
Premier Midland Insulation is a locally owned insulation contractor serving Stanton, TX with home insulation, attic insulation, spray foam, and air sealing. We have served Martin County homeowners since 2015 and know how the flat, windswept Llano Estacado climate affects older homes in this part of West Texas. We show up on time, give honest assessments, and finish the work in a single visit when possible.

A large share of homes in Stanton were built before 1980 and have insulation that has settled, degraded, or was never adequate for modern energy costs in a West Texas climate. A whole-home insulation assessment covers the attic, walls, and any crawl space areas so you get a complete picture of where your home is losing conditioned air. Learn more about our home insulation services.
The attic is the primary entry point for summer heat in most Stanton homes. Because lots here sit on flat, open Llano Estacado terrain with minimal tree cover, roofs are exposed to intense sun for hours each day. Upgrading attic insulation is the single highest-impact change most Stanton homeowners can make to reduce cooling costs.
Spray foam insulation creates an air barrier alongside its insulating value, which is important in Stanton where wind-driven dust and air infiltration are ongoing issues. Applied at the attic deck or in wall cavities, it stops heat and outside air at the same time - a combination that standard batt insulation cannot match in this climate.
There is nothing to slow the wind on the open Llano Estacado, and that means dust and outdoor air find every gap in a Stanton home over time. Air sealing the attic, wall penetrations, and electrical boxes keeps the conditioned air inside where it belongs and reduces the fine dust that accumulates on surfaces throughout the year.
Stanton has a notable share of older brick homes, and the wall cavities in those structures were frequently left empty or insulated lightly during original construction. Adding wall insulation cuts down heat gain on south and west-facing walls, which are the rooms most Stanton homeowners notice as uncomfortably hot on summer afternoons.
In Stanton homes with older construction, the attic is often the leakiest part of the building envelope, with gaps at top plates, plumbing chases, and recessed lighting that let hot attic air pour down into living spaces. Sealing those points before adding insulation makes the entire thermal envelope work correctly, not just the insulated layer.
Stanton sits on the Llano Estacado, the vast flat plateau that covers much of West Texas, where summer temperatures regularly climb above 95 degrees Fahrenheit and the treeless terrain gives homes no natural protection from the sun or wind. Lots in Stanton are typically level and open, with minimal shade cover, meaning roofs absorb heat from early morning through late afternoon with nothing to moderate it. The winds that cross the Llano Estacado carry fine dust year-round, and that dust finds every gap in a home's exterior - around windows, doors, electrical outlets, and roofline penetrations. Freeze-thaw cycles in winter, while less extreme than in northern states, still put stress on masonry and concrete, gradually opening small cracks in exterior surfaces that become air infiltration points.
Much of the housing in Stanton was built before 1980, and a large portion of that stock features brick or masonry exteriors that were common in mid-century West Texas construction. Those homes were built to the insulation standards of their era, which were minimal by today's measures. Brick construction holds heat well into the evening hours after the sun goes down, meaning the wall itself becomes a radiator after dark. Addressing the attic and wall cavity insulation in these homes is the combination that changes how the house feels and performs. An insulation contractor who works regularly in Martin County knows the construction types here and can recommend the right approach for each one.
Our crew works in Stanton regularly, and we are familiar with the older single-family homes and brick construction that define most of the residential neighborhoods here. For permit questions on jobs that trigger city review, we work with the City of Stanton, and we handle that process so homeowners do not have to navigate it on their own.
Stanton sits about 40 miles east of Midland along US Highway 80, the main corridor that connects Martin County to the regional hub. Many Stanton residents commute to Midland or Odessa for work, and we know that means being home during the day is not always an option. We schedule appointments that fit working households, communicate clearly about the timeline, and do not require you to supervise the job. The Martin County Courthouse anchors the center of town, and the neighborhoods around it and along Highway 80 are where we do most of our work in Stanton.
We serve homeowners throughout the surrounding area as well, including Big Spring to the east and Midkiff to the southwest. When you call us in Stanton, you are working with a crew that knows this part of West Texas.
We respond within one business day - often the same day. Tell us what you are noticing, whether it is high bills, uneven temperatures, or drafts, so we can come prepared for the right inspection.
We inspect your attic, exterior walls, and any other areas of concern. You get a written estimate before we schedule any work, and there is no charge and no commitment attached to the visit.
We arrive at the scheduled time with all equipment and materials. Most Stanton jobs are completed in one day. Spray foam requires a short curing window after application, and we will give you the specific re-entry time before we start.
We review the completed work with you before leaving, point out what was done and where, and answer any follow-up questions. You have our number if anything comes up afterward.
We serve Stanton and Martin County with honest assessments and same-week scheduling. No pressure, no commitment - just a free on-site visit and a written quote.
(432) 289-7587Stanton is the county seat of Martin County, Texas, and the only incorporated city in the county, with a population of roughly 2,500 people. The town sits on the flat Llano Estacado plateau in the Permian Basin, about 40 miles east of Midland on US Highway 80. Like most communities in this part of West Texas, the local economy is closely tied to oil and gas production, and the population reflects a mix of long-time residents and workers who move in with the industry. The Martin County Courthouse is the centerpiece of downtown, and the residential neighborhoods spread outward from there along a grid of streets on level, open lots.
The housing stock in Stanton skews older, with a large share of homes built before 1980, many featuring the brick and masonry construction that was common in mid-century West Texas. Single-family detached homes on individual lots are the dominant housing type, and a meaningful share of those homes are owner-occupied by long-term residents. The flat terrain means yards drain slowly after rain and there is no natural tree cover to shade roofs or break the wind. For homeowners who have lived here for years, keeping an older home in good shape against the wind, dust, and seasonal temperature swings is an ongoing project. We serve Stanton and the surrounding communities, including Big Spring to the east and Midland to the west.
High-density foam that adds structural strength and moisture resistance.
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Learn MoreBlock ground moisture from entering your home through the crawl space.
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Learn MoreCall Premier Midland Insulation for a free estimate on your Stanton home - we know the older housing stock here and we will tell you exactly what your home needs.