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    Lifestyle

    Smart Ways to Make Your Home a Little Greener This Spring

    Spring cleaning gets all the attention, but spring is also the most practical time to look at how your home uses energy...

    • Eric Marcus
    • April 27th, 2026
    • 5 min read
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    Spring cleaning gets all the attention, but spring is also the most practical time to look at how your home uses energy and resources. The days are longer, you're already thinking about the house, and many of the changes that make a real difference cost almost nothing to start.

    Making a home more sustainable doesn't require a full renovation. Most of what actually moves the needle involves fixing small inefficiencies that have been running up costs for years. Here's where to start.

    Start with Air Sealing and Insulation

    Before spending anything on upgrades, take stock of where your home is losing conditioned air. Gaps around window frames, door thresholds, attic hatches, and electrical outlets on exterior walls are among the most common culprits. Weatherstripping and caulk are inexpensive, take an afternoon to apply, and make a noticeable difference in both comfort and utility costs within the first billing cycle.

    If your attic has less than 10 to 12 inches of insulation, adding more will reduce heating and cooling load more than almost any other single improvement.

    Reduce Water Use in the Places That Matter Most

    Low-flow showerheads and faucet aerators are widely available at hardware stores for under $20 each and can reduce household water use by 25 to 30 percent without any perceptible change in pressure. A running toilet wastes thousands of gallons per year and is often caused by a worn flapper that costs a few dollars to replace.

    Outdoors, adjusting irrigation schedules to run in the early morning rather than midday reduces evaporation significantly. If your system has a rain sensor, confirm it's working. Many sit dormant for years without anyone checking.

    Do an Appliance Audit

    Not every appliance needs to be replaced. Older water heaters and dryers are typically the biggest energy consumers in a home, and they're also the least visible. A water heater older than 10 to 12 years is likely running at reduced efficiency and costing more to operate than a newer unit would. That's worth factoring into any home budget conversation.

    For everything else, the calculation is straightforward: if the appliance is functioning well and under 10 years old, maintain it. If it's failing or significantly older, compare annual operating costs against replacement before defaulting to repair.

    Switch to LED Lighting Throughout the Home

    If your home still has incandescent bulbs anywhere, switching to LEDs is one of the simplest, lowest-cost improvements available. LED bulbs use roughly 75 percent less energy and last significantly longer. Smart plugs and timers for outdoor and security lighting reduce the energy wasted leaving lights on overnight.

    This is also a good time to walk through and identify any fixtures or lamps that are on by default and rarely turned off. Small reductions in baseline load add up over a full year.

    Rethink the Kitchen and Cleaning Routine

    Refillable containers, concentrated cleaning products, and reusable storage reduce both waste and the frequency of purchases. Over a year, a household can eliminate dozens of single-use plastic containers through a handful of simple substitutions. The financial savings are modest but consistent.

    In the kitchen, running full dishwasher loads, air-drying dishes rather than using the heat cycle, and cooking with lids on pots all reduce energy and water use without any new equipment.

    Think About Your Outdoor Space Differently

    Native plants are drought-tolerant by design, require little to no fertilizer, and support local pollinators. Replacing even a portion of a high-maintenance lawn with native ground cover or a garden bed reduces irrigation needs and eliminates fertilizer and pesticide costs entirely.

    Composting is a natural companion to spring gardening. A basic compost bin handles kitchen scraps and yard waste and produces usable material within a few months. A small habit that eliminates a meaningful amount of household waste over time.

    Make Changes One Category at a Time

    Trying to address every area of the home at once is how most sustainability efforts stall. Pick one category, make two or three changes, and let them become part of the routine before moving on. The changes actually stick that way.

    It's also worth knowing that energy-efficient features and lower utility costs are showing up more consistently on buyer priority lists. Improvements made now benefit daily life and hold real resale value without requiring a significant upfront investment.

    Start Where It Makes the Most Sense for Your Home

    If you're thinking about listing, some of these improvements are worth making before you do. If you're staying put for the foreseeable future, most of them will pay for themselves within a year. Either way, spring is a practical time to take stock of how your home is performing and make a few targeted improvements.

    We can help you understand which upgrades carry the most weight in our local market and which ones buyers are actually looking for right now. Reach out when you're ready to talk through the specifics.

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    About the author

    Eric Marcus

    773-732-9898
    I was born in South Bend, Indiana where my family owned and operated a small business for over 50 years. Every member of my family has been licensed to practice real estate, and my dad owns a real estate company in Indiana. After graduating with honors from Indiana University in 1991, I earned my CPA and worked for a big six accounting firm in Chicago. Combining my experience and entrepreneurial spirit, I started my own successful accounting business that I ran for 3 years. Next, I embarked on a career as a soybean trader at the Chicago Board of Trade, followed by a successful run as a stock options market maker at the Chicago Board of Options Exchange. I began my real estate career in 2003 as broker/owner of ESM Realty. My team has helped more than 600 clients buy and sell condominiums, townhouses, single family homes, multi-unit residential, and commercial properties. For 14 straight years, we were recognized by Chicago Association of Realtors as Top Producers. Our extensive marketing program includes premium placement on hundreds of websites, morechicagohomes.com and state of the art Facebook advertising. My team works tirelessly to make each client feel like they are our only client! We strive for the highest level of performance every day so that we exceed your highest expectations. Our business is 75%+ referral-based and we want you to not only be our client but our biggest raving fan. In December 2020, I brought my team to Keller Williams ONEChicago with branches in Lincoln Park, Lakeview and O'Hare. To set up a consultation or if you have any questions, please contact me at 773-732-9898.

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    1525 W. Belmont Avenue, Chicago, IL 60657

    773-732-9898
    [email protected]

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