibility. Some local councils also offer additional support. See the Cavity Wall Insulation Guide for a comparison of wall types and funding routes.

What is the best insulation material for solid walls?

Polyisocyanurate (PIR) rigid boards give the highest thermal resistance per millimetre, making them the practical choice where internal space is limited. Expanded polystyrene (EPS) boards are cheaper and adequate where you have more depth to play with — both are widely available from builders’ merchants.

Will solid wall insulation cause damp or mould problems?

Only if ventilation is not addressed or a cold bridge is left at the wall perimeter. Using vapour-check plasterboard on the warm side and maintaining background ventilation through trickle vents prevents condensation building up within the wall construction. If you already have mould issues, read our guide to fixing black mould on walls before insulating.

Pro Tip

When cutting PIR boards to fit around reveals and jambs, seal every cut edge immediately with foil tape — the exposed foam core is a vapour path that causes interstitial condensation inside the build-up over time. Most DIYers tape the joints between boards but miss the cut edges entirely, and that is where failure starts.

Sources

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