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Efficiency Maine Programs for Mobile Home Insulation

Efficiency Maine, the state's independent efficiency trust, runs the rebate programs that make most Maine mobile home insulation retrofits affordable — including a program offering instant rebates up to $8,600.

Program administrator

Efficiency Maine Trust

Maine's independent trust for energy efficiency programs and rebates.

efficiencymaine.com →

1-866-376-2463

Up to $8,600 in instant rebates

Efficiency Maine's residential insulation rebate program covers insulation and air sealing upgrades — attic, wall, floor/belly, and rim joist work — for homes across the state, including mobile and manufactured homes. For insulation upgrades completed on or after October 1, 2026, the program's maximum rebate increases to up to $8,600, applied as an instant discount at the point of sale through a participating distributor or contractor rather than requiring the homeowner to front the full cost and wait for a mailed check. Eligibility verification is required for at least one homeowner or household member, and only one rebate is paid per upgrade.

Programs change — this is a snapshot Efficiency Maine states plainly that its programs and incentive amounts are subject to change or termination, and rebate processing can take several weeks. Treat every dollar figure on this page as a starting point for your own research, not a guarantee, and confirm the current program terms directly with Efficiency Maine before signing a contract.

The Mobile Home Initiative

Efficiency Maine also runs a dedicated Mobile Home Initiative aimed at income-eligible owners of single-wide manufactured homes that currently heat with propane or kerosene, offering a substantial rebate toward a new ducted heat pump system sized to use the home's existing ductwork and furnace closet. Before that heat pump work can proceed, Efficiency Maine performs a free assessment of the home's suitability — and if the home isn't a good candidate because of excessive heat loss, underbelly damage, or compromised ductwork, the homeowner has the option to use the insulation rebate program first to address those issues, then revisit the heat pump program afterward.

That sequencing matters: it's a direct acknowledgment from the program itself that insulation and air sealing often need to come before a heating system upgrade, not after, particularly on older single-wide homes.

Program rules and material requirements

Efficiency Maine's Home Energy Savings Program (and its low-income counterpart) attach specific technical requirements to the insulation rebate, not just a dollar cap:

  • Attic insulation generally must reach a minimum R-value using cellulose, blown fiber, or foam insulation to qualify — batt insulation alone does not meet the program specification.
  • Exterior wall cavities generally need to be dense-packed with insulation, filled with foam, and/or covered with a minimum thickness of rigid foam insulation to qualify for the wall insulation rebate.
  • Underbelly, crawlspace, and basement-equivalent spaces below a mobile home's conditioned floor are eligible for insulation rebates — but skirting insulation specifically is called out as not rebate-eligible, since skirting isn't part of the conditioned floor assembly itself.
  • Most insulation rebates require a prior energy assessment (an “Energy Upgrade Bundle”) unless the home was already weatherized through Efficiency Maine or a Community Action Agency, and all work must be completed by an Efficiency Maine Registered Vendor.
  • A Building Performance Institute (BPI)-certified professional generally needs to perform a test-out inspection after the work, confirming the upgrade meets program guidelines.

How the process generally works

Schedule an energy assessment

An Efficiency Maine Registered Vendor evaluates the home — often including a blower door test — to identify the insulation and air-sealing scope that will actually improve comfort and efficiency.

Confirm the scope meets program specs

The proposed R-value targets and materials are checked against Efficiency Maine's eligibility rules before work begins, so the completed project qualifies for a rebate.

The upgrade is installed

Work is completed by the Registered Vendor, typically with a post-installation blower door test to document the air-sealing improvement.

The rebate is applied or claimed

For instant-rebate projects, the discount is applied by the participating distributor or vendor at the time of the project. For mail-in rebates, the homeowner submits a signed claim form with paid, itemized invoices and the required energy assessment checklist.

Processing and verification

Efficiency Maine allows roughly six weeks for rebate processing and reserves the right to verify the installation or conduct a quality-assurance inspection.

How rebate tiers generally work

Efficiency Maine's insulation rebates are typically structured in income-based tiers rather than a single flat amount: a higher percentage of project cost is covered for low-income households, a moderate percentage for moderate-income households, and a baseline percentage available to any Maine homeowner regardless of income. The maximum dollar figure — now up to $8,600 for eligible projects — represents the ceiling reachable under the most generous, low-income tier; homeowners at other income levels should expect a lower percentage of project cost covered, up to that same overall cap. The exact current percentages for each tier are best confirmed directly with Efficiency Maine or a Registered Vendor, since they're periodically revised.

Always confirm current terms before you start

Because rebate amounts, eligible materials, income thresholds, and application steps are all subject to change, the most reliable way to plan a project is to start with Efficiency Maine directly — either through efficiencymaine.com or by calling 1-866-376-2463 — and then work with a Registered Vendor who handles the paperwork as part of the job.

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