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Knock $4,000 Off Your Utility Bill

Invest $1,500 in insulation and maintenance and get over twice that in energy savings the first year

By Josh Garskof. Excerpted from the October 2008 MONEY

You don't have to be a tree hugger or a miser to be a conservationist these days. Home energy costs have already risen by a huge 30% this year and are expected to go higher. In self-defense, you may have started turning off the lights when momentarily leaving a room, nagging the kids to choose their snacks before opening the fridge and testing just how low you can set the thermostat during the workday without killing the houseplants or the pets. But face it, those efforts—however well-intentioned—won't make much difference; at worst you'll just be annoying everybody in the family.

What will work? These six surprisingly easy and low-cost projects can drastically reduce your household energy bills—collectively, by my calculations, they'll cost about $1,500 and can save you more than twice that much within a year. And they'll continue saving you money every year thereafter. Now if only your 401(k) could deliver such dividends.

Insulate Your Attic

COST $500 to $1,000
PAYBACK $500 to $1,000 a year
"The attic floor is the house's most important barrier to heat loss because heat rises," says Charley Cormany, project manager at Renu, a home energy performance contractor in San Anselmo, Calif. The thickness of the insulation between joists in the unfinished floor should be at least 10 to 12 inches. If it isn't, lay on additional rolls, or "batts." You should also insulate a pull-down door or hatch with an attic tent. Made of fabric-covered insulating material, it keeps out drafts but allows you access through a zippered flap ($200 from attictent.com).

Cover the Ducts

COST $50 to $250
PAYBACK $500 to $1,500 a year
Inspect heating and cooling ducts in the attic, basement and closets. If you find exposed metal ducts, cover the seams with foil tape (such as Scotch Duct Sealing Foil Tape) to plug any leaks. Then cover the entire duct with insulation (such as Thermwell Self-Adhesive Foil/Foam Duct Insulation) and you can save as much as 50% on heating and cooling costs.

Use Time Settings for Heat

COST $40
PAYBACK $500 a year
Install a programmable thermostat (such as Honeywell's 5-2 Programmable Thermostat, $40; available at lowes.com). You can set it to lower the heat automatically just after you've gone to bed and to warm up the house before the alarm clock rings so that you won't have to put on an overcoat when you wake up. If you lower the thermostat by 7° from the normal daytime temperature, you'll knock 10% off your heating costs. Connecting the unit is a (warm) breeze; you merely unscrew the low-voltage wires and attach them to the new thermostat.

Seal Those Cracks

COST $15
PAYBACK $500 a year
If your attic or basement is unfinished, use a can of expanding foam insulation (such as Great Stuff Insulating Foam, $5 at deerso.com) to seal holes in the attic floor-boards and basement ceilings. That could reduce heating and cooling costs by about 10%. "Electricians and plumbers turn ceilings and floors into Swiss cheese when they run their pipes and wires," says Cormany. You may also see gaps around the chimney or around recessed lighting. Ask at the home center for heat-resistant insulation for those spots.

Wrap Your Water Heater

COST $40
PAYBACK $100 a year
Drape a water-heater blanket—really nothing more than an overcoat—around your tank to keep heat from leaking away. (One example: Frost King's water-heater jacket). Also, wrap pipe insulation around the first five feet of both the hot-water outlet pipe and the cold-water pipe leading into the tank. You can find the stuff at any hardware or plumbing-supply store. Taking these measures will knock as much as 15% off the unit's operating costs.

Call for Service

COST $100 to $200 per unit a year
PAYBACK $300 to $500 a year
Cleaning your furnace's oil burners or removing scale from gas units, changing filters and checking refrigerant levels in the air-conditioning system are not exactly do-it-yourself jobs. You'll need some help from the professionals. For every year that you fail to schedule service for your furnace (gas or oil), you'll wind up using 5% more heating fuel because of all the gunky buildup, and you'll pay 10% to 30% extra for neglecting your central air conditioning.

© Time Inc. Reprinted with permission. Does not constitute MONEY endorsement of Lowe's or any products/brands.

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