Airtightness & Air Pressure Testing: Where Leaks Happen & How to Seal Them

Quick Answer: Airtightness in new UK dwellings is tested using a blower door test (fan pressurisation test) per ATTMA Technical Standard L1. New dwellings must achieve a design air permeability target, with a maximum of 10 m³/h/m² at 50 Pa under Approved Document L 2021. Typical best-practice targets are 3–5 m³/h/m² and Passivhaus requires 0.6 ACH at 50 Pa. The most common air leakage paths are service penetrations (pipes, cables through walls/floors), junction between wall and floor/ceiling, recessed downlighters, loft hatches, and around window/door frames.

Summary

Airtightness is one of the most impactful but least understood aspects of energy-efficient building. Every gap or hole in the building envelope allows warm air to escape in winter and cold air to infiltrate — driven by wind pressure and the stack effect (warm air rising through the building). Air leakage accounts for a significant proportion of heat loss in typical UK homes and is much harder to retrofit than insulation. Getting it right during construction or refurbishment requires systematic planning, not just a final-stage seal-up.

The blower door test (or fan pressurisation test) is the standard method for measuring air permeability. A variable-speed fan mounted in an external doorframe pressurises or depressurises the building; the airflow required to maintain a specific pressure differential (50 Pascals is the standard test pressure) is measured and divided by the building envelope area to give the air permeability result in m³/h/m² @ 50 Pa. This result is used in SAP calculations to determine the energy rating.

A common misconception is that airtight buildings are unhealthy or stuffy. In fact, airtight buildings require controlled ventilation — typically Mechanical Ventilation with Heat Recovery (MVHR) for high-performance buildings or decentralised mechanical extract ventilation (dMEV) for good-practice homes. The key principle is that ventilation should be controlled and measured (via MVHR, trickle ventilators, or mechanical extract), not uncontrolled via leaks. Controlled ventilation brings fresh air where needed, in the right quantity, without wasting heat.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

Spending too long on quotes? squote turns a 2-minute voice recording into a professional quote.

Try squote free →
Building Type Typical Target Passivhaus Target
Standard new dwelling (Approved Document L) ≤5 m³/h/m² @ 50 Pa N/A
Good practice new build 3–5 m³/h/m² @ 50 Pa N/A
High performance / low energy 1–3 m³/h/m² @ 50 Pa N/A
Passivhaus certified N/A ≤0.6 ACH @ 50 Pa
Older UK housing (typical) 10–15 m³/h/m² @ 50 Pa (untested) N/A
Common Air Leakage Path Typical Fix
Service penetrations (pipes, cables through walls/floors) Fire-rated foam, acoustic sealant, or proprietary collar
Loft hatch Compression seal around hatch frame; insulate lid
Recessed downlighters IP65 fire-rated fittings; or LED surface spots; or light diffusers with airtight backing
Window/door frame to wall junction Airtight tape (Fentrim type); foam-filled and sealed
Junction of floor screed to wall Acoustic/airtight sealant at perimeter
Roof eaves junction (insulated room in roof) Continuous membrane lapped to wall membrane; taped at junction
Soil pipe penetration through floor Proprietary collar; foam; taped membrane
Letterbox / cat flap Brush seal; or relocate outside air barrier

Detailed Guidance

The Four Zones of Air Leakage

Air leakage occurs at any discontinuity in the air barrier. The four main zones to focus on:

1. Wall-to-floor junction (ground floor) The junction between the inner leaf of masonry/timber frame and the ground floor slab or suspended floor is a common gap, particularly where the floor screed doesn't fully seal against the wall. Fix: apply a continuous bead of airtight sealant (Soudal Fix All Flex or equivalent) at the junction before screeding; or use a proprietary airtight skirting system.

2. Wall-to-ceiling/roof junction At eaves level in rooms-in-roof and loft conversions: the membrane must wrap from the roof plane across the junction and connect to the wall membrane. This junction is responsible for a large proportion of air leakage in poorly detailed loft conversions.

3. Service penetrations Every pipe and cable that passes through the air barrier creates a potential leakage path. Fix:

4. Windows and doors The interface between the window frame and the surrounding structure is a common weak point. Fix: use an airtight tape (Siga Fentrim or Pro Clima Tescon Vana) to seal the frame to the structural opening; apply on the warm side (inside). Expanding foam alone is not adequate — tape over the foam with an airtight tape.

Airtight Membranes — How to Install Them Correctly

In timber frame or SIPs construction, a continuous membrane on the warm side of the insulation forms the air barrier:

  1. Start with a plan — draw out the air barrier layer on the drawings before construction. Know where the membrane goes, where it laps onto other elements, and how service penetrations will be treated.

  2. Overlap and tape all joints — membrane sheets must overlap by at least 100mm (some products specify 150mm) and all joints must be taped with a compatible airtight tape. Do not staple overlaps without taping.

  3. Service cavity — fit a service cavity batten (typically 38x50mm or 50x50mm) inside the membrane, before boarding, to allow services to be run without penetrating the membrane. This is the single most effective strategy for maintaining airtightness integrity in timber frame.

  4. Around structural elements — where timber posts or steel columns penetrate the membrane, cut neatly and tape with a preformed corner piece or a flexible tape capable of following the contour.

  5. Test early — if possible, carry out an interim airtightness test before boarding out (when penetrations are still accessible). Fix issues found before they are hidden.

Recessed Downlighters — The Airtightness Enemy

Recessed downlighters in ceilings are one of the most damaging airtightness details in UK housing. A single unprotected recessed light can lose more air than all the window frame junctions combined. Solutions:

Smoke Testing to Locate Leaks

Smoke testing (or "fog testing") is used to locate specific air leakage paths rather than measure overall air permeability. A theatrical smoke machine is used inside a pressurised or depressurised building; smoke is visible as it is sucked through gaps. This technique is particularly useful for locating service penetrations that are difficult to see from outside.

Procedure:

  1. Set up a blower door to depressurise the building to 50 Pa.
  2. Introduce smoke inside the building using a smoke machine.
  3. Watch around window frames, skirting boards, light fittings, service penetrations, and loft hatches for smoke being pulled out.
  4. Mark each identified leakage point for sealing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I have to carry out an air pressure test on a new house?

In England and Wales: yes, for most new dwellings. The Approved Document L requirement for air testing applies to all new dwellings unless a default air permeability value is used in the SAP calculation (which penalises the energy rating significantly). Check with building control and the SAP assessor at design stage.

Can I improve the airtightness of an existing house?

Yes — while it is much harder than achieving airtightness during construction, retrofit airtightness improvements are possible and cost-effective. Focus on the biggest leakage paths first: loft hatch (sealing and insulating), chimney breast (removing unused chimneys or fitting a chimney balloon), skirting boards (sealing behind them), and service penetrations.

Won't an airtight house cause condensation and damp?

Not if correctly ventilated. An airtight house should have controlled ventilation — trickle vents in windows, MVHR, or dMEV — providing fresh air at the correct rate. An uncontrolled, leaky house may actually have more condensation risk because warm moist air can reach cold surfaces via unpredictable paths and condense. Controlled, continuous ventilation manages humidity more effectively than background leakage.

Regulations & Standards