Why Insulate Your Steel Shed?
Steel is an excellent building material — strong, durable, termite-proof, and fire-resistant. But it conducts heat and cold efficiently, which means an uninsulated steel shed can be unbearably hot in summer, freezing in winter, and prone to condensation year-round.
Insulation solves all three problems. For livable shed homes, insulation isn’t optional — it’s a Building Code requirement. But even for workshops, garages, and hobby sheds, insulation makes your space usable 12 months a year.
The Condensation Problem
Condensation is the number one complaint from steel shed owners who skip insulation. When warm, moist air inside the shed hits the cold steel surface, water forms on the underside of the roof. This leads to:
- Dripping onto stored items, tools, and vehicles
- Rust formation on the inside of the steel (from the outside, your COLORBOND® coating is fine)
- Mould and mildew growth
- Damage to hay, grain, and feed in farm sheds
The solution is a vapour barrier combined with insulation — creating a thermal break between the warm inside air and the cold steel.
Insulation Types for Steel Sheds
Reflective Foil (Sisalation / Anticon)
The most common insulation for steel sheds. A layer of reflective foil laminate is laid over the purlins before the roof sheeting is installed. Anticon is the brand name for foil-backed blanket insulation specifically designed for steel roofing.
- R-value: R1.0 to R1.5 (reflective only) or R1.5 to R2.5 (with blanket)
- Best for: garages, workshops, storage sheds — stops condensation and provides basic thermal comfort
- Cost: $8–$15/m² installed
Glasswool Batts
For livable sheds and spaces that need higher thermal performance, glasswool batts are installed between the steel frame and internal lining. This is the standard approach for meeting BCA energy efficiency requirements.
- R-value: R2.0 to R6.0 depending on thickness
- Best for: livable shed homes, offices, studios — meets NCC/BCA energy requirements
- Cost: $15–$30/m² installed (including vapour barrier)
Spray Foam
Closed-cell spray foam provides excellent insulation and acts as its own vapour barrier. It’s applied directly to the inside of the steel cladding.
- R-value: R3.5 to R6.0+ per 50mm thickness
- Best for: cold climates, high-performance builds, odd-shaped spaces
- Cost: $25–$50/m² installed — the most expensive option but the best thermal performance
Which R-Value Do You Need?
The required R-value depends on your climate zone (as defined by the NCC) and whether your shed is habitable:
- Non-habitable sheds — no minimum requirement, but R1.0+ stops condensation
- Climate zones 1–3 (tropical/subtropical QLD, NT, northern WA): walls R2.8, ceiling R4.1 minimum
- Climate zones 4–5 (temperate NSW, VIC, SA): walls R2.8, ceiling R4.1–R5.1
- Climate zones 6–8 (cool/alpine TAS, highlands): walls R2.8–R3.8, ceiling R5.1–R6.3
Your building certifier will confirm the exact requirements for your location.
Installation Tips
- Install roof insulation before sheeting — it’s much easier to lay foil/blanket over the purlins before the roof goes on
- Don’t compress batts — squashing them reduces their R-value significantly
- Seal all gaps — insulation only works if air can’t bypass it. Tape joins in foil, fill gaps around doors and windows
- Ventilate — even insulated sheds need some airflow. Whirlybirds, ridge vents, or louvre vents prevent moisture build-up
- Consider wall insulation too — roof-only insulation helps but walls are responsible for 25–35% of heat transfer
Planning a shed that needs insulation? Design it in our 3D tool and we’ll help you choose the right insulation approach for your climate and use case.








