Heat doesn’t disappear. It moves.
Every home in the UK is constantly exchanging heat with its surroundings, whether the heating is on or not. When a house feels cold, it isn’t because heat has vanished — it’s because heat is leaving faster than it’s being replaced, or moving in ways that reduce comfort.
To understand why insulation sometimes works brilliantly and sometimes doesn’t, you need to understand the three ways heat moves through a building:
- conduction
- convection
- radiation
This overlaps heavily with moisture behaviour too — if you want the companion piece, see the physics of condensation.
1) Conduction: heat moving through materials
Conduction is heat travelling through solid materials such as walls, floors, roofs, masonry, and timber. Heat always moves from warmer areas to colder ones, and the faster it can move through a material, the more heat is lost.
This is the most familiar role of insulation. Materials used in traditional insulation systems slow conductive heat flow by increasing thermal resistance.
However, conduction doesn’t behave evenly. If insulation is interrupted at junctions, missing at edges, or inconsistent in thickness, heat will flow around it through easier paths (thermal bridges). From a physics perspective, insulation only controls conduction where it is continuous.
2) Convection: heat carried by moving air
Convection is heat being carried by air movement. Warm air rises, cold air falls — and any time air is allowed to move freely, heat moves with it.
Common convective heat loss paths include:
- draughts around floors and skirting boards
- air movement in lofts and voids
- gaps around insulation
- ventilated sub-floor voids
This is why insulation can exist “on paper” but still underperform in real life. Heat doesn’t have to pass through insulation to bypass it — it only needs a gap.
This is especially noticeable with underfloor insulation in suspended timber floors, where cold air movement beneath the building can bypass insulation entirely if airflow and detailing aren’t controlled.
3) Radiation: heat transfer between surfaces
Radiation is the least understood but most important mode when it comes to comfort. Your body constantly radiates heat toward colder surfaces around you — walls, floors, windows, and ceilings.
That’s why a room can have warm air but still feel cold if surrounding surfaces are cold.
Insulation matters here because it raises internal surface temperatures. When surfaces warm up, you lose less heat radiantly and the room feels comfortable at lower air temperatures.
This is also where systems such as insulation designed to improve surface temperatures can help, particularly where comfort complaints are dominated by cold surfaces rather than air temperature.
How these three modes show up in real homes
Cold walls
Usually a conduction + radiation issue: heat is leaving through the structure and surfaces stay cold.
Draughty floors
Usually a convection issue: air movement carries heat away, often from below.
“Thermostat says warm”
Often a radiation issue: air warms faster than surfaces, so comfort lags behind.
Uneven rooms
Often convection + detailing: heat bypasses insulation through gaps and junctions.
Cold corners
Often thermal bridging: conduction concentrates at junctions, surfaces stay colder.
Condensation hotspots
Often cold surfaces + moisture + airflow — covered deeper in condensation physics.
Insulation as a control system
From a physics perspective, insulation isn’t a standalone fix. It’s a control layer that influences how heat moves through a building.
How insulation affects each mode of heat transfer
| Heat transfer mode | What it is | How it shows up | How insulation helps |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conduction | Heat travelling through solid materials | Cold walls/ceilings, fast heat loss | Raises thermal resistance and reduces heat flow (best when continuous) |
| Convection | Heat carried by moving air | Draughts, cold floors, uneven rooms | Reduces convective bypass when paired with good air control and detailing |
| Radiation | Heat transfer between surfaces | “Warm air, still feels cold” | Raises internal surface temperatures and reduces radiant heat loss from the body |
Comfort comes from controlling all three modes — not just adding more heat.
What this means in practice
If a home feels cold, the question isn’t simply “Is it insulated?” The real questions are:
- how is heat moving through this building?
- where is it escaping fastest?
- which surfaces are dominating comfort?
This is also why EPC ratings don’t measure comfort. EPCs record insulation presence and system types — not how heat actually moves through your home day to day.
FAQ
Why does my home feel cold when the thermostat says it’s warm?
Because comfort depends heavily on surface temperatures. If walls, floors, or windows are cold, you lose heat radiantly even if the air temperature is high.
Is insulation mainly about stopping conduction?
Mostly, but not only. Insulation slows conduction, but performance can be lost through convection (air bypass) and comfort is strongly influenced by radiation (cold surfaces).
Why do single upgrades sometimes disappoint?
Because they often address one heat-transfer mode while leaving the others unchanged. A joined-up approach controls conduction, convection, and radiation together.
How does this link to condensation?
Condensation forms when moist air meets cold surfaces. Heat transfer determines surface temperature, so understanding these modes helps explain where condensation is likely to appear.
Not Sure Which Type of Heat Loss Is Affecting Your Home?
Every home loses heat differently. Conduction, convection, and radiation don’t show up equally in every building — which is why single fixes often disappoint. If your home feels cold, uncomfortable, or inefficient, the first step is understanding how heat is actually moving through it.
These principles apply to homes of all ages and types across the areas we cover, whether issues show up as cold floors, cold walls, or condensation.
