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Garage Door R-Value: What It Means and What You Need in Ottawa

By Omar, Factory-Trained Technician· Updated 2026-02-10

Garage door R-value rates how well the door resists heat loss, so a higher number means a warmer garage. For an Ottawa winter that hits -30 C, choose an R-16 or R-18 polyurethane door. R-16 suits a detached garage, R-18 an attached or heated one.

What is garage door R-value?

Garage door R-value rates how well the door resists heat flow. A higher R-value means better insulation and a warmer garage. The number comes from the foam type and thickness inside the panel, plus the thermal break and weatherseals that stop cold from bridging straight through the steel.

Think of R-value as the door’s thermal score. A bare single-skin steel door has almost none, around R-0 to R-2, so it leaks heat like an open window. A double-skin steel door with injected polyurethane insulation can reach R-16 to R-18, a meaningful jump for an Ottawa or Gatineau home. The garage door is usually the largest single opening in the building envelope, so its R-value matters more than most people expect. If you want the wider context on choosing a door, start with the complete new garage door buying guide.

What R-value do you need for a garage door in an Ottawa winter?

For an Ottawa winter that reaches -30 C, choose an R-16 or R-18 polyurethane door. R-16 is the value pick for a detached or unheated garage. Step up to R-18 for an attached garage, a heated shop, or a bedroom above the garage where comfort and energy loss matter most.

Infographic showing that for Ottawa winters near -30 C you should choose R-16 or R-18, with R-16 for a detached or unheated garage and R-18 for an attached or heated garage, and that polyurethane insulation beats polystyrene. HUSH Garage Door Service, call (613) 255-1968.
R-16 is the value pick, with R-18 for an attached or heated garage.

Ottawa and Gatineau sit in one of the colder climate zones in eastern Canada, with stretches below -25 C every January. In that cold, anything under R-16 in a steel door will sweat, frost on the inside skin, and bleed heat into the garage. Builders in newer subdivisions across Kanata, Barrhaven, and Orleans increasingly fit R-16 as the baseline for attached garages. We rarely recommend going lower than R-16 here, and for a finished room above the garage, R-18 pays for itself in comfort. Once you know your number, insulated garage door installation in Ottawa starts from $1,500 installed for a single door, or financing from $89 a month.

R-12 vs R-16 vs R-18: which garage door insulation is worth it?

R-16 is the sweet spot for most Ottawa homes. R-12 is fine only for a detached garage you never heat. R-18 is worth the small extra cost on an attached garage, a heated shop, or a door under a bedroom. The biggest gain is moving from no insulation to R-16.

Here is how the common ratings compare for our climate:

  • R-0 to R-2 (single-skin steel): no insulation, loud, and cold. Avoid in Ottawa unless the garage is purely a detached storage shed.
  • R-12 (two-layer polystyrene): entry-level insulated. Acceptable for a detached, unheated garage. It takes the edge off but still frosts in a deep freeze.
  • R-16 (two or three-layer polyurethane): the value pick. Warmer, quieter, and stiffer. Right for most attached and detached garages across Ottawa and Gatineau.
  • R-18 (three-layer polyurethane): the cold-climate choice. Best for an attached garage, a heated workshop, or a room above the garage. The price gap over R-16 is small.

Do not chase the highest R-value for its own sake. The biggest real-world gain is moving from a bare door to R-16. Beyond R-18, gains shrink and seals and installation quality matter more than the catalog number. For a side-by-side look at the trade-off, read insulated vs non-insulated garage doors compared.

Polyurethane vs polystyrene: which insulation gives a higher R-value?

Polyurethane gives a higher R-value. It is injected as a liquid foam that expands to fill the entire panel and bonds the two steel skins together. Polystyrene is a loose foam board slid into the panel, so it insulates less, rattles more, and adds no structural strength.

For the same panel thickness, injected polyurethane insulation delivers a higher R-value, a stiffer and quieter door, and better dent resistance than polystyrene insulation. That is why a polyurethane door reaches R-16 to R-18 while a polystyrene door of the same thickness lands around R-9 to R-12. Construction layers tell the same story:

  • Single-layer: one steel skin, no insulation.
  • Two-layer: steel skin with a polystyrene board behind it.
  • Three-layer (sandwich): injected polyurethane trapped between two steel skins, the warmest and strongest build.

Triple-layer construction with 24-gauge steel and a polyurethane core is the standard we fit for Ottawa attached garages. For a detached garage you never heat, a cheaper polystyrene door can be fine. The insulation lives inside the panel, so the foam choice, not just the R-number, is what you are really buying.

Does an insulated garage door actually save money on heating?

Yes, when the garage is attached or heated. An insulated R-16 or R-18 door slows heat loss through the largest opening in your home, cuts drafts into the room beside or above the garage, and keeps a heated shop usable in winter. For a detached, unheated garage the savings are smaller, but comfort still improves.

The garage door is often a 16-by-7-foot hole in your insulated wall. Swapping a bare door for an R-16 polyurethane one sharply reduces BTU heat loss through that opening, which eases the load on the furnace heating the bedroom above or the mudroom beside it. You will not see a dramatic line on the hydro bill from the garage alone, but on an attached garage the comfort gain is immediate: warmer floors above, fewer drafts, and a garage that holds heat overnight. Pair the right door with a fresh bottom seal and frame weatherseals, since a great R-value leaks through bad gaskets. The other upgrades worth the money are covered in garage door insulation and window upgrades worth paying for.

Attached, heated or detached: how your garage changes the R-value you need

Your garage type sets the target. An attached garage sharing a wall with living space, or with a room above it, justifies R-18. A heated garage or workshop also wants R-18 to protect heating costs. A detached garage you never heat can drop to R-12 or R-16 for durability and quiet.

Match the door to how you use the space:

  • Attached garage (most Ottawa homes): R-16 minimum, R-18 if there is a bedroom or bonus room above. This is where insulation does the most for your comfort and energy bill.
  • Heated garage or shop: R-18. You are paying to heat the space, so a higher R-value protects that investment.
  • Detached, unheated garage: R-12 to R-16. R-16 polyurethane is still worth it for the quieter, sturdier door, but the warmth payoff is smaller.

In short, the closer the garage is to where you live and the more you heat it, the higher the R-value should be. We confirm the right rating during a free in-home measure across Ottawa and Gatineau.

How is garage door R-value measured (and why catalog numbers vary)?

R-value is calculated from the door’s resistance to heat flow, but brands measure it differently, which is why catalog numbers vary. A true door R-value rates the whole assembly, including the steel skins, the foam core, and the thermal break. Some marketing quotes only the foam at its thickest point, which inflates the number.

Watch how a brand states it. A center-of-panel R-value measures the foam alone at the thickest spot and ignores the rails, stiles, and joints where heat actually escapes. A whole-door or computed R-value is more honest because it averages the full assembly. A thermal break, the strip that separates the warm inner skin from the cold outer skin, keeps the rated number real in winter use, because without it the steel conducts cold straight through. Garaga publishes computed R-values for its lines, so a Garaga Standard+ or Garaga North Hatley door rating reflects the built door, not just a foam sample. When you compare two doors, make sure you are comparing the same kind of R-value.

R-value vs U-factor: which number should you compare?

Compare whichever number both doors publish, but understand they are inverses. R-value measures resistance to heat flow, so higher is better. U-factor measures the rate heat passes through, so lower is better. A door’s U-factor is roughly 1 divided by its R-value. Most brands quote R-value, so shop on that.

If you ever see a U-factor instead, do not panic. An R-16 door has a U-factor near 0.06, and an R-18 door near 0.055, both excellent for a garage. The trap is mixing them up, since a low number is good for U-factor but bad for R-value. The simplest rule: for garage doors in Ottawa, ask for the R-value, confirm it rates the whole door, and look for a thermal break and quality weatherseals to back it up. Get those three right and the door will perform through a real Canadian winter.

Get an insulated garage door fitted for an Ottawa winter

HUSH Garage Door Service is an Authorized Garaga Dealer fitting insulated R-16 and R-18 polyurethane doors for real Ottawa and Gatineau winters. A new insulated single door starts from $1,500 installed, or financing from $89 a month with no down payment. Every install is backed by our 90-day Done-Right guarantee, with same-day service available 7 days a week.

We come to you across Ottawa, Kanata, Barrhaven, Orleans, Nepean, and Gatineau, measure the opening, and confirm the right R-value for how you use the garage. Call HUSH at (613) 255-1968 or book a free insulated-door estimate. To narrow your choice first, compare ratings and foam types on our insulated garage doors and the R-value to choose page, then bring your questions to the visit.

Frequently asked questions

What R-value garage door do I need in Ottawa?
For an Ottawa or Gatineau winter that drops to -30 C, choose an R-16 or R-18 polyurethane door. R-16 suits a detached or unheated garage. Step up to R-18 for an attached garage, a heated shop, or a room above it.
Is an R-16 garage door good enough for a cold climate?
Yes, for most homes. R-16 is the value pick that keeps a detached or lightly used Ottawa garage warmer and quieter. For an attached, heated, or room-above garage, R-18 is worth the small extra cost.
Is polyurethane or polystyrene insulation warmer?
Polyurethane is warmer. It is injected as a foam that expands to fill the panel and bonds the steel skins together, giving a higher R-value, a quieter door, and more strength than a loose polystyrene board of the same thickness.
Does an insulated garage door actually save money?
Yes, when the garage is attached or heated. An insulated R-16 or R-18 door slows heat loss through the largest opening in your home, cuts drafts into the room beside or above it, and keeps the space usable through an Ottawa winter.
What is the difference between R-value and U-factor?
R-value measures resistance to heat flow, so higher is better. U-factor measures the rate heat passes through, so lower is better. They are inverses. Compare the same number across brands, and check it rates the whole door, not just the foam.

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