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5 simple (and cheap) things to make your house use less energy

Climate solutions for reducing home energy use can be extremely simple — and sometimes even free, says Dorit Aviv, assistant professor of architecture at the University of Pennsylvania.
Illustrations by LA Johnson/NPR
Climate solutions for reducing home energy use can be extremely simple — and sometimes even free, says Dorit Aviv, assistant professor of architecture at the University of Pennsylvania.

Climate change shapes where and how we live. That's why NPR is dedicating a week to stories about solutions for building and living on a hotter planet.


Our homes use a lot of energy. The huge amounts of energy used to operate buildings result in more than a fourth of the world's planet heating carbon dioxide pollution.

One home climate solution is to switch to appliances that make less pollution, like switching from a gas furnace to an efficient heat pump.

But it turns out you don't have to buy a new appliance to cool or heat your home in a more climate-friendly way. Climate solutions for reducing home energy use can be extremely simple — and sometimes even free, says Dorit Aviv, assistant professor of architecture at the University of Pennsylvania.

A more energy-efficient home often comes down to gaining less heat in hot months and losing less heat in cold months, Aviv says. Here are five simple solutions to reduce your home's climate pollution, make your home more resilient to global warming and reduce your energy bills.

Open a window

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Aviv says we're so used to thinking about thermostats or turning on the air conditioning as the main way to control our home's temperature. But many of us live in temperate environments, at least for part of the year.

In the spring or in the evenings, instead of turning on the air conditioner — which not only uses electricity but releases potent planet-heating gases called hydrofluorocarbons — Aviv has another idea.

"A lot of the time," she says, "all you need to do is to actually open your windows to be comfortable."

Even better, Aviv says? Open up two windows to create a cross breeze if you have cross-facing windows in your home. Researchers find that using natural ventilation can translate into huge energy savings — sometimes as much as 45% depending on your local climate.

Don't forget ceiling fans

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Aviv thinks not enough people use ceiling fans. " I think that a lot of people can install ceiling fans and don't even think about it anymore in the age of air conditioning," Aviv says. "A lot of the time, you don't need air conditioning if you have a ceiling fan."

While ceiling fans cannot lower the air temperature, they can provide increased cooling by moving the air around, which may be enough in certain climates.

Fans use a lot less energy than air conditioning. Using ceiling fans compared to air conditioners can reduce energy use and greenhouse gas emissions by 76%, according to researchers in Australia.

If you have a ceiling fan and aren't using it, try turning it on. Bonus points if you also can open a few windows.

Make your roof reflective

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The roof is often the part of your home that receives the most sun. That sunlight hitting the roof gets absorbed in the building and translates to heat inside the house.

That's why Aviv says it might be worth looking into what's known as a "reflective roof."

"Reflective roofs are actually one of the easiest retrofits you can do in a house," she says.

A lot of roofs are covered with black or darker-color finishes, which absorb the sun's heat. With a roof coated with a white or a silvery color, the solar energy gets reflected away from the house instead of absorbed inside.

That way, Aviv says, "you are alleviating a lot of the cooling load that your house needs."

Less need for cooling with air conditioners also means less money spent on utility bills. Aviv suggests talking to a roofer who knows about different reflective paints that can help reflect sunlight.

Put your shades outside, not inside

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In places that get very hot, you might want to think about installing shades on the outside of your house, not the inside, says Daniel Barber, professor of architectural theory at  Eindhoven University of Technology in the Netherlands.

Here's why. If you have a blind or curtain inside your house, behind your windowpane,  then the sunlight coming in brings the heat inside.

If you close the blind or curtain, Barber says, "You're basically creating a sort of a buffer, a sort of pillow of heat between the curtain and the window."

That's why climate-minded designers are installing blinds or shades on the outside of apartments and homes, not on the inside. That way the heat stays outside your house.

Keeping the heat out using shades is a tradition dating back centuries, Barber says. In Mediterranean places like Egypt, Tunisia or Southern Europe, people use wooden shutters to keep the heat on the exterior of a building, and not bring it inside.

Seal it up

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It's a basic law of physics — thermodynamics, to be precise.  "Heat always finds a way to escape through the easiest path," Aviv says.

That's why in cool months when you're heating your home, you want to make sure that heat isn't escaping your house into the outdoors. Or in hot months, if you have an air-conditioning system that brings in fresh air, you want to make sure heat is not entering your home through the cracks.

Aviv says to look for "air leaks" that usually occur in cracks around openings like windows and doors.

Nancy "Nan" Ma, assistant professor of architectural engineering at Worcester Polytechnic Institute in Massachusetts, explains that one solution is to upgrade your windows. But for something cheaper, you can do something called "weather stripping." That's using a type of tape or rubber around your window frame to seal the leaks. Weather-stripping materials often cost under $10, and you can buy them at the hardware store or online.


This story was edited by Neela Banerjee. The visual editor is Beck Harlan. We'd love to hear from you. Leave us a voicemail at 202-216-9823, or email us at LifeKit@npr.org.

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Copyright 2025 NPR

Julia Simon
Julia Simon is the Climate Solutions reporter on NPR's Climate Desk. She covers the ways governments, businesses, scientists and everyday people are working to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. She also works to hold corporations, and others, accountable for greenwashing.