(905) 441 0770 allen@allenehlert.com

Cold Windows, Expensive Homes

by | January 27, 2026

How to Spot Bad Windows and Heat Loss Before You Buy

Cold, drafty windows are one of those things buyers feel immediately but rarely know how to evaluate properly. You walk into a house, it looks great, but there’s a chill you can’t shake. You shrug it off, assuming, “We’ll just turn up the heat.”
That’s a mistake — because window heat loss quietly drives up heating costs, affects comfort, and changes what a home really costs to live in.

As a mortgage agent and a certified home inspector, I can tell you this: you don’t always need new windows to fix the problem. In many cases, smart, low-cost insulation measures can dramatically improve comfort and monthly cash flow — and that matters whether you’re buying, renovating, or advising clients.

Here’s how to think about it.

Topics covered in this article

How homes lose heat through windows

Cost to Replace Windows

What buyers should look for during home tours and open houses

The Cheapest Fix With the Biggest Impact: Bottom Sash Seals

Sealing the Upper Sash and Side Gaps

A Secret Solution for Everyone

A buyer story from the field

How realtors and clients can use this information

Allen’s Final Thoughts

How Homes Lose Heat Through Windows

There are two types of heat loss through windows, and one is far worse than the other.

Direct heat loss: air leakage

This is the big one. Warm indoor air leaks out. Cold outdoor air leaks in. You feel drafts, cold floors, and uneven temperatures. This is why a room can feel cold even when the furnace is working overtime.

In real testing, air leakage shows up clearly around:

  • The bottom sash
  • Where the upper and lower sashes meet
  • Corners where the window rides up and down in the frame

If you could see the air moving — say, with fog or smoke — you’d be shocked how much cold air is pouring in through tiny gaps.

Indirect heat loss: conduction

This is heat traveling through the glass itself. Older single-pane windows are especially bad at this. A single pane of glass has an insulation value (R-value) of about 1. Even with a storm window, you’re often only around R-3.

Conduction matters — but it’s usually the second problem, not the first.

Cost to Replace Windows

Replacing all the windows in a typical 2,400 sq ft Canadian home is a significant investment — one that many buyers underestimate when they’re first thinking about comfort and heating costs.

Most homes of that size have somewhere between 15–25 windows, and in 2025-2026 you can expect to pay roughly $800 – $2,000 per window installed, depending on the type of window, frame material, glazing (like double- or triple-pane), and how tricky the installation is. That puts a full-house window replacement in the ballpark of $12,000 – $30,000 or more for a home this size if you’re doing every window at once, with higher costs for premium materials or custom sizes and lower costs if you choose standard vinyl units and keep things simple.

Because it’s such a large expenditure, many buyers choose to budget for targeted improvements first — like sealing drafts, upgrading storm windows, or adding thermal curtains — and factor full replacement into their longer-term renovation plan, rather than immediately upping their mortgage just to replace every window.

When purchasing, consider doing a Purchase Plus Improvements Mortgage that can allow you to move the cost of window replacement into your mortgage. If you already own a home, there are many opportunities to finance the cost of window replacement. Contact me for details.

What Buyers Should Watch for During Showings and Open Houses

You don’t need tools to spot window problems. You just need to know where to look.

When you’re touring a home:

  • Put your hand near the bottom of the windowsill
  • Feel around the sash joints and corners for cold or moisture
  • Notice if there is condensation between the panes of glass
  • Are the windows wood (will need regular painting to maintain them and eventual replacement) or vinyl (good long term investment but look out for cheap mechanisms)
  • Check for bubbling or discolouration around the window frame, sash, or casings

The Cheapest Fix With the Biggest Impact: Bottom Sash Seals

If you don’t have the money right now to make the big investment on new windows, you can do a few things to buy you a couple more years.

The seal at the bottom of the window is usually compressed, brittle, or missing entirely — especially on 30- or 40-year-old windows. Replacing it costs a few dollars per window and can dramatically reduce drafts without affecting usability.

Foam and rubber seal options range from basic vinyl to premium rubberized versions. The better ones compress properly, last longer, and still allow the window to lock.

For buyers, this is a great post-purchase, weekend-one fix.

Sealing the Upper Sash and Side Gaps

The second major leak point is where:

  • The upper and lower sashes meet
  • The window rides in the side tracks

A simple foam backer rod — originally meant for caulking — works surprisingly well here. It fills irregular gaps, is easy to remove, and doesn’t permanently alter the window.

From an inspection standpoint, this is one of the least invasive, highest-value improvements you can make.

A Secret Solution for Everyone

This one surprises people.

Thick, properly sized thermal or blackout curtains consistently show the largest temperature improvements — often 10–13 degrees at the glass surface in cold conditions.

Why?

  • They block air movement
  • They add thermal mass
  • They trap a pocket of warmer air

They’re not cheap compared to foam seals, but they’re:

  • Reusable
  • Non-destructive
  • Decor-friendly
  • Extremely effective

For buyers worried about heating costs, this is one of the easiest upgrades with the biggest payoff.

A Buyer Story From the Field

I once worked with buyers who loved a character home — high ceilings, original trim, older windows. They were worried it would be “freezing” in winter.

Instead of panicking about full window replacement, we mapped out a plan:

  • Seal the sashes
  • Address air leaks
  • Add thermal curtains
  • Budget window upgrades later, not immediately

The result? A comfortable home, manageable heating bills, and no over-borrowing to fund unnecessary renovations upfront.

How Realtors and Clients Can Use This in Practice

For buyers

  • Don’t assume old windows mean immediate replacement
  • Budget smart insulation upgrades first
  • Use window condition as a negotiating tool, not a deal-breaker

For realtors

  • Help clients distinguish between comfort issues and structural issues
  • Reframe window discussions around fixability
  • Protect affordability by avoiding unnecessary renovation panic

This is about smarter decision-making, not cutting corners.

Allen’s Final Thoughts

Window insulation sits right at the intersection of comfort, operating costs, and affordability — which is why I care about it as both a home inspector and a mortgage agent.

A home that bleeds heat every winter quietly costs more to live in. But the fix isn’t always new windows. Often, it’s understanding where the heat is escaping and stopping it intelligently.

From my side, I help clients:

  • Evaluate comfort issues before they buy
  • Separate “must-fix” from “nice-to-fix”
  • Budget upgrades without over-borrowing
  • Structure financing so renovation choices don’t strain cash flow

Whether you’re buying, renovating, or advising clients, understanding how windows actually work — and how they fail — puts you in a much stronger position.

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Allen Ehlert

Allen Ehlert

Allen Ehlert is a licensed mortgage agent. He has four university degrees, including two Masters degrees, and specializes in real estate finance, development, and investing. Allen Ehlert has decades of independent consulting experience for companies and governments, including the Ontario Real Estate Association, Deloitte, City of Toronto, Enbridge, and the Ministry of Finance.

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